note view
guitar_neck 6 6 b7 b7 2 2 b3 b3 5 5 R R 6 6 b7 b7 R R 4 4 6 6 b7 b7 2 2 b3 b3 5 5 R R 2 2 b3 b3 5 5 6 6 R R 2 2 4 4 5 5 6 6 b7 b7 2 2 b3 b3 4 4 5 5 b7 b7 R R b3 b3 4 4 6 6 b7 b7 R R 2 2 4 4 5 5 6 6 b7 b7 2 2 b3 b3 5 5 R R b3 b3 4 4 6 6 b7 b7 R R 4 4 6 6 b7 b7 2 2 b3 b3 5 5 R R 2 2 b3 b3 5 5 6 6 R R 2 2 4 4 5 5 6 6 b7 b7 2 2 b3 b3 4 4 b7 b7 b3 b3 R R 4 4

Practice backingtrack for F Dorian

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 F Dorian scale


         interval name             note
R Perfect unison F
2 Major second G
b3 Minor third Ab
4 Perfect fourth Bb
5 Perfect fifth C
6 Major sixth D
b7 Minor seventh Eb

Good to Know

The F dorian in musical notation

The Dorian mode is also known as the second mode from the diatonic modes. It is a minor scale and it differs from the natural minor scale (Aeolian mode) because its 6th note is raised. Its triade is a Minor triade, and it seventh chord is a Minor7th (other extensions are 9, 11, 13)

Alternative names

  • F Dorian mode
  • the second mode of the diatonic scale