The following sequence of whole (w) and half (h) steps produces a major scale:
W W H W W W H
So, starting on D for example, go up a whole step to E, another whole step to F#, then a half step to G, and so on...
eventually you get D E F# G A B C# D
Another way of referring to the notes is by their distance from the root; the interval.
root, major second, major third, perfect fourth, perfect fifth, major sixth, major seventh, octave
It depends on what the scale you want to change is.
That being said you have to know how each scale is constructed.
Here are the intervals of each scale:
Major scales - T T st T T T st
Natural Minor scales - T st T T st T T
Harmonic Minor - T st T T st T T & 1/2 = 7th note of the nat. minor scale raised
Melodic Minor - T st T T T T st = 6th and 7th notes of the nat. minor scale raised.
T - tone
st - semitone
So if you have a Melodic minor scale, you just need to raise the 3rd note a semitone, and it will become a major scale.
If you have a harmonic turn it into a natural first, by lowering the 7th note a semitone.
Then to turn a natural minor scale into a major scale, raise the 3rd, the 6th and the 7th notes a semitone.
Example:
"A minor" into "A major"
The "A minor" scale is A B C D E F G A
raising the 3rd note it becomes
A B C# D E F G A
Then raising the 6th and 7th
A B C# D E F# G# A
And that's the A major scale.
A major scale is formed by the following formula :
2 semitones 2 semitones 1 semitones 2 semitones 2 semitones 2 semitones 1 semitones apart
it looks like nothing
look for any accidenatls in the scale. If there are no accidentals, then it's a major scale, vise versa. All the sharps and flats should be included in the key signature of the scale.
G major scale
D-flat major. It's the enharmonic equivalent.
Actually its in E major. For the solo he uses a c# minor scale which is the relative scale to the E major scale and has the same exact notes as the E major scale. have fun!
The diatonic scale that is played mostly on the black keys is F# major (also known enharmonically as Gb Major). The scale that is played only on black keys is the five note F# pentatonic scale. (AKA Gb pentatonic scale).
E minor harmonic scale looks like this : E F# G A B C D# E The major scale for E minor is G major.
look for any accidenatls in the scale. If there are no accidentals, then it's a major scale, vise versa. All the sharps and flats should be included in the key signature of the scale.
Scroll down to related links and look at "Kelvin scale in comparison to degrees Celsius scale".
The major scale is the major scale. If it was altered, then it wouldn't be the major scale anymore.
a scale factor looks like a proportion but in the end it just looks like a ratio.
It is 0.5 on a digital scale
what does the key of g major look like on sheet music
Your question doesn't make much sense. But for any scale, "do" would be the first note of the scale, which is whatever the scale is called. But for a flat major, from what it sounds like you're asking, the note would be a flat. Ex: In B flat major, "Do" is b flat.
C major is a major scale starting from C.
A scale looks looks like the axis of a graph or a numbered list. In this case I believe it is called the Mohs' scale of hardness.
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to see how the building will look like hope i helped