Music TheoryHarmonyScales

F-Sharp Major Scale: A Complete Guide

Written by Dan Farrant

Last updated

Learning about F-Sharp major scale? In this post, we’ve put together a complete guide to everything you need to know when learning about the scale.

We’ll be looking at the notes of F-Sharp major scale, what it looks like in the treble, bass, alto, and tenor clefs, the degrees of the scale, its key signature, and lots more. Let’s get started.

Notes in F-Sharp Major Scale

The F-Sharp major scale is made up of seven notes starting on F-Sharp (which is known as the keynote). It then follows the major scale formula of whole and half steps.

Those notes are: F# G# A# B C# D# E#

As you can see, it has six sharp notes: F#, C#, G#, D#, A# and E#.

F-Sharp Major in the Treble Clef

Here are all the notes of F-Sharp major scale in the treble clef, ascending and descending.

F-Sharp Major Scale Treble Clef Ascending
F-Sharp Major Scale Ascending in the Treble Clef
F-Sharp Major Scale Treble Clef Descending
F-Sharp Major Scale Descending in the Treble Clef

F-Sharp Major in the Bass Clef

Next, we have all the notes of F-Sharp major scale in the bass clef, ascending and descending.

F-Sharp Major Scale Bass Clef Ascending
F-Sharp Major Scale Ascending in the Bass Clef
F-Sharp Major Scale Bass Clef Descending
F-Sharp Major Scale Descending in the Bass Clef

F-Sharp Major in the Alto Clef

Here are all the notes of F-Sharp major scale in the alto clef, ascending and descending.

F-Sharp Major Scale Ascending in the Alto Clef
F-Sharp Major Scale Alto Clef Descending
F-Sharp Major Scale Descending in the Alto Clef

F-Sharp Major in the Tenor Clef

And last of the clefs, here are all the notes of F-Sharp major scale in the tenor clef, ascending and descending.

F-Sharp Major Scale Tenor Clef Ascending
F-Sharp Major Scale Ascending in the Tenor Clef
F-Sharp Major Scale Tenor Clef Descending
F-Sharp Major Scale Descending in the Tenor Clef

F-Sharp Major Scale Formula

Like every major scale, F-Sharp major follows a certain formula of whole and half steps which is:

Whole step, whole step, half step, whole step, whole step, whole step, half step.

This is abbreviated to W W H W W W H.

F-Sharp Major Scale Treble Clef With Whole and Half Steps
F-Sharp Major Scale With Whole and Half Steps

Using the British terminology of tones and semitones, this would be:

Tone, tone, semitone, tone, tone, tone, semitone

Which gets abbreviated to T T S T T T S.

F-Sharp Major Scale Treble Clef With Tones and Semitones
F-Sharp Major Scale With Tones and Semitones

F-Sharp Major Scale Degrees and Technical Names

In music theory, we can refer to each note of a scale by numbers which we call the degrees of a scale.

The first note is the 1st degree, the second is the 2nd degree, the third note is the 3rd degree, etc.

But, each scale degree has another name which is called the technical names of the scale.

Here are the technical names and scale degrees of F-Sharp major scale.

  • 1st – Tonic – F#
  • 2nd – Supertonic – G#
  • 3rd – Mediant – A#
  • 4th – Subdominant – B
  • 5th – Dominant – C#
  • 6th – Submediant – D#
  • 7th – Leading tone – E#

F-Sharp Major Key Signature

To make playing in a certain key easier for the musician to read, we can use a key signature.

This helps us know to play certain notes sharp or flat without having to read an accidental each time.

F-Sharp major has six sharps in its key signature: F#, C#, G#, D#, A# and E#.

Here’s the key signature for F-Sharp major in the treble, alto, tenor, and bass clefs.

F-Sharp Major Key Signature

What is the Relative Minor of F-Sharp Major?

Every major key has a relative minor key. What makes them related is that they both share the same key signature.

The relative minor key of F-Sharp major is D-Sharp Minor.

Here is D-Sharp natural minor scale, which uses all the same notes as F-Sharp major but starts on D-Sharp, which is its keynote: D# E# F# G# A# B C#

D-Sharp Natural Minor Scale Ascending in the Treble Clef
D-Sharp Natural Minor Scale Descending in the Treble Clef

But how do we know that D-Sharp minor is the relative minor of F-Sharp major? Well, to work out the relative minor key of a major one, all we have to do is go down three half steps (semitones).

So from F#, we go down one half step to F, a second half step to E, and a third half step to D#: F# > F > E > D#

Conclusion

That’s it for the scale of F-Sharp major! We hope it helped make a bit more sense of everything.

Feel free to use this post as a reference when referring to the notes of F-Sharp major scale.

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Dan Farrant, the founder of Hello Music Theory, has been teaching music for over 15 years, helping hundreds of thousands of students unlock the joy of music. He graduated from The Royal Academy of Music in 2012 and then launched Hello Music Theory in 2014. He plays the guitar, piano, bass guitar and double bass and loves teaching music theory.