Sure you can, but they are the same identical note.
B sharp on the piano is C because C is one half step after B :-)
A B sharp is actually a C, and it's a half step up from B and a half step down from C sharp. So basically its between B natural and C sharp.
"Flat" means to go down one semitone. Look at a piano (or similar) keyboard, and check what you have one to the left of "C". Since on a piano there is no black key between "B" and "C", the next semitone down from "C" is simply "B".
Sonata No. 14 C-Sharp Minor for Piano-Beethoven
The piano is a "C" instrument, meaning when it plays a C you hear a C. The clarinet is a "B-flat" instrument which means when a clarinet plays a "C" is sounds a "B-flat." I know this sounds confusing and the easiest thing you can do is play, rewrite the clarinet notes a whole step higher than the piano part.
B sharp on the piano is C because C is one half step after B :-)
it's the second key on the piano from left to right B sharp, when played on the keyboard is what we know as C natural.
c sharp b diminished g major a minor c sharp
A B sharp is actually a C, and it's a half step up from B and a half step down from C sharp. So basically its between B natural and C sharp.
you start off with A sharp, C,Deeznutz
"Flat" means to go down one semitone. Look at a piano (or similar) keyboard, and check what you have one to the left of "C". Since on a piano there is no black key between "B" and "C", the next semitone down from "C" is simply "B".
Sonata No. 14 C-Sharp Minor for Piano-Beethoven
There actually is no such thing as a B sharp. It goes straight from B natural to C. C flat is B natural.
The piano is a "C" instrument, meaning when it plays a C you hear a C. The clarinet is a "B-flat" instrument which means when a clarinet plays a "C" is sounds a "B-flat." I know this sounds confusing and the easiest thing you can do is play, rewrite the clarinet notes a whole step higher than the piano part.
g sharp would be g sharp or a minor. d sharp would be d sharp or e flat. a sharp would be a sharp or b flat. c sharp would be c sharp or d flat. f sharp would be f sharp or g flat. e sharp would be e sharp or f slat for which there is no such note. and g natural would be g natural.
Press the leftmost black note in the 2 black-key groups.
On a standard piano, the first three notes are, A, A Sharp/ B flat, B. If you are speaking of the Piano Notes In General, they are C, C Sharp, and D, or C, D, and E.