You notes in the A minor chord are A, C, and E. Simply transpose your C one step higher to a C#, and you have an A major! Most chords are easily transposed from major to minor, or visa versa, with a transposition of one note. However, this is for the piano, you didn't specify which instrument =)
C Major scale: C D E F G A B C (no sharps or flats) C Major chord: C - E - G
Such a key only exists in theory. C major has zero flats. C-flat major has 7 flats. C-double-flat major would have 14 flats.
C flat Major
C major
The word "transpose" is term used in music. An example of a sentence using the word would be: We will have to transpose this piece down a major fourth to the key of C.
If you are playing violin music on a clarinet, you have to transpose up one step (a major 2nd). In other words, if you see a C, you play a D. If you are playing clarinet music on a violin, it's the opposite. You transpose down a step.
You notes in the A minor chord are A, C, and E. Simply transpose your C one step higher to a C#, and you have an A major! Most chords are easily transposed from major to minor, or visa versa, with a transposition of one note. However, this is for the piano, you didn't specify which instrument =)
It depends on each instrument. Strings and some band instruments such as Trombone, tuba, and flute are in the key of C so you don't have to transpose them. Other instruments like Clarinet and trumpet are in the key of B flat so if you want them to play a C you have to tell them to play a D because everything they play sounds a A whole note below what you tell them to play. Not all band instruments are in the key of B flat thought. French horn and English horn for example are in the key of F. There are many different kinds of instruments and different keys they are in.
Transpose the music down a major second.
The best way would be to transpose the piano music for clarinet. Clarinets transpose up a tone (just go up a letter, like A to B, B to C, C to D and if it works out to be a C of an F, make it a sharp!)
Algorithm: transpose Input: a matrix M[x][y] Output: the transpose of M (a matrix of order y * x) allocate N[y][x] for r = 0 to x-1 // iterate over rows for c = 0 to y-1 // iterate over columns N[c][r] = M[r][c] next c next r return N
yes, it is true that the transpose of the transpose of a matrix is the original matrix
Trumpets that are made in different keys allow for easier transposition. For example, if the piece that you are reading is in "E" and you are playing a Bb Trumpet, you would have to transpose all of the notes up a tri-tone, which can be pretty difficult. If you are playing a C trumpet, you would only have to transpose up a major third, which can be much easier.
In C its C C C C F F C C G F C C u can transpose 2 any key
The Trombone does NOT transpose, the player does. With that said, if the music is written in Bb Bass Clef, one does transpose in Bass clef. Most Bass Clef music is in C Bass clef, but the player has learned how to read in concert pitch, so there is no transposition needed.
Definition: Transpose, change, switch