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A Major Scale

A–B–C#–D–E–F#–G#

The A Major scale has 7 notes: A–B–C#–D–E–F#–G#. Its character: bright, happy, and resolved — the sound of resolution and joy.

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. You'll hear it most in pop, rock, country and classical.

Because A Major shares its notes with F# minor (its relative minor), every shape on the fretboard below does double duty — learn it once, use it in both keys. Start with one position, loop a backing track in A, and connect neighboring positions as they become comfortable.

A Major Scale on the Fretboard

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

A Major scale fretboard diagram, standard tuning357912EF#G#ABC#DEBC#DEF#G#ABG#ABC#DEF#DEF#G#ABC#DABC#DEF#G#AEF#G#ABC#DE

Notes and Intervals

IntervalR234567
NoteABC#DEF#G#

Chords in A Major

These seven chords are built from the scale itself — any progression using them stays in key.

IiiiiiIVVvivii°
ABmDbmDEF#mAb°

Songs That Use the Major 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.

A Major Scale FAQ

What notes are in the A Major scale?

A Major contains 7 notes: A–B–C#–D–E–F#–G#. The interval formula is R–2–3–4–5–6–7.

What is the A Major scale used for?

Bright, happy, and resolved — the sound of resolution and joy. It's a core vocabulary scale in pop, rock, country and classical — used for riffs, solos, and melodies over major-key progressions in A.

What is the relative minor of A major?

F# minor. A Major uses exactly the same notes as F# minor, just starting from a different root — so every shape on the fretboard works for both keys.

How do I practice the A Major scale?

Pick one position, play it ascending and descending with a metronome until it's clean, then improvise over a backing track in A so your ear connects the shapes to the sound. 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.

Related Scales

Practice A Major with real feedback

Guitar Quest listens to your real guitar and turns scale practice into a game — run scales to battle monsters, with every note checked by pitch detection. Free in your browser, no signup needed.

A Major Scale on Guitar: Notes, Positions & Theory | OpenFret