C Natural is a whole step above B flat. If you look at a piano, a half step above B Flat is B Natural, and one more half step above that is C Natural. So it's a whole step from B Flat to C Natural.
C#/Db is a half step above C.
A diatonic semitone is usually represented by the adjacent letter names. The next higher letter pitch to C is D. The answer is D (natural).
G is half a note higher than F#. The full scale is C C# D D# E F F# G G# A A# B C
B flat. I picture it on the piano, one key is one semi-tone or half a tone. Two of these makes one whole tone, or one whole step. One half step down from C would be the note B, another half step would then go to B flat. That is one whole step.
C Natural is a whole step above B flat. If you look at a piano, a half step above B Flat is B Natural, and one more half step above that is C Natural. So it's a whole step from B Flat to C Natural.
C Natural is a whole step above B flat. If you look at a piano, a half step above B Flat is B Natural, and one more half step above that is C Natural. So it's a whole step from B Flat to C Natural.
C Natural is a whole step above B flat. If you look at a piano, a half step above B Flat is B Natural, and one more half step above that is C Natural. So it's a whole step from B Flat to C Natural.
C is one step above B
Technically speaking, D sharp major is: D#, E#, F* (F double Sharp,) G#, A#, B#, C* (C double sharp) D#. ***note: a double sharp (*) means that the note sounds a whole step above the principal note. For example: F*=G.
A B sharp is actually a C, and it's a half step up from B and a half step down from C sharp. So basically its between B natural and C sharp.
C#/Db is a half step above C.
The scale goes like this: Do, Re, Mi, Fa, Sol, La, Ti, Do Starting from C, play 8 white note in a row, C, D, E, F, G, A, B, and C. That is a major scale. It is also known as the Ionian mode. Starting from any note, play 8 notes in a row, first note, whole step, whole step, half step, whole step, whole step, whole step and half step. (For example, starting with E - E, F#, G#, A, B, C#, D#, E. If you are looking at the key signature, in the case of sharps, the major key is one half step above the last sharp and, in the cast of flats, the major key is five half steps below the last flat.
A sharp, B flat, or even C double-flat. How you finger it varies upon the instrument you play.
To create a major scale, you must use a series of whole and half steps. Whole steps are the movement of a note two pitches up. For example, a C to a D (C goes to C sharp which goes to D). Another example is D sharp to an F (D sharp to E to F). A half step is a movement of one pitch up. For example, a C to a C sharp. Another example would be a B to a C. Now just pick any note and to make the scale just follow the sequence of whole and half steps. Whole, Whole, Half, Whole, Whole, Whole, Half For example, if you chose G, you would end up with: G, A, B, C, D, E, F sharp, G
C sharp
B sharp on the piano is C because C is one half step after B :-)