E♭ Dominant penta Scale

123456789101112131415FGB♭D♭E♭FGD♭E♭FGB♭D♭GB♭D♭E♭FGB♭E♭FGB♭D♭E♭FB♭D♭E♭FGB♭FGB♭D♭E♭FG

E♭ Dominant penta contains 5 notes: E♭, F, G, B♭, D♭. It has 3 flats: E♭, B♭, D♭. The step pattern is W–W–W+H–W+H–W.

A stripped-down Mixolydian with only 5 notes and no half steps. It keeps the strong chord tones of a dominant 7th plus the 2nd for melodic movement, creating a clean, forgiving palette for blues-rock soloing.

The formula is 1, 2, 3, 5, b7. It removes the 4th and 6th from Mixolydian, eliminating all half-step intervals. With only 5 notes matching a dominant 7th chord (R, 3, 5, b7) plus the 2nd, it's as forgiving as the major/minor pentatonics but with a distinctly dominant flavor.

The shapes are comfortable and similar to major pentatonic with the 6th replaced by a b7. Use it over dominant 7th and 9th chords for simple, clean phrasing without the "minor pentatonic over a major chord" clash. Great for country bends and blues-rock double stops.

Step pattern W – W – W+H – W+H – W
E♭FGB♭D♭E♭TT33T
E♭·B♭·D♭·8
𝄞E♭FGB♭D♭E♭ (8)
E♭ Mixolydian pentatonicE♭ Dominant pentatonic
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