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Lydian and Locrian: Dreamy vs. Unsettling Scales

Want a dreamy, floating sound or an uneasy, eerie one? Lydian and Locrian sit at opposite poles. Learn the single note behind each, and play both.

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CDEFGAB
F Lydian (white keys from F): the sharp 4th gives a dreamy, floating brightness.

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Contents

  1. Hear it first
  2. Lydian — Dreamy and Floating
  3. Interval Structure
  4. The Characteristic Interval: Augmented 4th (#4)
  5. Lydian in Film Music
  6. Lydian's Diatonic Chords
  7. Song Examples
  8. Locrian — The Unstable Mode
  9. Interval Structure
  10. Why Locrian Is So Unstable
  11. When Locrian Is Used
  12. Song Examples
  13. Comparing Lydian and Locrian
  14. The Role of Tritone in Both Modes
  15. Practical Takeaways
  16. What to try next

Lydian and Locrian

Lydian and Locrian sit at opposite ends of the stability spectrum. Lydian is the brightest mode, a major scale with an augmented 4th that makes it float. Locrian is the most unstable, with a diminished 5th that turns the tonic chord itself into a diminished triad. Put together, they map out the full range of what modes can do.

Hear it first

These two are easiest to grasp against the scales they sit closest to.

  1. Open the Mode Dictionary
  2. Set the root to F, select Lydian, and press Play
  3. Switch the root to B, select Locrian, and play that scale
  4. Listen for how Lydian lifts upward while Locrian refuses to settle

In F Lydian, the highlighted #4 (B) is the note that sounds slightly “too high” for major. In B Locrian, the ♭5 leaves the home chord sounding unresolved no matter where you stop.

Lydian — Dreamy and Floating

Interval Structure

Lydian is major with a raised 4th degree (#4, augmented 4th).

Degree1234567
MajorrootWWHWWW
LydianrootWWWHWW

F Lydian: F G A B C D E F

The only difference from F major is B♮ (natural) instead of B♭. That single raised fourth changes everything about the character.

The Characteristic Interval: Augmented 4th (#4)

In F Lydian, the note B is an augmented 4th above F. In standard F major, you’d have B♭.

The augmented 4th interval lifts the scale away from its expected gravity, creating a quality often described as:

  • Floating, hovering
  • Slightly magical or supernatural
  • Bright but somehow “not quite here”

Lydian in Film Music

Lydian is a favorite of film composers for scenes involving:

  • Flight, weightlessness, outer space
  • Magic, wonder, child-like awe
  • Dreams and fantasy sequences

John Williams uses Lydian frequently in his scores. The opening theme of The Simpsons (Danny Elfman) is one of the most recognizable Lydian melodies in popular culture.

Lydian’s Diatonic Chords

F Lydian diatonic chords: F / G / Am / Bdim / C / Dm / Em

Notice the II chord is G major — in standard F major it would be G minor. This II major chord (a whole step above the root) is unique to Lydian and contributes to its unusual brightness.

Song Examples

SongArtistNotes
The Simpsons ThemeDanny ElfmanClearest Lydian example in pop culture
Flying (E.T.)John WilliamsWeightlessness in Lydian
Misty MountainsHoward ShoreLydian in fantasy film scoring

Locrian — The Unstable Mode

Interval Structure

Locrian has both a ♭2 (minor 2nd) and a ♭5 (diminished 5th).

Degree1234567
Natural MinorrootWHWWHW
LocrianrootHWWHWW

B Locrian: B C D E F G A B

Why Locrian Is So Unstable

Two simultaneous problems:

  1. ♭2 (minor 2nd) — Same as Phrygian, this creates immediate tension at the second scale degree
  2. ♭5 (diminished 5th) — The fifth degree is lowered, so root + 5th forms a tritone (the most dissonant common interval)

The consequence: the tonic chord is diminished (B–D–F in B Locrian). A diminished chord has no stable root feel, so it wants to resolve somewhere else. This is why Locrian cannot function as a stable tonal center in practical music.

When Locrian Is Used

Despite its instability, Locrian appears in specific contexts:

As the VII chord: In any major key, the seventh diatonic chord is built on Locrian (e.g., in C major, the VII chord Bdim is “B Locrian”). When you use a VIIdim chord in your progressions, Locrian is the theory behind it.

Prog rock and metal: Bands willing to embrace extreme dissonance occasionally use Locrian as a temporary tonal area for unsettling effect.

Avant-garde and film music: To create maximum tension in horror or action sequences.

Song Examples

SongArtistNotes
YYZRushB Locrian elements in the instrumental
Various horror film scoresMultipleMaximum tension from ♭5

Comparing Lydian and Locrian

AspectLydianLocrian
Base typeMajorMinor
Key alteration#4 (raised 4th)♭2 + ♭5 (two lowered)
Tonic chord qualityMajor (stable)Diminished (unstable)
Emotional qualityDreamy, floatingExtreme tension, dread
Practical useModerateRare

The Role of Tritone in Both Modes

Both Lydian and Locrian feature the tritone (augmented 4th / diminished 5th) prominently, but with completely different effects:

  • In Lydian, the #4 creates an upward floating sensation because it’s a non-root note
  • In Locrian, the ♭5 creates downward instability because it destabilizes the root chord itself

Same interval, opposite results: in Lydian the tritone sits above a stable home chord, while in Locrian it sits inside the home chord and pulls it apart.


Practical Takeaways

Use Lydian when you want:

  • A major-key sound with extra brightness or magic
  • Film-score-style floating, weightless textures
  • Something familiar but slightly otherworldly

Avoid Locrian as a tonic unless:

  • You intentionally want extreme instability
  • You’re writing prog rock, metal, or experimental music
  • You’re using it as a temporary color before resolving elsewhere

What to try next

Play F Lydian and F major back to back so the #4 stands out, then do the same with B Locrian against B natural minor to feel the ♭5 collapse the home chord. Once the two extremes are clear, the everyday modes in between are much easier to place.

Hear Lydian and Locrian in the Mode Dictionary

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