F♯ Locrian scale

The F♯ Locrian scale is a 7-note locrian scale built on the root F♯. Its notes are F♯, G, A, B, C, D and E. The unstable seventh mode — diminished tonic and a flat fifth, rarely used as tonal centre. This page covers the formula, fingerings, diatonic chords and common progressions that make F♯ Locrian a powerful tool for improvising and composing.

Locrian is rare as a tonal centre because of its diminished tonic, but it is essential for understanding modal theory and shows up in metal and avant-garde jazz. Built on the root F♯, the scale takes on the specific colour and pitch range of that key — making it especially useful in genres and registers where F♯ is a comfortable tonal centre.

Formula & step pattern

Formula
1P · 2m · 3m · 4P · 5d · 6m · 7m
Step pattern
H - W - W - H - W - W - W

The F♯ Locrian scale follows a minor scale with a flat second and a flat fifth (H-W-W-H-W-W-W). Step pattern: H - W - W - H - W - W - W. Intervals from the root: 1P · 2m · 3m · 4P · 5d · 6m · 7m. Memorising the formula lets you transpose the scale to any other root note quickly.

F♯ Locrian on the piano

Piano keyboard highlighting the F♯ Locrian scale notesCDEGABCDEGABF♯F♯F♯ LocrianF♯ · G · A · B · C · D · E

F♯ Locrian on the guitar

Guitar fretboard highlighting the F♯ Locrian scale notesEBGDAEEF♯GABCDEBCDEF♯GABGABCDEF♯GDEF♯GABCDABCDEF♯GAEF♯GABCDEF♯ Locrianfr 0–12

F♯ Locrian on the staff

Hear the F♯ Locrian scale

F♯ Locrian
F♯ · G · A · B · C · D · E
F♯GABCDE

Notes of the F♯ Locrian scale

Notes: F♯ · G · A · B · C · D · EStep pattern: H - W - W - H - W - W - W
DegreeIntervalSemitonesNote
11P0F♯(F#)
22m1G
33m3A
44P5B
55d6C
66m8D
77m10E

Diatonic chords of F♯ Locrian

These are the chords that naturally form on each degree of the scale. Click a chord to open its dedicated page.

How to use the F♯ Locrian scale

The diatonic chords of F♯ Locrian are: i° = F♯°, II = G, iii = Am, iv = Bm, V = C, VI = D, vii = Em. These seven chords belong naturally to the key and are the safest harmonic vocabulary when writing songs in F♯ Locrian. Click any chord below to open its full diagram and progressions.

Locrian is rare as a tonal centre because of its diminished tonic, but it is essential for understanding modal theory and shows up in metal and avant-garde jazz.

Practice tips

Locrian is best learned as a theoretical exercise: spell each diatonic chord and notice why the diminished tonic makes it unstable.

Famous songs in this key

F♯ Locrian appears throughout locrian is rare as a tonal centre because of its diminished tonic, but it is essential for understanding modal theory and shows up in metal and avant-garde jazz. Listening to music in this scale and transcribing short phrases is the fastest way to absorb its sound.

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

Frequently asked questions

What notes are in the F♯ Locrian scale?
The F♯ Locrian scale contains F♯, G, A, B, C, D and E.
What is the formula for the F♯ Locrian scale?
F♯ Locrian follows a minor scale with a flat second and a flat fifth (H-W-W-H-W-W-W).
Is F♯ Locrian a major or minor scale?
F♯ Locrian is a locrian scale. The unstable seventh mode — diminished tonic and a flat fifth, rarely used as tonal centre.
What chords belong to the F♯ Locrian scale?
The diatonic chords of F♯ Locrian are F♯°, G, Am, Bm, C, D, Em.
Which genres use F♯ Locrian?
Locrian is rare as a tonal centre because of its diminished tonic, but it is essential for understanding modal theory and shows up in metal and avant-garde jazz.
How do I practise the F♯ Locrian scale?
Locrian is best learned as a theoretical exercise: spell each diatonic chord and notice why the diminished tonic makes it unstable.

Take F♯ Locrian into your music

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