B Major Pentatonic Scale on Guitar
Diagram, notes, and audio for the B Major Pentatonic scale on guitar. Free in your browser.
About B Major Pentatonic on guitar
If you have only one scale in your back pocket on guitar, make it the B Major Pentatonic. Players describe its sound as open, country-flavoured, and forgiving, and that lines up with the theory underneath. Its pitches in order are B, C#, D#, F#, G#, and any of those notes is a safe landing spot in this key.
Across the guitar neck the pentatonic shape connects naturally between positions, so most lead players treat it as one big map rather than five small ones. From a music-theory angle the scale's interval pattern matters more than the note names — start on a different root and you still hear the same flavour. Save this page and come back to it whenever you need a reference for B in this scale type.
Frequently asked questions
- What notes are in the B Major Pentatonic scale?
- The B Major Pentatonic scale contains the notes B, C#, D#, F#, G#. That is 5 pitch classes, played in that order from the root upward.
- What does Major Pentatonic mean in music theory?
- Major Pentatonic is five notes selected from a parent diatonic scale to remove the most dissonant tones. The interval pattern is the same in every key — choosing B as the root just shifts every pitch up or down without changing the scale's character.
- How do I practise B Major Pentatonic on guitar?
- Start with the diagram on this page, play the notes slowly ascending and descending, then add a metronome at a comfortable tempo. Once the fingering is automatic, try improvising short phrases that always land back on B.
Switch instruments
See B Major Pentatonic on a different instrument — same notes, new diagram.