A Iwato Scale
A Iwato contains 5 notes: A, B♭, D, E♭, G. It has 2 flats: B♭, E♭. The step pattern is H–4h–H–4h–W.
The darkest of the Japanese pentatonic scales. It has a flat 2nd and a flat 5th, which means there's no stable perfect 5th to anchor things — just pure tension and unease. Think ominous ceremonial music or horror soundtracks.
The formula is 1, b2, 4, b5, b7. It's essentially the 5th mode of the In-Sen scale and sounds like a pentatonic version of Locrian. The tritone (b5) combined with the b2 creates an extremely dark, unresolved character. The complete absence of a perfect 5th means the ear never finds a resting point.
Useful for creating dissonant textures over diminished or half-diminished chords. The shapes are compact due to the half-step intervals, making it playable in tight clusters on adjacent frets. Try it on the lower strings with heavy distortion for maximum impact.
Iwato works best as a brief color rather than a sustained tonality — a few bars of Iwato over a dark riff can be incredibly effective before resolving to something more stable. In jazz, it's a niche tool for navigating half-diminished chord voicings when you want maximum darkness with minimal notes.