Scale Theory

F♯ Natural Minor Scale: Notes, Chords, and How to Play It

By Interactive Chord Finder ·

The F♯ natural minor scale has three sharps and shares its key signature with A major, its relative major. It is a key favoured in classical repertoire and modern rock alike, offering a dark, melancholic sound that sits comfortably on both piano and guitar once the fingerings are learned.

Notes of the F♯ Natural Minor Scale

The F♯ natural minor scale contains seven notes:

F♯ – G♯ – A – B – C♯ – D – E

Starting from F♯, the scale follows the natural minor interval pattern — W – H – W – W – H – W – W — and arrives back at F♯ one octave higher. The three sharps (F♯, G♯, and C♯) match those found in A major.

DegreeNoteInterval from RootStep to Next
1 (Root)F♯UnisonWhole step
2G♯Major 2ndHalf step
3AMinor 3rdWhole step
4BPerfect 4thWhole step
5C♯Perfect 5thHalf step
6DMinor 6thWhole step
7EMinor 7thWhole step
8F♯Octave

The half steps fall between G♯–A (degrees 2–3) and C♯–D (degrees 5–6). This placement is what gives every natural minor scale its dark, reflective sound. For a deeper look at minor scale construction, see Minor Scales: Natural, Harmonic, and Melodic.

F♯ Natural Minor on Piano

F♯ natural minor begins on a black key and uses three sharps overall. The hand naturally follows the contour of the keyboard as the black keys provide tactile landmarks.

Right hand fingering (ascending): 2 – 3 – 1 – 2 – 3 – 1 – 2 – 3 (thumb crosses under after A, and again after D)

Left hand fingering (ascending): 4 – 3 – 2 – 1 – 3 – 2 – 1 – 4 (the fourth finger starts on F♯, and the thumb crosses to B)

Starting on a black key may feel unfamiliar at first, but the elevated position of F♯ actually provides a natural reference point. Keep the wrist relaxed and let the fingers fall into place.

F♯ Natural Minor on Guitar

On guitar, F♯ natural minor sits cleanly in the second position with the root on the 6th string, 2nd fret.

Second position (low to high):

StringFretNote
6th (E)2F♯
6th (E)4G♯
5th (A)openA (enharmonic)
5th (A)2B
5th (A)4C♯
4th (D)openD
4th (D)2E
4th (D)4F♯

This pattern covers one octave from F♯ on the 6th string to F♯ on the 4th string. Use the CAGED system to play F♯ natural minor in every position.

Use the guitar fretboard view in the Interactive Chord Finder to see all positions at once.

Diatonic Chords in F♯ Natural Minor

Every chord built from the F♯ natural minor scale follows a predictable pattern of qualities. Stacking thirds on each scale degree produces seven triads:

DegreeChordQualityNotes
iF♯mMinorF♯ – A – C♯
ii°G♯dimDiminishedG♯ – B – D
IIIAMajorA – C♯ – E
ivBmMinorB – D – F♯
vC♯mMinorC♯ – E – G♯
VIDMajorD – F♯ – A
VIIEMajorE – G♯ – B

The pattern minor – diminished – major – minor – minor – major – major holds true in every natural minor key.

For a thorough explanation of how these chords are constructed, see Diatonic Chords: A Beginner’s Guide.

Seventh Chords

Adding a fourth note to each triad creates seventh chords, which add colour and harmonic depth:

DegreeChordQualityNotes
i7F♯m7Minor 7thF♯ – A – C♯ – E
iiø7G♯m7♭5Half-diminishedG♯ – B – D – F♯
IIImaj7Amaj7Major 7thA – C♯ – E – G♯
iv7Bm7Minor 7thB – D – F♯ – A
v7C♯m7Minor 7thC♯ – E – G♯ – B
VImaj7Dmaj7Major 7thD – F♯ – A – C♯
VII7E7Dominant 7thE – G♯ – B – D

Notice that the VII chord produces a dominant 7th. In natural minor, this VII7 resolves naturally to the III chord (E7 to A), not to the tonic. This is one reason composers often raise the 7th degree (creating F♯ harmonic minor) to build a dominant V chord that resolves to i. For more on seventh chords, see Seventh Chords: The Complete Guide.

Common Chord Progressions in F♯ Natural Minor

These progressions are among the most widely used in minor keys. Knowing them in F♯ minor gives you a template you can transpose to any key.

