Root & scale

G prometheus

G

I

A

II

B

III

C♯

#IV

E

VI

F

bVII

Fretboard positions

select a scale fingering system to highlight fretting positions

E4
F
F♯
G
G♯
A
A♯
B
C
C♯
D
D♯
E
F
F♯
G
G♯
A
A♯
B
C
C♯
D
D♯
B3
C
C♯
D
D♯
E
F
F♯
G
G♯
A
A♯
B
C
C♯
D
D♯
E
F
F♯
G
G♯
A
A♯
G3
G♯
A
A♯
B
C
C♯
D
D♯
E
F
F♯
G
G♯
A
A♯
B
C
C♯
D
D♯
E
F
F♯
D3
D♯
E
F
F♯
G
G♯
A
A♯
B
C
C♯
D
D♯
E
F
F♯
G
G♯
A
A♯
B
C
C♯
A2
A♯
B
C
C♯
D
D♯
E
F
F♯
G
G♯
A
A♯
B
C
C♯
D
D♯
E
F
F♯
G
G♯
E2
F
F♯
G
G♯
A
A♯
B
C
C♯
D
D♯
E
F
F♯
G
G♯
A
A♯
B
C
C♯
D
D♯
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23

Listen to the G prometheus scale

bpm: 120
start at and

How to use the G prometheus scale

The Prometheus scale is a six-note synthetic scale known for its distinctive and modern sound. It's used in various genres, including classical and jazz.

tip
  • The Prometheus scale is a hexatonic scale famously used by Russian composer Alexander Scriabin. It has a mystical, unresolved quality, making it perfect for modern classical and jazz compositions.
  • Use the Prometheus scale to create a bright, ethereal sound, focusing on the raised 4th (IV#) to introduce harmonic tension in your improvisations.
  • Incorporate this scale into jazz fusion and progressive rock solos to add a surreal, otherworldly feel to your melodies.
  • Experiment with the Prometheus scale in modern classical music to explore atonal or modal compositions, avoiding conventional resolutions to create harmonic ambiguity.
  • Blend the Prometheus scale with whole-tone or Lydian scales to enhance its dreamlike quality, perfect for cinematic and ambient music.