E Ionian Mode
E–F#–G#–A–B–C#–D#
E Ionian is the 1st mode of the major scale — it is the E major scale itself (E–F#–G#–A–B–C#–D#), viewed as the starting point of the modal system. Its character: bright, happy, and resolved — the sound of resolution and joy.
"Ionian" is simply the modal name for the major scale — same notes, same shapes, same sound. The name earns its keep when you think modally: the other six modes are all measured against Ionian as the reference point. The major 3rd and major 7th create a sense of completeness. The half-step between the 7th and root (leading tone) pulls strongly toward resolution.
Because every mode of E major shares the same seven notes, any E major fretboard shape works for E Ionian — what changes is the note you resolve to. Loop a E vamp or a backing track that stays on E, keep resolving your phrases to E, and the Ionian color comes through. You'll hear this sound in pop, rock, country and classical.
E Ionian is mode 1 of E Major — same seven notes, resolved to E instead. It’s note-for-note identical to the E major scale, covered in full in the scale library.
E Ionian on the Fretboard
Standard tuning, frets 0–12. Every dot is a note in the mode — blue dots are the root (E).
Notes and Intervals
| Interval | R | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Note | E | F# | G# | A | B | C# | D# |
The highlighted D# is the major 7th (leading tone) — the note that gives Ionian its sound.
Chords in E Ionian
The seven chords of E Major, reordered to start from E — vamping between the first two or three keeps the Ionian sound from collapsing back into the parent key.
Songs That Use the Ionian Sound
The Beatles — “Let It Be”
Built entirely on C major scale tones. The piano melody in the intro walks through the major scale, and McCartney's vocal melody stays within the scale throughout.
Bob Marley — “Three Little Birds”
In A major. The vocal melody uses the bright major scale to deliver the uplifting 'every little thing is gonna be alright' hook — a textbook example of how major tonality conveys optimism.
Journey — “Don't Stop Believin'”
In E major. The iconic piano riff outlines the major scale, and the guitar solo stays rooted in E major patterns around the 9th–12th fret positions.
E Ionian Mode FAQ
What is the E Ionian mode?
E Ionian is the 1st mode of the E major scale — the same seven notes starting from E: E–F#–G#–A–B–C#–D#. The interval formula is R–2–3–4–5–6–7.
Is E Ionian the same as the E major scale?
Yes — identical notes, identical shapes. "Ionian" is the modal name for the major scale, used when comparing it against the other six modes. Every E major position on the fretboard is an E Ionian position.
What chords work with E Ionian?
The seven chords of the parent E major scale, reordered to start from E: E (I), F#m (ii), Abm (iii), A (IV), B (V), Dbm (vi), Eb° (vii°). A two-chord vamp between E and A is the classic way to establish the Ionian sound without drifting back to the parent key.
What modes share their notes with E Ionian?
All seven modes of E major use these exact notes — each one just treats a different note as home: F# Dorian, Ab Phrygian, A Lydian, B Mixolydian, Db Aeolian, and Eb Locrian.
How do I practice the E Ionian mode?
Modes live and die by harmonic context — run over a static E vamp or a drone on E, not a full progression that pulls back to the parent key. Play the E major shapes you already know, resolve every phrase to E, and lean on the major 7th (leading tone) (D#). OpenFret's free Studio has a fretboard viewer and metronome for exactly this, and Guitar Quest turns scale practice into a game with real-time pitch detection.
Modes Sharing These Notes
All seven modes of E Major use the same seven notes — each one treats a different note as home.
Related Modes
Practice E Ionian with real feedback
Guitar Quest listens to your real guitar and turns scale practice into a game — run modes to battle monsters, with every note checked by pitch detection. Free in your browser, no signup needed.