C major
The note names on a piano don't correspond with the note names on french horn. A piano is in the key of C and a french horn is in the key of F.
it's F#4
The dominant note is the 5th note in the scale. In the B Major scale, F is the dominant note.
The arpeggio is the root, 3rd, and 5th of the scale. In F major, those note are F A C.
A chord is classified as diminished when it contains a diminished 5th above the tonic note.
the major pentatonic scale ( notes played are 1st note or "Root" note, then the 2nd, 3rd, 5th and the 6th) differs from the the minor pentatonic (1st, 3rd flatted, 4th, 5th, and 7th flatted) D major pentatonic: D, E, F#, A, and B (1st, 2nd, 3rd, 5th, and 6th notes of the D scale.) D minor pentatonic: D, F, G, A, and C (1st, 3rd flatted, 4th, 5th, and 7th flatted) (D =1st note , 3rd flatted = F (F# becomes F when flatted), G = 4th note, A = 5th note and 6th note flatted = C (C# becomes C when flatted). Hope that is helpful.. Same pattern applys to other notes for creating major and minor pentatonic scales.
To transpose from F to Bb you go up a 4th.
thereisf sharp, f flat(note e), and f natural
The III note is A. However, the 3rd note in the chord is the V note. That is C. The F major chord is F, A, C.
For bass clef, it is D. For treble clef, it is F. The way to remember what the dominant tone for any key is to count 4 notes above the 1st note. (the dominant is the 5th degree/note)
I'm not sure how to explain this in words, but I play it as:Bb (half note), Db (half note), Db (quarter note), two quarter note Eb's, (quarter rest), Gb (eighth note), F (eighth note), Gb (eighth note), F (eighth note), Gb (eighth note), F(eighth note), Db (quarter note), Db (quarter note), Eb (quarter note) and Eb (half note).Repeat if desired.Hope that helps?