B Locrian Guitar Scale
Guitar scale in Open A tuning — fretboard diagram
B Locrian in Open A — Notes and Intervals
The B Locrian scale is the seventh and most unstable mode of the major scale. On Guitar, the notes are B, C, D, E, F, G, A. It sounds highly dissonant and unresolved, as its home chord is a diminished triad. While rare as a primary key, it is a crucial technical tool for jazz musicians improvising over half-diminished chords in tension-heavy passages. The diatonic chords of B Locrian are Bm7b5, CMaj7, Dm7, Em7, FMaj7, G7, Am7. Commonly used in Jazz, Metal, Experimental, Avant-Garde. Notable players include John Coltrane, Meshuggah, Dream Theater. Use over m7b5 (half-diminished) chords. Essential for jazz ii-V-i in minor keys where the ii chord is half-diminished.
Notes: B, C, D, E, F, G, A
Intervals: 1P, 2m, 3m, 4P, 5d, 6m, 7m
Degrees: 1 b2 b3 4 5 b6 b7
Formula: H-W-W-H-W-W-W
Number of notes: 7
Tuning: Open A (E-A-E-A-C#-E)
Diatonic Chords
Bm7♭5 — CMaj7 — Dm7 — Em7 — FMaj7 — G7 — Am7
About Open A Tuning
Open A tuning (E-A-E-A-C#-E) produces an A major chord when strummed open. It is structurally identical to Open G tuned up one whole step, delivering a brighter, more tense sound that works particularly well for slide guitar centered on the key of A.
Jimmy Page used Open A with a slide on Led Zeppelin's 'In My Time of Dying' from Physical Graffiti (1975). Rory Gallagher also employed Open A for his raw, energetic slide work. Many players achieve Open A by simply placing a capo at the 2nd fret in Open G tuning, which is why dedicated Open A usage is less commonly discussed. However, without a capo, Open A gives direct access to the open A string resonance and a different feel under the fingers due to the higher tension.
Notable artists: Jimmy Page, Rory Gallagher, Delta blues players
Best for: Slide guitar in the key of A, blues playing, and situations where you need the brightness of Open G tuned up without a capo
Musical Character
The only mode with a diminished 5th (b5) from the root, making its home chord a diminished triad. This instability means Locrian is almost never used as a key center — it is a tool for tension.
Explore This Scale in Other Tunings
- B Locrian in Standard Tuning
- B Locrian in Drop D
- B Locrian in DADGAD
- B Locrian in Open G
- B Locrian in Baritone (B Standard)
- B Locrian in 7-string
- B Locrian in 8-string
- B Locrian in Drop C
- B Locrian in Drop B
- B Locrian in Open D
- B Locrian in Half Step Down
- B Locrian in Open E
- B Locrian in Double Drop D
- B Locrian in Open C