G♯
root
tonic landing note.
Overview
G♯ Minor Pentatonic uses the notes G♯, B, C♯, D♯, and F♯. It is a compact five-note minor subset built for direct riff and lead phrasing.
Quick reference
Notes
G♯ Minor Pentatonic laid out by interval role.
G♯
root
tonic landing note.
B
minor third
minor color tone.
C♯
perfect fourth
suspended pull above the third.
D♯
perfect fifth
stable support tone.
F♯
minor seventh
open minor or blues ending.
Playing ideas
Best over minor vamps, i7 grooves, and blues-rock lead lines on G♯.
Use it when the melody should stay centered on the root, minor third, fourth, fifth, and flat seventh.
Compare it with G♯ Natural Minor to hear which two notes the pentatonic version omits.
Positions
Use the Pentatonic view to learn one box at a time, starting with the root notes and the minor-third and flat-seventh anchors inside it.
Then switch to Full Neck to spot the next box above or below it and practice sliding between the shared notes.
Chords and key
Typical minor and relative-major chords around this note set.
Tonic minor chord on the same root.
Minor 7 chord that keeps the flat seventh in play.
Relative major built from the same notes.
Explore next
Compare closely related scales, chords, and key-center ideas.
i • G♯ minor
Tonic minor chord on the same root.
i7 • G♯ minor 7
Minor 7 chord that keeps the flat seventh in play.
III • B major
Relative major built from the same notes.
G♯ chords
Compare common major, minor, 7, and suspended chords on the same root.
G♯ scales
Compare every supported G♯ scale family in one place.
Quick answers