Site Logo

Saxophone Scale Finder

Learn scales on your saxophone for free. Plays real per-note samples. Set the tempo to 30 bpm for clarity.

30 bpm

Metronome

Alto saxophone on transparent background
Alto saxophone

Quick Links

FAQ

What’s the difference between written and concert pitch?

Written is what sax players read; concert is what it sounds like. E♭ saxes (Alto/Baritone) and B♭ saxes (Tenor/Soprano) transpose differently.

Why does the scale start on the scale’s letter?

Scales always start on their tonic (F major starts on F, etc.). The tool builds two octaves from that tonic, within each horn’s practical written range.

Do you pitch-shift the samples?

No. Each pill expects its own file in /sounds_sax (e.g., Gsharp4.wav or G#4.wav). This keeps the tone realistic.

My note doesn’t play—what’s wrong?

The matching file likely isn’t present. Make sure the filename exactly matches the pill’s note (case-sensitive on some hosts).

Which filename style should I use, sharps or words?

Either works. The tool tries both symbols (G#4.wav, Db4.wav) and words (Gsharp4.wav, Dflat4.wav).

What are the practical ranges?

Baritone: A3–F(♯)6; Alto/Tenor/Soprano: B♭3–F(♯)6. Actual horns may vary (e.g., high-F♯ key).

Can it loop up and down?

Yes. Use Play Mode → “Asc→Desc (once)” or “Asc (loop)”.

Why do enharmonics change (G♯ vs A♭)?

The spelling adapts to the chosen key to keep notation musical. You can force sharps or flats via the “Show Note Names” control.

Saxophone samples used in the saxophone scale finder tool are courtesy of the Philharmonia Orchestra and are provided freely for any use, including commercial. These must not be redistributed as raw samples or a sampler pack. Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution‑ShareAlike 3.0 Unported .