What is the D# Melodic Minor Scale?

The Melodic Minor scale raises both the 6th and 7th degrees of natural minor, creating a smoother melodic line. In jazz, it's used both ascending and descending, unlike its classical counterpart which descends as natural minor.

Interval Pattern: W-H-W-W-W-W-H

Scale Notes and Intervals

D# Melodic Minor

Sophisticated
D# 1
E# 2
F# 3
G# 4
A# 5
B# 6
D 7
Notes:
D# -E# -F# -G# -A# -B# -D
Intervals:
WHWWWW H

Keyboard Visualization

How to Play D# Melodic Minor on Piano

Scale Properties

Mood

Sophisticated

Character

Jazz minor, smooth

Genres

Jazz, Fusion

Notes in Scale

7 notes: D#, E#, F#, G#, A#, B#, D

Category

Minor Variants

Intervals

W-H-W-W-W-W-H

History and Origins

The Background of the Melodic Minor Scale

Originally created to smooth out the augmented 2nd of harmonic minor for vocal melodies. Jazz musicians adopted it as a standalone scale, using it to generate numerous chord-scale relationships essential to modern jazz harmony.

Musical Characteristics

Key Features of the D# Melodic Minor Scale

  • Raised 6th and 7th degrees
  • Smoother than harmonic minor
  • Parent scale for many jazz modes
  • Creates sophisticated jazz sounds

Famous Songs Using This Scale

Popular Tracks in D# Melodic Minor

  • Yesterday - The Beatles
  • Footprints - Wayne Shorter
  • Solar - Miles Davis
  • Blue in Green - Miles Davis

Playing Tips

How to Practice the D# Melodic Minor Scale

Think of it as a major scale with a flat 3rd. This scale generates the altered scale, lydian dominant, and other jazz essentials. Use over minor-major 7th chords for a sophisticated sound.

Circle of Fifths Position

D# in the Circle of Fifths

B#GDAEBF#DbG#D#A#E#AmEmBmF#mC#mG#mD#mA#mE#mB#mGmDmD#minor
Major
Minor
Selected

Transpose to Other Keys

Melodic Minor Scale in All 12 Keys

Related Scales

Similar Scales in the Key of D#

Scale Diagram

D# Melodic Minor Keyboard Diagram

D# Melodic Minor scale shown on piano keyboard with notes D#, E#, F#, G#, A#, B#, D highlighted