Ab major
E A major second is equivalent to a whole note, or two semitones, and two semitones down from G-flat (which is enharmonically equivalent to F-sharp) is E, although it might be written as F-flat depending on the key signature. F-flat, E to G-flat would be a diminished 3rd, not a major second..
the music for the 2nd or 3rd trailer is down the rabbit hole. by Murray gold.
The Key of the Song is F. But to play F cross harp you need a B-flat harmonica. Not the A harmonica as previously suggested. That would be used to play songs in the key of E.
Any scale will have the same key signature in both the bass and treble clef. For A major, the key signature consists of F#, C#, and G#.To write the key signature:Treble Clef: the sharps correspond to the 1st and 3rd spaces, and the second line [F#, C#, and G#, respectively].Bass Clef: the sharps correspond to the 2nd and 4th spaces, and the 4th line [C#, G#, and F#, respectively).
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.
C major
Ab major
D major
E A major second is equivalent to a whole note, or two semitones, and two semitones down from G-flat (which is enharmonically equivalent to F-sharp) is E, although it might be written as F-flat depending on the key signature. F-flat, E to G-flat would be a diminished 3rd, not a major second..
E A major second is equivalent to a whole note, or two semitones, and two semitones down from G-flat (which is enharmonically equivalent to F-sharp) is E, although it might be written as F-flat depending on the key signature. F-flat, E to G-flat would be a diminished 3rd, not a major second..
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.
Ggc up gce "" gce "" gce "" gce "" ceg "" ecg down ggc up
There are five major seconds which occur in the key of F major - the first major second is between F and G, then between G and A, then between B-flat and C, then between C and D and finally between D and E. I hope this answers your question.
scale: open............1st & 3rd.........1st & 2nd.......1st..........open.......1st & 2nd..........2nd........open arpeggio: open...........1st & 2nd............open............open
B-flat to C-sharp is an augmented 2nd.
-------- A - 2nd A flat/G sharp - 3rd G - 4th -------- F - 1st F sharp/G Flat - 5th E - 2nd E flat/D sharp - 3rd -------- D - 4th D Flat/C sharp - 5th C - 6th -------- B - 7th B Flat/A Sharp - 1st A - 2nd A Flat/G sharp - 3rd -------- G - 4th
2nd and 3rd valve