note view
guitar_neck b6 b6 b7 b7 b2 b2 b3 b3 b5 b5 b6 b6 R R b2 b2 b3 b3 4 4 b6 b6 b7 b7 R R b2 b2 4 4 b5 b5 b7 b7 b3 b3 b5 b5 b6 b6 R R b2 b2 b3 b3 b6 b6 R R b2 b2 4 4 b5 b5 b7 b7 b3 b3 4 4 b5 b5 b7 b7 R R b3 b3 4 4 b6 b6 b7 b7 R R b2 b2 4 4 b5 b5 b6 b6 b7 b7 b2 b2 b3 b3 b5 b5 b6 b6 R R b2 b2 b3 b3 4 4 b6 b6 b7 b7 R R b2 b2 4 4 b5 b5 b7 b7 b3 b3 b5 b5 b6 b6 R R b2 b2 R R 4 4

Practice backingtrack for Ab Locrian

If your jam is not sounding great, try to reload the page, you might get a better vid. For scales that are a bit on the exotic side it might not find much at all.

Intervals of the Ab Locrian scale


         interval name             note
R Perfect unison Ab
b2 Minor second Bbb
b3 Minor third Cb
4 Perfect fourth Db
b5 Diminished fifth Ebb
b6 Minor sixth Fb
b7 Minor seventh Gb

Good to Know

The Ab locrian in musical notation

The Locrian mode is also known as the seventh mode from the diatonic scale. It differs from the natural minor scale (Aeolian mode) because it has its 2nd and 5th lowerd by a semitone. Its triade is a Diminished triade, and it seventh chord is a Min7b5 or half-diminished-7th-chord (other extensions are b9, 11, b13)

Alternative names

  • Ab Locrian mode
  • the seventh mode of the diatonic scale