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"
To make a note flat, you take it down a half step: e turns into e flat and e flat turns into D natural. Natural just means the plain old note with nothing done to it. Therefore, to take a G flat up a half step, it turns into a G natural.
If by 'one tone' you mean one step on the chromatic scale, the next note from E flat would be E, which implies the E major scale. If you meant one whole step, as opposed to one half step, the new key would be F major.
For half step sharps, the most commonly used and the one you are probably referring to that raises a pitch a half tone up, you use a # symbol. If you are writing on manuscript (staff paper), you write the # symbol before the note. If you are writing it on regular notebook paper, you write it after the note name, i.e. C#. For whole step sharps, which raises a pitch a whole tone up, you use a x symbol. The position of the symbol is the same as half step sharps. For quarter step sharps, which are unconventional in western music but used in oriental music, look it up on wikipedia. The position of the symbol is the same as half step sharps also.
The piano is a C instrument. The trumpet is a B flat instrument. Thus, to transpose piano notes to trumpet notes, you have to put each note up one whole step. If piano -> trumpet: A -> B B flat -> C B -> C sharp C -> D C sharp -> D sharp D -> E E flat -> F E -> F sharp F -> G F sharp -> G sharp G -> A A flat -> B flat Hope that helped!
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"
To make a note flat, you take it down a half step: e turns into e flat and e flat turns into D natural. Natural just means the plain old note with nothing done to it. Therefore, to take a G flat up a half step, it turns into a G natural.
In music, a flat is a half step down from a note. It is the opposite of a Sharp which is a half step up. Sharps and Flats on the piano are the black keys.
A sharp raises a note by half a step, while a flat lowers a note by half a step on the piano. For example, if a note is played as C♯, it is one half step higher than C; if played as C♭, it is one half step lower than C.
Root, whole-step, half-step, whole, whole, half, whole, whole. On a piano, if you start on A you would bo straight up the white notes. if you start on C, you would go C, D, E-flat, F, G, A-flat, B-flat, C
If by 'one tone' you mean one step on the chromatic scale, the next note from E flat would be E, which implies the E major scale. If you meant one whole step, as opposed to one half step, the new key would be F major.
The pattern of intervals that make up the 7 sharp scale is whole step, whole step, half step, whole step, whole step, whole step, half step.
For half step sharps, the most commonly used and the one you are probably referring to that raises a pitch a half tone up, you use a # symbol. If you are writing on manuscript (staff paper), you write the # symbol before the note. If you are writing it on regular notebook paper, you write it after the note name, i.e. C#. For whole step sharps, which raises a pitch a whole tone up, you use a x symbol. The position of the symbol is the same as half step sharps. For quarter step sharps, which are unconventional in western music but used in oriental music, look it up on wikipedia. The position of the symbol is the same as half step sharps also.
To learn how to make a minor scale, you can start by understanding the pattern of whole and half steps that make up a natural minor scale. The formula for a natural minor scale is whole step, half step, whole step, whole step, half step, whole step, whole step. By applying this pattern to any starting note, you can create a minor scale. Practice playing and listening to minor scales to become familiar with their sound and structure.
The piano is a C instrument. The trumpet is a B flat instrument. Thus, to transpose piano notes to trumpet notes, you have to put each note up one whole step. If piano -> trumpet: A -> B B flat -> C B -> C sharp C -> D C sharp -> D sharp D -> E E flat -> F E -> F sharp F -> G F sharp -> G sharp G -> A A flat -> B flat Hope that helped!
In music, when you see the flat sign (it looks like a lowercase "b"), it simply means to lower the given pitch one half step. On the piano this would be the key directly to the left of the given note.
any normal note then a flat note next to it then do it the requred amount of times, speeding up and then play a high flat note at the end