D♭ Blues scale

The D♭ Blues scale is a 6-note blues scale built on the root D♭. Its notes are D♭, E, G♭, G, A♭ and B. Minor pentatonic with an added flat fifth (the blue note) - the heart of blues phrasing. This page covers the formula, fingerings, diatonic chords and common progressions that make D♭ Blues a great tool for improvising and composing.

The blues scale is where blues, rock, R&B and jazz improvisation live. That added flat fifth with all the bends and slides - that's its signature voice. Built on the root D♭, the scale takes on the specific colour and pitch range of that key - making it especially useful in genres and registers where D♭ is a comfortable tonal centre.

Formula & step pattern

Formula
1P · 3m · 4P · 5d · 5P · 7m
Step pattern
W+H - W - H - H - W+H - W

The D♭ Blues scale follows the minor pentatonic scale with an added flat fifth - the famous “blue note”. Step pattern: W+H - W - H - H - W+H - W. Intervals from the root: 1P · 3m · 4P · 5d · 5P · 7m. Memorising the formula lets you transpose the scale to any other root note quickly.

D♭ Blues on the piano

Show:
Piano keyboard highlighting the D♭ Blues scale notesEGBEGBD♭G♭A♭D♭G♭A♭D♭ Blues - D♭ · E · G♭ · G · A♭ · B

D♭ Blues on the guitar

Show:
Position:
Guitar fretboard highlighting the D♭ Blues scale noteseBGDAEEG♭GA♭BD♭EBD♭EG♭GA♭BGA♭BD♭EG♭GEG♭GA♭BD♭BD♭EG♭GA♭EG♭GA♭BD♭ED♭ Blues - fr 012

D♭ Blues on the staff

Hear the D♭ Blues scale

D♭ Blues
D♭ · E · G♭ · G · A♭ · B
D♭EG♭GA♭B

Improvisation drone

Loop the root note as a pad to practice improvising over this scale.

D♭ Blues
D♭

Notes of the D♭ Blues scale

Notes: D♭ · E · G♭ · G · A♭ · BStep pattern: W+H - W - H - H - W+H - W
DegreeIntervalSemitonesNote
11P0D♭(Db)
23m3E
34P5G♭(Gb)
45d6G
55P7A♭(Ab)
67m10B

How to use the D♭ Blues scale

Because D♭ Blues has fewer or more than seven notes, it doesn't produce a standard set of seven diatonic triads. Instead, build chords by stacking thirds within the scale or use it as a melodic colour over chords drawn from a related diatonic key.

The blues scale is where blues, rock, R&B and jazz improvisation live. That added flat fifth with all the bends and slides - that's its signature voice.

Practice tips

Add the blue note (flat fifth) to your minor pentatonic phrases as a passing or grace note. Don't sit on it too long - works best as a slide.

Famous songs

D♭ Blues appears throughout the blues scale is where blues, rock, r&b and jazz improvisation live. that added flat fifth with all the bends and slides - that's its signature voice. Listening to music in this scale and transcribing short phrases is the fastest way to absorb its sound.

Once you are comfortable with D♭ Blues, explore related scales to expand your vocabulary. The scales below share notes, modes or tonal centres with D♭ Blues and are a natural next step in your study.

Frequently asked questions

What notes are in the D♭ Blues scale?
The D♭ Blues scale contains D♭, E, G♭, G, A♭ and B.
What is the formula for the D♭ Blues scale?
D♭ Blues follows the minor pentatonic scale with an added flat fifth - the famous “blue note”.
Is D♭ Blues a major or minor scale?
D♭ Blues is a blues scale. Minor pentatonic with an added flat fifth (the blue note) - the heart of blues phrasing.
What chords belong to the D♭ Blues scale?
D♭ Blues doesn't produce a standard seven-chord diatonic set. Use chords from a related diatonic scale instead.
Which genres use D♭ Blues?
The blues scale is where blues, rock, R&B and jazz improvisation live. That added flat fifth with all the bends and slides - that's its signature voice.
How do I practise the D♭ Blues scale?
Add the blue note (flat fifth) to your minor pentatonic phrases as a passing or grace note. Don't sit on it too long - works best as a slide.

Take D♭ Blues into your music

Build progressions, find chord voicings and improvise with confidence using our music tools.