G flat
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!
The tonic is the 1st note in the scale. For example, in the G major scale, G is the tonic.
The tonic is the first note of the scale. Therefore, the tonic is G.
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.
It is a major chord. Actually, tonic is simply defined as the first note in the scale or key. All chords have tonic note. The tonic of a C chord is the C. The tonic of a C minor chord is a C. The tonic of a C minor major 7 is a C.
the tonic of the tonic of c is c because the tonic refers to the first note of the scale. Which is c. get it?
F is the tonic. Therefore, from supertonic (the second note) to supertonic is G, A flat, B flat, C, D flat, E natural (a harmonic minor scale has the 7th note raised), F, G.
g g# a b flat b c c# d e flat e f f# g All chromatics go up in semitones until you reach the first (tonic) note again.
Chords don't have "tonic notes". Scales do. The tonic note of the G major scale is G (in fact, the tonic note of the X major/minor scale will always be X). Chords do have roots, but that's equally boring: the root of the G major chord is G.
The tonic of C major is the note C itself. In music theory, the tonic is the first note of a scale and serves as the home or reference note around which the other notes in the scale are organized. In the context of C major, the scale consists of the notes C, D, E, F, G, A, and B.
A
G flat