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JolyMusic Theory Lab
Hirajoshi Scale Explained: Five Notes, Strong Image
Explore Hirajoshi as a compact five-note color for memorable melodic writing.
Published May 25, 2026, 4:48 AM
Explore Hirajoshi as a compact five-note color for memorable melodic writing.
Hirajoshi is a five-note Japanese scale often taught as 1, 2, b3, 5, b6. In C, that gives C, D, Eb, G, Ab. The scale is compact but vivid because it avoids the fourth and seventh while keeping a strong minor third and flat sixth color.
Keyscale State
C Hirajoshi - 1 2 b3 5 b6
Root: CTones: C D Eb G AbIntervals: 1 2 b3 5 b6Character: Sparse, minor, suspended
Why the gaps matter
| Feature | Effect | Composition use |
|---|---|---|
| No 4th | Less direct suspension behavior | Leaves space around the tonic |
| No 7th | No leading-tone pressure | Keeps the line modal instead of cadential |
| b3 and b6 | Strong minor color | Creates instant emotional contour |
| Large G-Ab-C region | Distinctive melodic leap space | Good for hooks and answers |
Exercise
Write a two-cell Hirajoshi theme
ComposerScale Study
Create one rising cell and one answering falling cell using only C, D, Eb, G, and Ab. Keep the rhythm memorable before adding harmony.
SkillPentatonic composition
Cells2
LengthOne bar each
Levelall
Because the scale has fewer notes, every rhythmic and registral choice becomes more audible. A strong Hirajoshi melody usually sounds designed, not filled in.