chisel
A sharp G G E sharp G E sharp A sharp A sharp C C A sharp C E sharp G A G E sharp A sharp A sharp A sharp G E sharp C this is not on the Flute btw idk what instrument its on
A sharp G G E sharp G E sharp A sharp A sharp C C A sharp C E sharp G A G E sharp A sharp A sharp A sharp G E sharp C this is not on the flute btw idk what instrument its on
here it is C,E,F SHARP,A,G,E,C,A,F SHARP,F SHARP,F SHARP,G,A SHARP,C,C,C,C
The key of 'E' major is the 5th key in the circle of 5ths, meaning it would have 4 sharps. F sharp, C sharp, G sharp and D sharp. Obviously since it is an E major scale, it starts on E, then F sharp, G sharp, A, B, C sharp, D sharp and E again. If you are talking about 'E' minor, the relative major is G, which has 1 sharp: F sharp. You would start an 'E' minor natural scale once again on 'E', then go to F sharp, g, a, b, c, d and e.
C# Major
C sharp, D sharp, E natural, F sharp, G sharp, A natural, B sharp & C sharp We call the note C "B sharp" to avoid using the same letter name twice. If we used the note name "C" we would have 2 C-notes and no B-notes in the scale!
The tonic is C sharp.
That would be C-sharp major. Every note is sharp.
The E sharp is the F note. The interval between C sharp and F (e sharp) in two whole steps.
C, C sharp/D flat, D, D sharp/E flat, E, F, F sharp/G flat, G, G sharp/A flat, A, A sharp/B flat, B, C.
In a c sharp major: C#, E#, G# In a c sharp minor: C#, E, G#
Dudley C. Sharp was born in 1905.