A Phrygian Dominant Mode

The A Phrygian Dominant Mode has a Major quality due to its Major Third C♯. The Phrygian Dominant Mode, like A Phrygian Dominant, is based on the A Phrygian Mode but has a raised (by a semitone) Third C♯. The A Phrygian Dominant Mode is classified as a heptatonic scale as it has seven notes, A, B, C♯, D, E, F, G.

Below you will find the A Phrygian Dominant Mode notes, notation, patterns, degrees, intervals and more. You can also opt to see the A Phrygian Dominant Mode on your preferred instrument.

Notes Ascending

A, B, C♯, D, E, F, G, A

Notes Descending

A, G, F, E, D, C♯, B, A

Pattern Ascending

S, TS, S, T, S, T, T

S = Semitone, T = Tone (2 Semitones)

Pattern Descending

T, T, S, T, S, TS, S

S = Semitone, T = Tone (2 Semitones)

Degrees Ascending

NoteNumberName
A1Tonic
B2Supertonic
C♯3Mediant
D4Subdominant
E5Dominant
F6Submediant
G7Subtonic
A8Tonic (Octave)

Degrees Descending

NoteNumberName
A8Tonic (Octave)
G7Subtonic
F6Submediant
E5Dominant
D4Subdominant
C♯3Mediant
B2Supertonic
A1Tonic

Intervals Ascending

NotesSemitonesInterval
A > A0Perfect Unison (P1)
A > B1minor 2nd (m2)
A > C♯4Major 3rd (M3)
A > D5Perfect 4th (P4)
A > E7Perfect 5th (P5)
A > F8minor 6th (m6)
A > G10minor 7th (m7)
A > A12Perfect Octave (P8)

Intervals Descending

NotesSemitonesInterval
A > A0Perfect Unison (P1)
A > G2Major 2nd (M2)
A > F4Major 3rd (M3)
A > E5Perfect 4th (P4)
A > D7Perfect 5th (P5)
A > C♯8minor 6th (m6)
A > B11Major 7th (M7)
A > A12Perfect Octave (P8)

Chords related to A Phrygian Dominant Mode

Related Triads

These chords have been built using the notes of the A Phrygian Dominant Mode. The chords are in degree order and shown in Roman numerals (lowercase = minor/diminished, uppercase = Major/Augmented).

I Chord - A Major

II Chord - B Major

iiio Chord - C♯ Diminished

iv Chord - D Minor

vo Chord - E Diminished

VI+ Chord - F Augmented

vii Chord - G Minor

Learn to Play A Phrygian Dominant Mode

Instrument View

See A Phrygian Dominant Mode on

If you want to learn what scales and modes are and much more, check out our free Fundamentals of Music Theory course. If you already know some of the basics, you can jump straight into the scales lesson.

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