Scale Degree Calculator

Instantly see every note, Roman numeral and interval in any musical scale.

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The scale degree calculator shows you every note in any musical scale or mode, labelled by degree number, Roman numeral, note name and interval quality. Select a root pitch and a scale type and the full degree table — plus a mini piano diagram — updates instantly. It is built for songwriters, music theory students, guitarists, pianists and anyone learning how keys and modes work.

How it works

A musical scale is defined by a set of semitone intervals above the root. The major scale uses the pattern 0 – 2 – 4 – 5 – 7 – 9 – 11 semitones; the natural minor (Aeolian) uses 0 – 2 – 3 – 5 – 7 – 8 – 10. Given a root pitch class R (0 = C through 11 = B), degree i has pitch class:

pitch = (R + semitones[i]) mod 12

The tool stores the interval formula for each of 15 scales, applies the modular arithmetic to every step, and maps the resulting pitch class to a note name (and enharmonic equivalent where applicable). Roman numerals are pre-assigned per scale type — upper-case for major-quality chords, lower-case for minor, with ° for diminished and + for augmented.

Frequency ratios

In 12-tone equal temperament each semitone multiplies frequency by 2^(1/12). A scale degree s semitones above the root has ratio:

ratio = 2^(s / 12)

Clicking any row in the degree table displays this ratio alongside the interval name. The perfect fifth (7 semitones) gives 2^(7/12) ≈ 1.4983, extremely close to the just-intonation ratio 3:2 = 1.5. The major third (4 semitones) gives 2^(4/12) ≈ 1.2599 versus the pure 5:4 = 1.25 — a small but audible difference that drove centuries of tuning debate.

Worked example — D Dorian

Root: D  Scale: Dorian (intervals: 0, 2, 3, 5, 7, 9, 10 semitones)

DegreeRomanNoteSemitonesInterval
1iD0P1 (Unison)
2iiE2M2
3IIIF3m3
4IVG5P4
5vA7P5
6viB9M6
7VIIC10m7

Dorian is the second mode of the C major scale. Its characteristic sound comes from the major 6th on degree 6 (B natural in D Dorian) contrasted against the minor third and minor seventh. This makes it ideal for jazz and funk — Miles Davis’s “So What” and Carlos Santana’s playing are canonical examples.

Formula note

Scale degree frequency ratio (equal temperament):

f(s) = f_root × 2^(s / 12)

where s is the number of semitones above the root. The piano diagram highlights active pitch classes across one octave so you can instantly see whether a scale clusters around the white keys or crosses between natural and accidental notes.

Everything runs in your browser — no data is sent to any server.

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