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F Lydian Mode

F–G–A–B–C–D–E

F Lydian is the 4th mode of the C major scale: F–G–A–B–C–D–E. Its character: dreamy, floating, and ethereal — major with a mystical quality.

The raised 4th (#4) is the only difference from major. This one note eliminates the only 'avoid note' in the major scale, making everything sound open and weightless. On guitar, target the raised 4th (B) in your phrases — landing on it against the root is what makes a line sound Lydian instead of plain major.

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

F Lydian is mode 4 of C Major — same seven notes, resolved to F instead.

F Lydian on the Fretboard

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

F Lydian mode fretboard diagram, standard tuning357912EFGABCDEBCDEFGABGABCDEFGDEFGABCDABCDEFGAEFGABCDE

Notes and Intervals

IntervalR23#4567
NoteFGABCDE

The highlighted B is the raised 4th — the note that gives Lydian its sound.

Lydian vs. Major

Everything else about the two scales is identical — these are the only degrees that change.

F majorF LydianNote
4#4B

Chords in F Lydian

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

IIIiii#iv°Vvivii
FGAmCDmEm

Songs That Use the Lydian Sound

Steve Vai — “The Riddle

Steve Vai is a Lydian devotee. The floating, otherworldly quality of his lead lines comes from emphasizing the #4 over major-sounding backing tracks.

Joe Satriani — “Flying in a Blue Dream

The dreamy, soaring quality of the main melody comes from Lydian's raised 4th. The #4 creates a sense of floating rather than resolving.

The Simpsons — “Main Theme (Danny Elfman)

The iconic theme is in C Lydian — the F# (raised 4th) in the melody line is what gives it that quirky, slightly off-kilter feel.

F Lydian Mode FAQ

What is the F Lydian mode?

F Lydian is the 4th mode of the C major scale — the same seven notes starting from F: F–G–A–B–C–D–E. The interval formula is R–2–3–#4–5–6–7.

What is the difference between F Lydian and F major?

One note: where F major has 4, F Lydian has #4 (B). That single half-step is the entire difference in sound — everything else about the two scales is identical.

What chords work with F Lydian?

The seven chords of the parent C major scale, reordered to start from F: F (I), G (II), Am (iii), B° (#iv°), C (V), Dm (vi), Em (vii). A two-chord vamp between F and G is the classic way to establish the Lydian sound without drifting back to the parent key.

What major scale has the same notes as F Lydian?

C major. F Lydian uses exactly the notes of C major starting from its 4th degree, so every C major shape on the fretboard doubles as a F Lydian shape. The same notes also spell C Ionian, D Dorian, E Phrygian, G Mixolydian, A Aeolian, and B Locrian.

How do I practice the F Lydian mode?

Modes live and die by harmonic context — run over a static F vamp or a drone on F, not a full progression that pulls back to the parent key. Play the C major shapes you already know, resolve every phrase to F, and lean on the raised 4th (B). 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 C Major use the same seven notes — each one treats a different note as home.

Related Modes

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