E Major Pentatonic Scale
E–F#–G#–B–C#
The E Major Pentatonic scale has 5 notes: E–F#–G#–B–C#. Its character: bright, sweet, and uplifting — the sound of country, southern rock, and feel-good melodies.
Same five notes as minor pentatonic but from a different root. The major 2nd and major 3rd give it an optimistic, open quality distinct from minor pentatonic's rawness. You'll hear it most in country, rock, blues and pop.
Because E Major Pentatonic shares its notes with Db minor pentatonic (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 E, and connect neighboring positions as they become comfortable.
E Major Pentatonic Scale on the Fretboard
Standard tuning, frets 0–12. Every dot is a note in the scale — blue dots are the root (E).
Notes and Intervals
| Interval | R | 2 | 3 | 5 | 6 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Note | E | F# | G# | B | C# |
Songs That Use the Major Pentatonic Sound
Lynyrd Skynyrd — “Sweet Home Alabama”
In G major pentatonic. The intro lick and recurring lead fills are textbook major pentatonic runs around the 3rd–5th fret area.
The Allman Brothers Band — “Blue Sky”
In E major pentatonic. The dual guitar harmonies and Dickey Betts' lead lines use major pentatonic extensively, creating the song's bright, open feel.
Chuck Berry — “Johnny B. Goode”
In Bb major pentatonic. The opening riff is one of the most recognizable major pentatonic phrases in music history — two-string bends and double-stops straight from the scale.
E Major Pentatonic Scale FAQ
What notes are in the E Major Pentatonic scale?
E Major Pentatonic contains 5 notes: E–F#–G#–B–C#. The interval formula is R–2–3–5–6.
What is the E Major Pentatonic scale used for?
Bright, sweet, and uplifting — the sound of country, southern rock, and feel-good melodies. It's a core vocabulary scale in country, rock, blues and pop — used for riffs, solos, and melodies over major-key progressions in E.
What is the relative minor of E major?
Db minor. E Major Pentatonic uses exactly the same notes as Db minor pentatonic, just starting from a different root — so every shape on the fretboard works for both keys.
How do I practice the E Major Pentatonic scale?
Pick one position, play it ascending and descending with a metronome until it's clean, then improvise over a backing track in E 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 E Major Pentatonic 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.