A sharp on the piano could be black notes or white ones. A sharp is note that is half a step above the natural note. A natural note is any of the white notes on your piano. For example if you played the G key on your piano you would be playing G natural. If you played the white note on the right of G you would be playing A. If you played the black note on the right of G in between G and A you would be playing G sharp or A flat. Hope that answers your question a sharp is half a step above a note and any of the black notes on the piano are one notes sharp and another notes flat.
for example, E sharp would be F natural, a white key.
In music, a sharp raises a note by one half-step. To raise a note a half-step on the piano, simply play the key on the right, adjacent to the original. In most cases, this is a black key, however, for e# and b#, it will be a white key.
A sharp is a half-step higher and a flat is a half-step lower.
Most of the time flat and sharp notes are the black keys on the piano. Although that is true, the white keys could also be a sharp or flat key. For example, An F-flat would be the Eand an E-sharp would be the F.
YES it is the black key to the right on the A key
It's the same as B flat
On a traditional piano with 88 notes, there is 36 black or "sharp" keys, and 52 white
Okay, there are 88 keys altogether. 88-36=52!
B sharp on the piano is C because C is one half step after B :-)
A flat
To the right.
On a traditional piano with 88 notes, there is 36 black or "sharp" keys, and 52 white
Okay, there are 88 keys altogether. 88-36=52!
There is no B sharp.
Ab
B sharp on the piano is C because C is one half step after B :-)
To the right.
A flat
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.
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.
D sharp
Look on this picture http://musicianinyou.com/resources/Piano%20Keys.GIF
A♯, Cx (double sharp) and E♯ (F).