Locrian Mode

Locrian Mode

Diminished mode with ♭2 and ♭5; unstable, used for color not functional tonics.

Locrian Mode

Parentage: 7th mode of the Major Scale

Interval Formula: H – W – W – H – W – W – W

Degrees: 1 – ♭2 – ♭3 – 4 – ♭5 – ♭6 – ♭7

Chords built on degrees: i°, ♭II, ♭III, iv, ♭V, ♭VI, ♭VII

Structure and Function

Locrian is the darkest and most unstable of the diatonic modes.

It begins on the 7th degree of the major scale and features both a flattened 2nd and a flattened 5th, removing the perfect fifth that normally stabilizes tonality.

This results in a mode that lacks a true tonal center —

it sounds tense and unresolved by design, functioning best as a passing color or to imply harmonic instability rather than a self-contained key.

Formula in B Locrian (from C Major):

B C D E F G A B

DegreeFunctionIntervalChordNashvilleComment
:
-:
:



-
:

-
:
-
:

-:
:








1Tonic0Bdim1Unstable root
♭2Supertonic+1Cmaj♭2Harsh dissonant interval
♭3Mediant+3Dmin♭3Defines minor quality
4Subdominant+5Emin4Passing tension
♭5Diminished 5th+6Fmaj♭5Removes harmonic anchor
♭6Submediant+8Gmaj♭6Adds modal darkness
♭7Subtonic+10Amin♭7Weak descending cadence tone

Sound and Character

  • Mood: unstable, tense, and claustrophobic.
  • Signature intervals: flat 2nd and flat 5th — remove tonal stability.
  • Cadence: no true dominant-tonic relationship; often cycles between i° and ♭II.
  • Melodic feel: dissonant, unresolved; used to suggest tension or decay.

Locrian’s diminished tonic chord (i°) makes it impractical as a tonal home — it’s the only mode that cannot form a stable major or minor triad on its tonic.

Use and Application

  • Genres: avant-garde jazz, metal, progressive, experimental, and film music.
  • Improvisation: used sparingly over half-diminished (m7♭5) chords, often in ii–V–i progressions in minor keys (e.g., Bm7♭5 → E7 → Am).
  • Composition: effective for portraying instability, suspense, or tension before resolution.
  • Guitarists and bassists: use Locrian fragments for dark chromatic riffs or diminished runs.

Common Song Examples

Pure Locrian usage is rare, but its flavor appears in dark, tension-heavy music:

SongArtistKey/ModeNotable Features
“YYZ”RushB LocrianBass riff outlines flat 2 and flat 5 tension
“Army of Me”BjörkE LocrianSynth-bass-driven dissonant mode
“Heretic”SoundgardenF LocrianMetal use of diminished tonic riff
“Giant Steps” (chord fragments)John ColtraneB Locrian passingJazz example of Locrian within harmonic flow
“Tension”ToolB LocrianModern metal modal use for instability

Summary

AttributeValue
Parent Major KeyStarts on 7th degree
Tonal CenterDiminished (unstable)
Signature IntervalsFlat 2nd, Flat 5th
Emotional ColorTense, unresolved, dark
Typical Harmonyi° – ♭II or i° – ♭VII
Typical ChordsDiminished, Half-diminished, Minor7♭5
UsageMetal, experimental jazz, cinematic tension
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