Drop D left-handed scale chart
G# Minor Pentatonic Left-Handed Guitar Scale Chart
Minor Pentatonic scale notes, mirrored lefty fretboard positions and standard tab in Drop D.
G# Minor Pentatonic in Drop D tuning gives you the notes G#, B, C#, D#, F# across a mirrored left-handed fretboard. Drop D leaves most of the neck familiar but changes the bass side immediately, which is especially relevant for left-handed players who use mirrored rhythm charts. The mirrored chart makes box one feel natural to a left-handed eye, which matters because this is often the first scale lefty players learn.
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Charts are mirrored for left-handed players. Standard tablature below stays unchanged because tab does not flip with handedness.
Primary Chart
Scale View
Full neck left-handed mirror view. Use Position 1 first, then move across the smaller windows.
0-4 frets in mirrored left-handed view
4-8 frets in mirrored left-handed view
9-13 frets in mirrored left-handed view
14-18 frets in mirrored left-handed view
18-22 frets in mirrored left-handed view
Standard Reference
Tab & Shape Readout
Position 1 Tab
E|---------------------------------2--4--| B|------------------------0--2--4--------| G|------------------1--4-----------------| D|------------1--4-----------------------| A|------2--4-----------------------------| D|1--4-----------------------------------|
0-4 frets • 13 note position run
Position 1 Tab
E|---------------------------------2--4--| B|------------------------0--2--4--------| G|------------------1--4-----------------| D|------------1--4-----------------------| A|------2--4-----------------------------| D|1--4-----------------------------------|
0-4 frets • 13 note position run
Position 2 Tab
E|---------------------------------4--7--| B|---------------------------4--7--------| G|------------------4--6--8--------------| D|------------4--6-----------------------| A|------4--6-----------------------------| D|4--6-----------------------------------|
4-8 frets • 13 note position run
Position 3 Tab
E|------------------------------------9--11-| B|------------------------------9--12-------| G|------------------------11-13-------------| D|---------------9--11-13-------------------| A|---------9--11----------------------------| D|9--11-13----------------------------------|
9-13 frets • 14 note position run
Position 4 Tab
E|---------------------------------14-16-| B|---------------------------14-16-------| G|---------------------16-18-------------| D|---------------16-18-------------------| A|------14-16-18-------------------------| D|16-18----------------------------------|
14-18 frets • 13 note position run
Position 5 Tab
E|------------------------------19-21-| B|------------------------19-21-------| G|------------------18-20-------------| D|------------18-21-------------------| A|------18-21-------------------------| D|18-21-------------------------------|
18-22 frets • 12 note position run
Context
How To Use This Page
Minor Pentatonic feels direct, punchy and riff-friendly and is useful for blues-rock solos, familiar lead guitar and stubborn riff writing.
When a right-handed teacher says start on the sixth string, go to the far-right string in this chart and keep the tab as your note-order reference.
Anchor the root and b7, then bring in bends around the b3 for feel instead of speed alone
Drop D feels heavier on the low end while staying familiar on the top five strings. It makes low-string riffs and one-finger power movement faster to understand in left-handed view.
- G#
- B
- C#
- D#
- F#
Next Step
Matching Left-Handed Chords
These chord pages use the same tuning and key centre so you can move straight from a scale chart into left-handed rhythm work.
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