G# Ritusen Piano Scale

Piano scale diagramBeginner

FG#A#C#D#

G# Ritusen Scale — Notes and Intervals

The G# Ritusen scale is a traditional Japanese pentatonic scale known for its balanced and tranquil nature. On Piano, the notes are G#, A#, C#, D#, F. 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: G#, A#, C#, D#, F

Intervals: 1P, 2M, 4P, 5P, 6M

Degrees: 1 2 3 4 5

Formula: W-WH-W-W-WH

Number of notes: 5

Musical Character

BalancedTranquilPeacefulSuspended

A perfectly balanced pentatonic with a suspended quality — sounds peaceful and folk-like. Its simplicity makes it accessible while its exotic intervals set it apart from Western pentatonics.

Genres & Notable Artists

Genres: Japanese, World, Ambient, Film Scores

Notable players: Kitaro, Ryuichi Sakamoto

How to Use the G# Ritusen Scale

Use over sus2, sus4, and open chords. Its omission of the 3rd creates an ambiguous major/minor quality.

Origin & Background

A traditional Japanese scale used in ancient East Asian court music. Related to the Yo scale of the Japanese modal system.

How to Play G# Ritusen on Piano

On piano, the G# Ritusen scale uses 4 black keys. With several black keys involved, let the thumb naturally fall on white keys where possible. Practice hands separately at first, paying attention to smooth thumb-under transitions.

The G# Ritusen scale contains 4 sharps (G#, A#, C#, D#). 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 60 BPM and play the G# 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 G#. Try a G#5 - D#5 - F5 progression. This scale is especially effective in film scores contexts.

Piano Tips

On piano, practice the G# Ritusen scale hands together in contrary motion (one hand ascending, the other descending). This builds independence and strengthens your awareness of the scale's symmetry. Aim for a balanced quality in your phrasing to match the natural character of this scale.

Related Scales

The G# Ritusen scale contains 5 notes (G#, A#, C#, D#, F). Use the interactive piano diagram above to explore this scale on Piano.

Explore G# Ritusen Further

← Back to all Piano scales