---
title: What Are Modes?
category: Modes
slug: what-are-modes
related: [scales, major-scale-modes, melodic-minor-modes, chord-scale-theory]
url: https://fourthshub.com/docs/what-are-modes
---

# What Are Modes?

A **mode** is a scale derived by starting on a different degree of a parent scale while keeping all the same notes. Each starting point produces a different pattern of whole and half steps, creating a different sound and mood.

## The Concept

Take the C major scale: C-D-E-F-G-A-B. Now play from D to D using only those same notes: D-E-F-G-A-B-C-D. You are now playing **D Dorian**. Same notes as C major, but D is the tonal center, and the interval pattern (W-H-W-W-W-H-W) is different from major. This produces a minor sound with a distinctive bright 6th.

## Parent Scales

Each parent scale generates a family of modes, one starting on each degree. The four most commonly used parent scales in Western music are:

- **Major scale**: 7 modes (Ionian through Locrian)
- **Melodic minor**: 7 modes (including altered, Lydian dominant)
- **Harmonic minor**: 7 modes (including Phrygian dominant)
- **Harmonic major**: 7 modes (less common, full of unique colors)

That is 28 modes total, each with a distinct intervallic formula and sound.

## Why Modes Matter

Modes are not just academic constructs. They provide:

1. **Melodic vocabulary**: Each mode has a unique color that suggests different melodic possibilities. Lydian melodies sound fundamentally different from Phrygian melodies.

2. **Chord-scale relationships**: When you see a chord symbol, the mode tells you which notes are available and which are "avoid" notes.

3. **Compositional tools**: Writing a section in Dorian versus Aeolian creates a different emotional effect, even though both are "minor."

## Relative vs. Parallel Modes

**Relative**: D Dorian and C Ionian share the same notes. They are relative modes — same parent scale, different starting points.

**Parallel**: D Dorian and D Ionian start on the same note but have different note content. Comparing parallel modes reveals the "character notes" that define each mode's unique sound.

## On the Fretboard

In fourths tuning, each mode has one shape that moves freely across the neck. Since the tuning is symmetric, you learn one physical pattern per mode and it works in all 12 keys without modification.