The tonic of F major is F major.
Major Key: F Major Minor Key: D Minor
The answer to this question is not always simple, however if you want a definite answer, look at the tips below: If you wanted to end on a perfect cadence, you should modulate to a G major chord and then move down to the tonic chord (C major). If you wanted to end on a plagal cadence, you would modulate up a fourth to a F major chord and then resolve on a C major chord. If you wanted to end on am imperfect cadence you simply modulate to the dominant chord (in this case G major) and end there. Finally, if you wanted to end on an interrupted cadence you modulate from the tonic chord (C major) to the relative minor, an A minor chord. So in most cases a song which began in C major should end in the tonic key (C major), however a song in C major can end in G major (an imperfect cadence) or in A minor (an interrupted cadence). Hope this helps.
In most music, the majority of the notes in a tune are a set of seven notes chosen from the 12 notes of western music. The "major scale" is one way of selecting these seven notes. In the key of C, the major scale is C-D-E-F-G-A-B-C. The song "Do-Re-Mi" is all about the major scale. If you can sing that, then you know the major scale intuitively.As an example, the main Star Wars theme uses a major scale:C G F E D C GThe "Jedi" theme does not use a major scale; it includes e-flat which is not in the major scale.G G C D E-flat F E-flat GNote that the notes of the major scale are not evenly spaced in frequency. The interval between C and D is twice as big as the interval between E and F. The intervals (in terms of semitones) is:C(2)D(2)E(1)F(2)G(2)A(2)B(1)C
A relative minor key is the minor key with the same key signature as a particular major key, for example D minor and F major both have one flat (Bb).
The arpeggio is the root, 3rd, and 5th of the scale. In F major, those note are F A C.
C major triad : C - E - GG major triad : G - B - DD major triad : D - F# - AA major triad: A - C# - EE major triad : E - G# - BB major triad : B - D# - FC# major triad: C# - E# - G#F# major triad : F# - A# - C#Cb major triad : Cb - Eb - GGb major triad : Gb - Bb - DbDb major triad : Db - F - AbAb major triad : Ab - C - EbEb major triad : Eb - G - BbBb major triad : Bb - D - FF major triad : F - A - CA natural minor triad : A - C - EE natural minor triad : E - G - BB natural minor triad : B - D - F#F# natural minor triad : F# - A - C#C# natural minor triad : C# - E - G#A# natural minor triad : A# - C# - EG# natural minor triad : G# - B - D#D# natural minor triad : D# - F# - A#Eb natural minor triad : Eb - Gb - BbAb natural minor triad : Ab - C -EbBb natural minor triad : Bb - Db - FD natural minor triad : D - F - AG natural minor triad : G - Bb - DC natural minor triad : C - Eb - GF natural minor triad : F - Ab - C
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.
A tonic triad of C major always sounds pretty good. F# and A sound good together. Try various major keys, that would sound the nicest.
The supertonic triad in the key of A flat major is B flat, D flat, and F natural
F, G, and A are musical notes. In the key of F major, they represent the tonic, the second, and the third of the scale.
Generally, the leading note is the seventh tonal degree of the diatonic scale leading up to the tonic. For example, in the C major scale (white keys on a piano, starting on C), the leading note is the note B; and the leading note chord uses the notes B, D, and F: a diminished triad. In Music Theory, the leading note triad is symbolized by the Roman numeral vii°.
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!
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.
'tonic' is created from two words which are 'ton' and 'ic'. 'ton' means tension, tone and stretching while 'ic' means pertaining/relating to. Therefore, if combined, 'tonic' means pertaining/relating to either tension, tone or stretching.
In a major key, the triad built on the 7th scale degree is diminished. Using C major as an example, the triad on the 7th is B D F. B to D is a minor 3rd, as is D to F, so B to F is a diminished 5th.
The tonic in any scale is the 1st scale degree. For example, in the key of F major, the tonic is F.
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.