A♯ minor hexatonic scale diatonic chords
scale
Fretboard diagram
A# minor hexatonic scale — chords and intervals
Harmonizing the A# minor hexatonic scale produces a soulful minor chord family with one extra tone compared to the pentatonic, adding harmonic flexibility while maintaining a blues-rock feel. The chords of A# minor hexatonic are A# minor, A diminished, A# minor, A diminished, A# minor, A diminished. The additional chord option enriches simple minor progressions with more voice-leading possibilities. Use these chords for blues-rock and jazz-rock writing that needs slightly more color than pentatonic harmony provides. Commonly used in Blues, Jazz-Rock, R&B, Soul. Notable players include B.B. King, Albert King, John Mayer.
The A# minor hexatonic scale has the following degrees: 1 2 ♭3 4 5 7.
Intervals: W-H-W-W-2W-H.
Diatonic chords: A# minor, A diminished, A# minor, A diminished, A# minor, A diminished.
| Degrees | Chord |
|---|---|
| I | A# minor |
| ii | A diminished |
| iii | A# minor |
| IV | A diminished |
| V | A# minor |
| vi | A diminished |
This page focuses on the harmonic content — the chords built from each degree of the A# minor hexatonic scale. For fretboard patterns and fingering guides, see the scale page.
Use the interactive harmonizer above to explore triads, seventh chords, and chord voicings for composing with the A# minor hexatonic scale on guitar.
Related Scales
How to Use This Scale
Use over m7 chords and blues changes. More flexible than minor pentatonic but less complex than full Dorian.