← Back to Interactive Tool

Position 6th of 7 · F Major Family

Aeolian Mode on Guitar

Natural Minor Scale

Aeolian is the 6th mode of the major scale and is identical to the natural minor scale. It has three flattened notes compared to the major scale: the 3rd, 6th, and 7th. This gives it a deep emotional, sad, and introspective quality that forms the backbone of countless rock, metal, and classical pieces. In F Major, Aeolian starts on D.

Step Formula

The step formula tells you the distance between each note — W = Whole step (2 frets), H = Half step (1 fret):

W H W W H W W

Intervals

Scale degrees relative to the root:

1 2 ♭3 4 5 ♭6 ♭7

Root, Major 2nd, Minor 3rd, Perfect 4th, Perfect 5th, Minor 6th, Minor 7th

Vibe / Sound Character Sad, emotional, dark, introspective, melancholic
In the Key of F Major D E F G A B♭ C
Famous Examples Stairway to Heaven, Hotel California, Nothing Else Matters (Metallica), virtually all rock ballads
Dead Sea Scales Position Position 6th — use the interactive fretboard to see and hear this mode in every key
💡 The Key Insight:
Aeolian IS the natural minor scale. The ♭3, ♭6, and ♭7 (three flattened notes compared to major) are what create the characteristic sad, dark sound.

How the 7 Modes Relate

All 7 diatonic modes share the same notes — they just start on different degrees of the major scale. Aeolian Mode is Position 6th of 7. Understanding this relationship is the foundation of the Dead Sea Scales system.

Once you know where Aeolian Mode sits in the pattern, you can connect it to the other 6 modes and begin navigating the entire fretboard by shape instead of memorizing individual scales.

The 5 Missing Notes™ — Going Beyond the 7 Modes

The Dead Sea Scales system extends beyond the 7 diatonic modes using the 5 Missing Notes™ framework — the 5 chromatic notes that fall outside the major scale. Each missing note generates 7 new mode variations, giving you 35 extended scales plus the 7 originals = 42 total modes.

Hear & play the Aeolian Mode on an interactive fretboard

All 7 modes + 42 exotic scales · Every key · With audio · Free forever

Open the Free Interactive Tool →

DEEP DIVES

Why 42 Modes? Dead Sea Chords 2,048 Combinations Pentatonic Origins Where Notes Came From Guido d'Arezzo George Russell All Resources