A In-Sen Scale
A In-Sen contains 5 notes: A, B♭, D, E, G. It has 1 flat: B♭. The step pattern is H–4h–W–W+H–W.
An angular, tense Japanese pentatonic scale that starts with a half step right from the root. It sounds unsettling and edgy — like something is about to happen. Used in traditional shakuhachi flute music and by experimental jazz players.
The formula is 1, b2, 4, 5, b7. That b2 sitting a half step above the root creates immediate tension, while the b7 adds a dominant, unresolved quality. It's similar to a stripped-down Phrygian mode, keeping only the most characteristic notes.
The half-step interval between root and b2 makes for some tight, aggressive fingerings on the lower strings. Play it over a static bass drone or a single power chord to get the full effect. The five-box shapes are easy to visualize if you already know your pentatonic framework.
In-Sen is a great tool for creating tension in jazz or progressive contexts. Try playing it over a minor vamp and let the b2 clash against the root in the bass — that dissonance is the whole point. It also works as a 'color scale' in metal: drop in a few In-Sen phrases to break up standard pentatonic runs.