D major or it's relative minor (B minor). I memorized the "Circle of 5th's" to help me remember key signatures.
There are many key signatures with F and C sharps.
D, A, E, B, F#, C# and their relative minor scales (Bm, F#m, C#m, G#m, D#m, A#m).
e major or c# minor
That is the key of E.
A major or F# minor
B major :)
D major
C sharp major, or A sharp minor. The sharps are F, C, G, D, A, E and B.C# Major does
B-minor has no flats in it's natural key signature (of course, accidentals can always be added to alter a melody without altering the key signature). The key of b-minor (relative minor of D-major) has two sharps in its key signature; F-sharp(#) and C-sharp(#). If you wanted to play a b-natural-minor scale, you would play; B-C#-D-E-F#-G-A-B For a b-harmonic-minor; B-C#-D-E-F#-G-A#-B For a b-melodic-minor; B-C#-D-E-F#-G#-A#-B-A(natural, remove the sharp)-G(natural, remove the sharp)-F#-E-D-C#-B I hope this helps.
the order of sharps and flats are both used to write out the order in a key siganture on a piece of music (for example: the key of d has two sharps, f and c, so in the key signature, you see a sharp for f and a sharp for c) Also, when you're looking at the key signature, you can use the order to find out what key the song is in. For sharps, you look at the last sharp in the key signature, and go up one letter in the musical alphabet. if that note is not sharped, then that letter is the key. if it is sharped, then it's that letter, sharped (for example: key of c sharp, fcgdaeb are the sharps: you go up one from b and it's c, but c is already sharp, so it's the key of c sharp) For flats, you look at the second to last flat in the key signature, and that's the key that it's in. if there's only one flat, it's b flat, and the key is f. i hope this helped!!
D major has F# and C# in it's key signature.
C Sharp Major has 6 key signatures which are all sharps:F#C#G#D#A#E#B#There is also another major key that has 7 sharp keys.
D major has a key signature of F sharp and C sharp D minor has a key signature of B flat
Only "B flat" is the key signature, then "C sharp" is the accidental.
B Major is the 1st major scale that CONTAINS A sharp and F sharp within its key signature but has a total of 5 sharps which are, F# C# G# D# A# F# Major also CONTAINS A sharp and F sharp within its key signature but has a total of 6 sharps which are, F# C# G# D# A# E# C# Major also CONTAINS A sharp and F sharp within its key signature but has a total of 7 sharps which are, F# C# G# D# A# E# B#
The key with three sharps is A major, however A major uses C sharp - alongside with G sharp and F sharp - instead of D sharp.
Four key signatures have G sharp and E sharp in them: F sharp Major, D sharp minor, C sharp Major and A sharp minor.
C sharp major, or A sharp minor. The sharps are F, C, G, D, A, E and B.C# Major does
D minor - more specifically, D harmonic minor (the version of the minor scale with a flat 6 and a sharp 7). However, you will never see a key signature with a B flat and a C sharp. The key signature will only contain B flat.
Four sharps - F#, C#, G#, D# (the same as E major).
TO FIND THE KEY FROM THE KEY SIGNATUREIf the key signature has sharps:The major key is the note above the last sharp in the key signature.The minor key is the note below the last sharp in the key signature.Ex: key signature with sharps f-c-g is A major or F-sharp majorIf the key signature has flats:The major key is the note of the next to last flat in the key signature. If there is only one flat, it is F major.The minor key is the note TWO notes above the last flat in the key signature.Ex: key signature with the flats b-e-a-d-g is D-flat major or B-flat minorIf the key signature has no flats or sharps:The major key is C.The minor key is A.TO CREATE THE KEY SIGNATURE FROM THE KEYThe sharps always go in this order: F-C-G-D-A-E-B-C (circle of fifths)If you are creating the key signature for a major key, keep writing sharps until the last sharp is the note below the key you need.If you are creating the key signature for a minor key, keep writing sharps until the last sharp is the note above the key you need.Ex: The key signature for B major and G-sharp minor is f-c-g-d-a.The flats always go in this order: B-E-A-D-G-C-F (circle of fourths)If you are creating the key signature for a major key, keep writing flats until the next-to-last flat is the key you need.If you are creating the key signature for a minor key, keep writing flats until the last flat is TWO notes below the key you need.Ex: The key signature for E-flat major and C minor is b-e-a.The key signature for C major and A minor has no flats or sharps.The key signature for F major and d minor has ONE flat (B-flat).
The key signature for D sharp minor would be the one for F sharp major: FCGDAE. You can also think of it as E flat minorwhich is related to g flat major in which the key signature would be BEADGC.
B-minor has no flats in it's natural key signature (of course, accidentals can always be added to alter a melody without altering the key signature). The key of b-minor (relative minor of D-major) has two sharps in its key signature; F-sharp(#) and C-sharp(#). If you wanted to play a b-natural-minor scale, you would play; B-C#-D-E-F#-G-A-B For a b-harmonic-minor; B-C#-D-E-F#-G-A#-B For a b-melodic-minor; B-C#-D-E-F#-G#-A#-B-A(natural, remove the sharp)-G(natural, remove the sharp)-F#-E-D-C#-B I hope this helps.
No key signatures contain only those three sharps. With the A-sharp, it could be the keys of B major, F-sharp major, or C-sharp major (or any of their relative minor keys).