A, C, D, Eb (or D♯), E, G and A
You may be a student wondering why on earth there are so many scales to learn. In most standard western musics there are 12 tones to work with. Any one of the 12 tones can be the starting point of a scale. A scale is really a set of rules (an algorithm) that you apply, no matter where you start the scale. From any given starting note, this will give you a blues scale: up a minor third; up a half step; up a half step; up a half step; up a half step; up a minor third; up a whole step. There are 7 notes in a blues scale. Pentatonic scales have 5 notes. Just stay with it; before long, you will wonder why you found it so difficult.
A major pentatonic scale uses the 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 5th and 6th degrees of a major scale, in C major that means we use C, D, E, G, and A and we skip F and B since a major pentatonic scale uses only five notes. Interestingly enough, the word "penta" which is found in the word pentatonic, literally translates into "five tones" (penta-tonic).
Vernier scale consists of main scale and vernier scale. The first line or the zeroth line coinciding with the main scale reading is the main scale reading. The vernier line except zeroth line coinciding with any line on main scale is the main scale reading.
Any scale can be used; the absolute, rational, thermodynamic based scale is the Kelvin scale.
A scale that compare two objects is the, balance scale.
The notes to F blues scale are: F, Ab, Bb, Cb, C, Eb and F.
A "blues scale" consists of the root, minor third, fourth, flatted fifth, natural fifth, minor seventh and the root again. The notes for the C Blues Scale would be C, Eb, F, Gb, G, Bb and C again.
1-2-2,5-3-5-7
C Blues scale: C D# F F# G A# C And then back down again. The other scales follows the same model: D blues scale: D F G G# A C D Just check the distance between the notes and you will get the rest too!
A C D Eb E G A The notes might tecnecally be different, but this works enharmonically.
D, f, g, ab, a, c and d
simple answer: because of the instruments and the phrasing of the notes that they play. Blues music uses a special variant of the scales called unsurprisingly "The Blues scale". Which is the minor pentatonic scale plus an extra note. In C major these notes would be; C - Eb - F - Gb - G - Bb - C It is the intervals between these notes that produces a sad emotional response by humans.
The simple blues scale beginning on C is: C, Eb, F, F#(Gb), G, Bb, C. Disregarding the repeated C, there are only six notes in the scale so it is sometimes called hexatonic (six tone) blues scale. There are other versions and alterations of the blues scale, as well.
Ummm . . . it is true that blues music characterisically uses, the minor pentatonic scale. altered. The common blues scale is derived from the usual scale (1,2,3,4,5,6,7,1) by removing the 2nd and 6th notes. That leaves you with the notes, "1,3,4,5,7,1" . There's more to it, though: you flat by a half step the 3rd and the 7th. That results in the notes, 1, b3 (flatted 3rd), 4, 5, b7 - 5 notes in all.
f#,A,B,C,C#,E,F#
the notes of the blues scale is as follows bottom c, e flat, f, f sharp, g flat, g, b flat and a Glad to help Maddy Ell.
root, b3 4, b5, 5, b7, root. For example: C, Eb, F, Gb, G natural, Bb then back to C. The blues scale is the only scale where a flatted 5th co-exists with a natural 5th.