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F Aeolian Mode

F–G–Ab–Bb–C–Db–Eb

F Aeolian is the 6th mode of the Ab major scale: F–G–Ab–Bb–C–Db–Eb. Its character: dark, emotional, and melancholic — identical to natural minor.

"Aeolian" is the modal name for the natural minor scale — identical notes and shapes. The flat 3rd, flat 6th, and flat 7th create the classic minor sound. Aeolian is the natural minor scale named as a mode, commonly used in modal contexts. Thinking of it as the 6th mode of Ab major is what unlocks the fretboard: every Ab major shape you know is also an F Aeolian shape.

Because every mode of Ab major shares the same seven notes, any Ab major fretboard shape works for F Aeolian — what changes is the note you resolve to. Loop a Fm vamp or a backing track that stays on F, keep resolving your phrases to F, and the Aeolian color comes through. You'll hear this sound in rock, metal, pop and classical.

F Aeolian is mode 6 of Ab Major — same seven notes, resolved to F instead. It’s note-for-note identical to the F minor scale, covered in full in the scale library.

F Aeolian on the Fretboard

Standard tuning, frets 0–12. Every dot is a note in the mode — blue dots are the root (F).

F Aeolian mode fretboard diagram, standard tuning357912FGAbBbCDbEbCDbEbFGAbBbGAbBbCDbEbFGEbFGAbBbCDbBbCDbEbFGAbFGAbBbCDbEb

Notes and Intervals

IntervalR2♭345♭6♭7
NoteFGAbBbCDbEb

The highlighted Db is the flat 6th — the note that gives Aeolian its sound.

Chords in F Aeolian

The seven chords of Ab Major, reordered to start from F — vamping between the first two or three keeps the Aeolian sound from collapsing back into the parent key.

iii°♭IIIivv♭VI♭VII
FmAbBbmCmDbEb

Songs That Use the Aeolian Sound

R.E.M. — “Losing My Religion

In A Aeolian (A minor). The mandolin riff and vocal melody navigate the natural minor scale, staying purely diatonic for its haunting quality.

Radiohead — “Exit Music (For a Film)

In B Aeolian. The acoustic guitar arpeggios and Thom Yorke's melody use the natural minor scale to build from intimate to devastating.

Iron Maiden — “Fear of the Dark

In B Aeolian. The galloping riff and twin-guitar harmonies are built entirely from the Aeolian mode, a staple of heavy metal composition.

F Aeolian Mode FAQ

What is the F Aeolian mode?

F Aeolian is the 6th mode of the Ab major scale — the same seven notes starting from F: F–G–Ab–Bb–C–Db–Eb. The interval formula is R–2–♭3–4–5–♭6–♭7.

Is F Aeolian the same as F natural minor?

Yes — identical notes, identical shapes. "Aeolian" is the modal name for the natural minor scale, used when treating it as one of the seven modes of Ab major rather than as a key of its own.

What chords work with F Aeolian?

The seven chords of the parent Ab major scale, reordered to start from F: Fm (i), G° (ii°), Ab (♭III), Bbm (iv), Cm (v), Db (♭VI), Eb (♭VII). A two-chord vamp between Fm and Eb is the classic way to establish the Aeolian sound without drifting back to the parent key.

What major scale has the same notes as F Aeolian?

Ab major. F Aeolian uses exactly the notes of Ab major starting from its 6th degree, so every Ab major shape on the fretboard doubles as a F Aeolian shape. The same notes also spell Ab Ionian, Bb Dorian, C Phrygian, Db Lydian, Eb Mixolydian, and G Locrian.

How do I practice the F Aeolian mode?

Modes live and die by harmonic context — run over a static Fm vamp or a drone on F, not a full progression that pulls back to the parent key. Play the Ab major shapes you already know, resolve every phrase to F, and lean on the flat 6th (Db). 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 Ab Major use the same seven notes — each one treats a different note as home.

Related Modes

Practice F Aeolian 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.

F Aeolian Mode on Guitar: Notes, Chords & Theory | OpenFret