E
E-flat
The dominant note is the 5th note in the scale. In the B Major scale, F is the dominant note.
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f flat in music is actually a regular e, and an e sharp is regular f. all sharps and flats are always a half step apart
E A major second is equivalent to a whole note, or two semitones, and two semitones down from G-flat (which is enharmonically equivalent to F-sharp) is E, although it might be written as F-flat depending on the key signature. F-flat, E to G-flat would be a diminished 3rd, not a major second..
In order to create a footnote you need to press the following keys on the keyboard: Ctrl + Alt + F Ctrl + Alt + Shift + F Ctrl + Shift + F Depending on the program you are using one of the combinations above should work.
F sharp
Any major scale follows the same pattern. After the first note is a whole step, then another whole step, then a half step, whole step, whole step, whole step, half step; therefore, the fourth note of a scale is two and a half steps away from the first note.
The scale goes like this: Do, Re, Mi, Fa, Sol, La, Ti, Do Starting from C, play 8 white note in a row, C, D, E, F, G, A, B, and C. That is a major scale. It is also known as the Ionian mode. Starting from any note, play 8 notes in a row, first note, whole step, whole step, half step, whole step, whole step, whole step and half step. (For example, starting with E - E, F#, G#, A, B, C#, D#, E. If you are looking at the key signature, in the case of sharps, the major key is one half step above the last sharp and, in the cast of flats, the major key is five half steps below the last flat.
The answer is C. Since B is one half step up from B flat, and C is one half step up from B, and two halves make a whole :)
A whole step consists of two half steps, the smallest note division excluding semitones, so one half step brings the pitch to an "A" and the second up to "B flat"
The formula used to construct any major scale is 2 whole steps, 1 half step, 3 whole steps, and 1 half step. To find a C Major Scale, begin on note C and use the formula. One whole step from C leads to D. Another whole step from D leads to E. Then, move up one half step to F. One whole step from F is G. From G, move another whole step to A. The last whole step leads to B. Take one last half step to C. The notes of the C Major Scale in order are C, D, E, F, G, A, B, C.
The note above F can be labelled as F sharp or G flat.
Technically speaking, D sharp major is: D#, E#, F* (F double Sharp,) G#, A#, B#, C* (C double sharp) D#. ***note: a double sharp (*) means that the note sounds a whole step above the principal note. For example: F*=G.
There are 3. The scale notes are: A B C# D E F# G# and then back to A so the 3 sharps are C#, F# and G#. All major scales are a pattern of whole steps and half steps so if you know this pattern then even if you are not a musician you can play every major scale on a piano. Just start with the note that begins the scale, in this case 'A'. The pattern is 2 whole steps, then a half step, then 3 whole steps, and another half step back to the beginning note (an octave higher). On a piano, the whole steps (no matter what note you start from) are 2 keys apart. From A to B there is a black note in between, this is a whole step. From B to C is only a half step (there is no black note in between) so you have to jump to C# (the black note to the right of C), then we come to the first half step, from C# to D (the white note immediately to the right)... and so on.
f
The B flat basic chord consists of the notes Bb, D natural and F natural. Bb (flat) is a whole step down from C (two keys below). B flat is the same note as A sharp in music scores.
No, it's a half step. E to F is a half step, and if both are flat, the interval remains the same.