A Minor Pentatonic Scale on Piano
Diagram, notes, and audio for the A Minor Pentatonic scale on piano. Free in your browser.
About A Minor Pentatonic on piano
Players reach for the A Minor Pentatonic on piano when they want immediate musical results. It is bluesy, vocal, and instantly singable, and you can hear that mood in every phrase you build from it. Run through A, C, D, E, G once aloud — that is the full set, and every other note is outside the scale.
Pianists often play the pentatonic on the black keys (in F#) to get that instant hook sound; here you see the same shape transposed into your chosen key. What makes it sound like itself is the gap pattern between notes; transposing to A keeps that pattern intact. Save this page and come back to it whenever you need a reference for A in this scale type.
Frequently asked questions
- What notes are in the A Minor Pentatonic scale?
- The A Minor Pentatonic scale contains the notes A, C, D, E, G. That is 5 pitch classes, played in that order from the root upward.
- What does Minor Pentatonic mean in music theory?
- Minor 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 A as the root just shifts every pitch up or down without changing the scale's character.
- How do I practise A Minor Pentatonic on piano?
- 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 A.
Switch instruments
See A Minor Pentatonic on a different instrument — same notes, new diagram.