No, it's a half step. E to F is a half step, and if both are flat, the interval remains the same.
Root, whole-step, half-step, whole, whole, half, whole, whole. On a piano, if you start on A you would bo straight up the white notes. if you start on C, you would go C, D, E-flat, F, G, A-flat, B-flat, C
An interval is the distance between two pitches. These intervals are measured in half-steps and whole steps. For example, a half-step is like C to Db. A whole step would be C to D. A major scale is made up of these steps as so: C MAJOR Whole step, Whole step, Half step, Whole step, Whole step, Whole step, Half step. C to D, D to E, E to F, F to G, G to A, A to B, B to C WWHWWWH You may have noticed that from E to F and from B to C it was a half step just as if it were from C to Db. This is because these pitches are simply a half step away from each other.
Natural minor:C, D, E flat, F, G, A flat, B flatHarmonic:C, D, E flat, F, G, A flat, BMelodic:on the way up:C, D, E flat, F, G, A, B, Con the way down:C, B flat, A flat, G, F, E flat, D, C
The formula used to construct any major scale is 2 whole steps, 1 half step, 3 whole steps, and 1 half step. To find a C Major Scale, begin on note C and use the formula. One whole step from C leads to D. Another whole step from D leads to E. Then, move up one half step to F. One whole step from F is G. From G, move another whole step to A. The last whole step leads to B. Take one last half step to C. The notes of the C Major Scale in order are C, D, E, F, G, A, B, C.
F, G, Ab, Bb, C, Db, E, FF, G, A-flat, B-flat, C, D-flat, E, F
f
E
A whole step consists of two half steps, the smallest note division excluding semitones, so one half step brings the pitch to an "A" and the second up to "B flat"
Root, whole-step, half-step, whole, whole, half, whole, whole. On a piano, if you start on A you would bo straight up the white notes. if you start on C, you would go C, D, E-flat, F, G, A-flat, B-flat, C
f flat in music is actually a regular e, and an e sharp is regular f. all sharps and flats are always a half step apart
E oops e flat
If by 'one tone' you mean one step on the chromatic scale, the next note from E flat would be E, which implies the E major scale. If you meant one whole step, as opposed to one half step, the new key would be F major.
E natural and F natural are a half step away. With accidental marks like # and b, they tell you to either move up or down a half step. There's another two, but I can't show them on this answer thing. But those are the only ones that make you move up or down a whole step.So, Fb would be moving down a half step. Move down a half step and you've got E natural.
F natural
It is made of whole and half steps. Whole-half-whole-whole-half-whole-whole. For example, c natural minor would be C-D-Eflat-F-G-Aflat-Bflat-C.
Notes inside the double slashes are repeated. \\ g f e flat c d e flat d c \\ e flat e flat f f g g b flat a flat g f g f e flat d c. d f... \\ e flat e flat e flat b flat e flat c e flat \\ e flat e flat f f g g b flat a flat g f g f e flat d c.
The answer is C. Since B is one half step up from B flat, and C is one half step up from B, and two halves make a whole :)