Cb, Db, Eb, Fb, Gb, Ab, Bb, Cb
b flat, c, d, e flat, f, g, a, b flat
They are not the same but are closely related. A scale is any series of notes that goes from a note to the same pitched note an octave higher or lower. So a scale goes from C to C, or from E flat to E flat, and so on. A major scale is a special scale pattern that forms the basis of most Western music. A major key is the key that the music is played in. For any given key, the default notes will be the notes in the major scale of the same name. So in the key of C major the default notes are the 7 notes in the C major scale, and in the key of E flat major the default notes are the 7 notes in the E flat major scale. To further clarify, the interval between the two C's or E flats is called an octave. There are twelve specific notes in the octave. lets start with A. (Some notes have two names and they will be given in parentheses (The symbol # is pronounced sharp, the symbol b is pronounced flat). The notes are A, (A#, Bb), B, C, (C#, Db), D, (D#, Eb), E, F, (F#, Gb), G, (G#, Ab). A major scale uses seven of those notes. They are the starting point, skip one, then skip again, then the next one, skip, skip skip. So if you start with C, you get C, D, E, F, G, A, B and end it with the note of the next octave, C. This makes eight, hence the name octave.
Such a key only exists in theory and not in practice. In C-double-flat major, every single note (C D E F G A B C) would have a double-flat on it, and it would sound the same as B-flat major.
A, B, C#, D, E, F#, and G# are the notes of the A major scale.
The F major scale consists of the following notes: F - G - A - B Flat - C - D - E - F
C flat Major
The C major scale and its relative minor, the A minor scale. C Major.
The scale of 'C' - it uses neither sharp or flat notes.
b flat, c, d, e flat, f, g, a, b flat
There are no flats or sharps. Its relative major scale is C major, which has all of the same notes.
The F major scale, ascending and descending, is: F, G, A, B flat, C, D, E, F, E, D, C, B flat, A, G, F
The notes in the F major scale are: F, G, A, B flat, C, D, E, F
A minor scale is the same as its major scale with the third and the seventh notes "flatted" or lowered half a step. For example, the key of C has the notes C D E F G A B C in C minor the E is changed to E-flat and the B is B-flat
They are not the same but are closely related. A scale is any series of notes that goes from a note to the same pitched note an octave higher or lower. So a scale goes from C to C, or from E flat to E flat, and so on. A major scale is a special scale pattern that forms the basis of most Western music. A major key is the key that the music is played in. For any given key, the default notes will be the notes in the major scale of the same name. So in the key of C major the default notes are the 7 notes in the C major scale, and in the key of E flat major the default notes are the 7 notes in the E flat major scale. To further clarify, the interval between the two C's or E flats is called an octave. There are twelve specific notes in the octave. lets start with A. (Some notes have two names and they will be given in parentheses (The symbol # is pronounced sharp, the symbol b is pronounced flat). The notes are A, (A#, Bb), B, C, (C#, Db), D, (D#, Eb), E, F, (F#, Gb), G, (G#, Ab). A major scale uses seven of those notes. They are the starting point, skip one, then skip again, then the next one, skip, skip skip. So if you start with C, you get C, D, E, F, G, A, B and end it with the note of the next octave, C. This makes eight, hence the name octave.
Bb, C, D, Eb. F. G. A. Bb
ggagcb ggagdc gggecba ffecdc c major
e flat f g a b flat c d e flat. It doesn't matter the instrument- the notes used in a specific scale will always be the same.