ProgressionChordsUsed in
i – iv – vF♯m – Bm – C♯mFolk, classical
i – VI – III – VIIF♯m – D – A – EPop, rock anthems
i – iv – VII – IIIF♯m – Bm – E – AAndalusian-style
VI – VII – iD – E – F♯mRock, film scores
ii° – v – iG♯dim – C♯m – F♯mClassical, jazz
i – VII – VI – VIIF♯m – E – D – EPower ballads

For a deeper dive into how progressions work, see Chord Progressions Every Musician Should Know.

Songs in the Key of F♯ Minor

F♯ minor is a dramatic, expressive key. A few well-known examples:

  • “Wicked Game” — Chris Isaak
  • “I Will Survive” — Gloria Gaynor
  • “Toccata and Fugue in D Minor” — J.S. Bach (often performed in various keys)
  • “Toxic” — Britney Spears
  • “Riders on the Storm” — The Doors
  • “It’s My Life” — Bon Jovi
  • “Personal Jesus” — Depeche Mode

Listening to these songs with the scale in mind helps you hear how melodies move through the seven notes and how chords resolve to the tonic minor.

Relative Major: A Major

Every natural minor scale has a relative major — a major scale that contains exactly the same notes but starts on a different degree. For F♯ natural minor, the relative major is A major.

F♯ natural minorF♯G♯ABC♯DE
A majorABC♯DEF♯G♯

Both scales share the same three sharps. The difference is which note functions as the tonal centre: when you resolve to F♯ the music sounds dark and minor; when you resolve to A it sounds bright and major.

To find the relative major of any natural minor scale, count up three half steps (a minor third) from the root, or simply start on the 3rd degree.

Parallel Major: F♯ Major

The parallel major is the major scale that shares the same root note. For F♯ natural minor, the parallel major is F♯ major.

ScaleNotes
F♯ natural minorF♯ – G♯ – A – B – C♯ – D – E
F♯ majorF♯ – G♯ – A♯ – B – C♯ – D♯ – E♯

Unlike the relative major (which shares the same notes), the parallel major shares the root, 2nd, 4th, and 5th degrees. Three notes change: A becomes A♯, D becomes D♯, and E becomes E♯. These raised 3rd, 6th, and 7th degrees are what shift the mood from minor to major while keeping F♯ as home.

Borrowing chords from the parallel major is a powerful songwriting technique called modal interchange. For more on this topic, see Secondary Dominants and Borrowed Chords.

F♯ natural minor is part of a family of related scales and variants:

ScaleNotesCharacter
F♯ natural minorF♯–G♯–A–B–C♯–D–EDark, reflective (you are here)
F♯ harmonic minorF♯–G♯–A–B–C♯–D–E♯Exotic, with raised 7th
F♯ melodic minorF♯–G♯–A–B–C♯–D♯–E♯Smooth, with raised 6th and 7th
F♯ minor pentatonicF♯–A–B–C♯–EStripped-down minor sound
F♯ blues scaleF♯–A–B–C–C♯–EGritty, expressive
A majorA–B–C♯–D–E–F♯–G♯Bright, resolved (relative major)

The harmonic minor raises the 7th degree (E to E♯) to create a leading tone that pulls strongly to the tonic. The melodic minor raises both the 6th and 7th degrees (D to D♯ and E to E♯) for smoother ascending melodies. The minor pentatonic removes the 2nd and 6th degrees for a five-note scale that works brilliantly for soloing.

Practice Tips

Play the scale daily. Even experienced musicians warm up with minor scales. Play it ascending and descending, hands separately, then hands together on piano. On guitar, play it in every position you know.

Compare with the parallel major. Play F♯ natural minor followed immediately by F♯ major. Hearing the three altered notes (A vs A♯, D vs D♯, E vs E♯) side by side builds your ear for the major-minor distinction.

Practise with a metronome. Start at a comfortable tempo (60–80 BPM, one note per beat) and only increase speed when every note is clean and even.

Play in thirds. Instead of F♯–G♯–A–B, play F♯–A, G♯–B, A–C♯, B–D and so on. This breaks the linear pattern and prepares you for chord construction.

Explore the chords. After playing the scale, arpeggiate each diatonic triad. Then try simple progressions like i–iv–v (F♯m–Bm–C♯m). Connecting scales to chords is where theory becomes practical music-making.

Try It Yourself

Open the Interactive Chord Finder, select F♯ as the root and Natural Minor (Aeolian) as the scale. You will see every note highlighted on the piano keyboard or guitar fretboard, the step pattern visualised as intervals, and all diatonic chords laid out in a table — ready to play and explore.

For the complete list of scales in every key, see Scales for Piano and Guitar: The Complete Reference Guide.