Scale Theory

E♭ Dorian Scale: Notes, Chords, and How to Play It

By Interactive Chord Finder ·

E♭ Dorian is built on the 2nd degree of D♭ major, with five flats. It sits deeper in the flat key spectrum, giving it a rich, velvety character prized in jazz, orchestral writing, and atmospheric electronic music. The Dorian mode’s characteristic raised 6th (C natural) provides the familiar brightness within the minor tonality, creating a sound that is dark yet refined.

What Makes Dorian Different?

The Dorian mode is built on the 2nd degree of a major scale. E♭ Dorian uses the notes of D♭ major starting and ending on E♭. Compared to E♭ natural minor (E♭ Aeolian), the only difference is the raised 6th degree — C natural instead of C♭. That single note lifts the mood from dark minor to something more luminous and sophisticated.

For a full explanation of all seven modes, see Modes Explained: Dorian to Locrian.

Notes of the E♭ Dorian Scale

The E♭ Dorian scale contains seven notes:

E♭ – F – G♭ – A♭ – B♭ – C – D♭

The scale follows the Dorian interval pattern — W – H – W – W – W – H – W — and returns to E♭ one octave higher.

DegreeNoteInterval from RootStep to Next
1 (Root)E♭UnisonWhole step
2FMajor 2ndHalf step
3G♭Minor 3rdWhole step
4A♭Perfect 4thWhole step
5B♭Perfect 5thWhole step
6CMajor 6thHalf step
7D♭Minor 7thWhole step
8E♭Octave

The half steps fall between F–G♭ (degrees 2–3) and C–D♭ (degrees 6–7). The major 6th (C natural) is the defining characteristic — it is what separates Dorian from natural minor.

E♭ Dorian on Piano

E♭ Dorian has five black keys (E♭, G♭, A♭, B♭, and D♭), with only F and C as white keys. The fingers ride predominantly along the black keys with brief drops to the white keys.

Right hand fingering (ascending): 2 – 1 – 2 – 3 – 1 – 2 – 3 – (second finger on E♭, thumb drops to F)

Left hand fingering (ascending): 3 – 2 – 1 – 3 – 2 – 1 – (third finger starts on E♭)

Drone a low E♭ with your left hand while playing the scale with your right to lock in the Dorian sound.

E♭ Dorian on Guitar

On guitar, E♭ Dorian works well in the 6th position (starting from E♭ on the 5th string, 6th fret) or the 11th position (starting from E♭ on the 6th string, 11th fret).

6th position (low to high):

StringFretNote
5th (A)6E♭
5th (A)8F
4th (D)4G♭
4th (D)6A♭
4th (D)8B♭
3rd (G)5C
3rd (G)6D♭
3rd (G)8E♭

This covers one octave from E♭ on the 5th string to E♭ on the 3rd string.

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

Diatonic Chords in E♭ Dorian

Stacking thirds on each scale degree produces seven triads:

DegreeChordQualityNotes
iE♭mMinorE♭ – G♭ – B♭
iiFmMinorF – A♭ – C
IIIG♭MajorG♭ – B♭ – D♭
IVA♭MajorA♭ – C – E♭
vB♭mMinorB♭ – D♭ – F
vi°CdimDiminishedC – E♭ – G♭
VIID♭MajorD♭ – F – A♭

The IV chord (A♭ major) is the signature Dorian chord — a major chord built on the 4th degree in a minor context. In E♭ natural minor the IV chord would be A♭m; the A♭ major here creates the bright Dorian colour.

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

Seventh Chords

Adding a fourth note to each triad creates seventh chords:

DegreeChordQualityNotes
i7E♭m7Minor 7thE♭ – G♭ – B♭ – D♭
ii7Fm7Minor 7thF – A♭ – C – E♭
IIImaj7G♭maj7Major 7thG♭ – B♭ – D♭ – F
IV7A♭7Dominant 7thA♭ – C – E♭ – G♭
v7B♭m7Minor 7thB♭ – D♭ – F – A♭
viø7Cm7♭5Half-diminishedC – E♭ – G♭ – B♭
VIImaj7D♭maj7Major 7thD♭ – F – A♭ – C

For more on seventh chords, see Seventh Chords: The Complete Guide.

Common Chord Progressions in E♭ Dorian

Dorian progressions rely on vamps and loops rather than strong cadences.

ProgressionChordsUsed in
i – IVE♭m – A♭The Dorian vamp (jazz, soul)
i – ii – III – IVE♭m – Fm – G♭ – A♭Modal rock, fusion
i – IV – VIIE♭m – A♭ – D♭Soul, R&B
i – VII – IVE♭m – D♭ – A♭Funk, pop
i7 – IV7E♭m7 – A♭7Jazz comping, soul
i – III – VII – IVE♭m – G♭ – D♭ – A♭Modern pop, EDM

The i – IV vamp (E♭m – A♭) is the quintessential Dorian sound. The A♭ major chord contains the C natural that defines the mode. For more on progressions, see Chord Progressions Every Musician Should Know.

Songs That Use E♭ Dorian

E♭ Dorian is less common in pop but appears in jazz and orchestral music:

  • “Flamenco Sketches” — Miles Davis (sections)
  • “Blue in Green” — Miles Davis (modal sections)
  • “Speak No Evil” — Wayne Shorter (passages)
  • “Mystic Brew” — Ronnie Foster (Dorian flavour)

The key’s depth makes it ideal for atmospheric and introspective music.

Parent Major Scale and Modal Relationships

E♭ Dorian is the 2nd mode of D♭ major. Every mode of D♭ major shares the same seven notes but starts on a different degree:

Scale / ModeStarting NoteCharacter
D♭ major (Ionian)D♭Bright, resolved
E♭ DorianE♭Minor with a lifted feel (you are here)
F PhrygianFDark, Spanish flavour
G♭ LydianG♭Dreamy, floating major
A♭ MixolydianA♭Bluesy, relaxed major
B♭ natural minor (Aeolian)B♭Dark, reflective
C LocrianCUnstable, diminished

Dorian vs Natural Minor

The only difference between E♭ Dorian and E♭ natural minor is the 6th degree:

ScaleNotes6th Degree
E♭ DorianE♭ – F – G♭ – A♭ – B♭ – C – D♭Major 6th (C)
E♭ natural minorE♭ – F – G♭ – A♭ – B♭ – C♭ – D♭Minor 6th (C♭)

That single semitone difference — C versus C♭ — changes the IV chord from minor (A♭m) to major (A♭) and gives Dorian its characteristic brightness within a minor framework.

Practice Tips

Drone on E♭. Play or loop a low E♭ note and improvise using the scale over it. This trains your ear to hear E♭ as the tonal centre.

Emphasise the C natural. When practising, linger on the 6th degree. This is the note that defines the Dorian sound.

Practise the i–IV vamp. Loop E♭m–A♭ on a keyboard or guitar and solo over it.

Play in thirds and sixths. Instead of running the scale linearly, play E♭–G♭, F–A♭, G♭–B♭ and so on.

Compare with natural minor. Play E♭ natural minor immediately after E♭ Dorian to hear the difference. The C♭ versus C is subtle but unmistakable.

Try It Yourself

Open the Interactive Chord Finder, select E♭ as the root and Dorian 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.