E Ritusen Cuatro Venezolano Scale
Cuatro Venezolano scale — fretboard diagram
E Ritusen Scale — Notes and Intervals
The E Ritusen scale is a traditional Japanese pentatonic scale known for its balanced and tranquil nature. On Cuatro Venezolano, the notes are E, F#, A, B, C#. It has a suspended quality that sounds very peaceful and is a core part of ancient East Asian court music and contemplative melodies. Commonly used in Japanese, World, Ambient, Film Scores. Notable players include Kitaro, Ryuichi Sakamoto. Use over sus2, sus4, and open chords. Its omission of the 3rd creates an ambiguous major/minor quality.
Notes: E, F#, A, B, C#
Intervals: 1P, 2M, 4P, 5P, 6M
Degrees: 1 2 3 4 5
Formula: W-WH-W-W-WH
Number of notes: 5
How to Play E Ritusen on Cuatro Venezolano
Begin by locating E on your instrument and play through the 5 notes of the Ritusen scale slowly, ensuring each note rings clearly before increasing speed.
The E Ritusen scale contains 2 sharps (F#, C#). This scale does not follow a traditional major or minor key signature, so reading from sheet music may require accidentals.
Practice Routine
Set a metronome to 80 BPM and play the E Ritusen scale in groups of four notes, shifting the starting note each repetition. This builds muscle memory across the entire scale range. After a week, try improvising short 4-bar phrases using only these notes.
This scale works well over simple power chord progressions or a 12-bar blues in E. Try a E5 - B5 - C#5 progression.
Cuatro Venezolano Tips
Practice the E Ritusen scale slowly and evenly on your instrument, focusing on tone quality for each of the 5 notes before building speed.
The E Ritusen scale contains 5 notes (E, F#, A, B, C#). Use the interactive fretboard above to explore this scale on Cuatro Venezolano with different tunings and fret ranges.
CAGED Positions & Patterns for E Ritusen
The E Ritusen scale can be played in 5 CAGED positions across the fretboard, each based on an open chord shape (C, A, G, E, D). As a 5-note pentatonic scale, 2-notes-per-string patterns are the most ergonomic way to traverse the fretboard. Use the pattern selector above to isolate each position.