Ab Major
The tonic is the 1st note in the scale. For example, in the G major scale, G is the tonic.
The first note of the major scale is the tonic.
The first note of a major or minor scale is called the tonic note. For example: for C major, the first note (or tonic note) is C; for a minor, the first note (or tonic note) is a.
A major scale has 8 notes, including the second use of the tonic.
The mediant of any major scale is the note that is a third above the tonic (root) of the scale. In the key of F sharp major, the tonic is F sharp, so the mediant would be A sharp.
The tonic note of any diatonic scale is the first note (starting note) of the scale. In the case of G-flat major the tonic note is G-flat!
Each scale has a Leading Tone (which is the 7th note of the scale) and a Tonic Note (which is the first/eighth note of the scale). For the key of C major, the leading tone would be B, and the tonic note would be C.
The tonic of the D flat scale is D flat.
The tonic of E flat major is E flat. Its dominant is B flat and its subdominant is A flat.
The tonic is the 1st note in the scale. For example, in the G major scale, G is the tonic.
The tonic minor (or parallel minor) of a flat major is a flat minor.
G flat
The interval from the tonic note to the third note of a major scale is a major third.
The interval from the tonic note to the third note of a major scale is a major third.
Relative major and minor share the same key signature but a different tonic note (a tonic note is the first note of the scale or in solfege tonic is DO). For example, D flat major has five flats in it's key signature and b flat minor has 5 flats in it's key signature; therefore, D flat major and b flat minor are relative.
1-3-5 of a major scale make up the tonic CHORD.
The tonic in any scale is the 1st scale degree. For example, in the key of F major, the tonic is F.