The E# minor scale is as follows: E#, Fx, G#, A#, B#, Cx, D#, E#
E minor has one sharp, which is F#.
E minor has F# and D# (as an accidental)
E minor contains one sharp: F.
B minor comes next (after E minor) on the sharps side of the circle of fifths?
E sharp has 3 sharps and 4 double sharps, the sharps are E sharp, A sharp, and B sharp.
There aren't any sharps in c minor - there are three flats, b flat, e flat and a flat.
G minor contains two flats: B and E.
E minor contains an F-sharp and no flats. E F# G A B C D E
C major (no sharps or flats)Sharp Keys:G Major/E minor (1 sharp)D Major/B minor (2 sharps)A Major/F-sharp minor (3 sharps)E Major/C-sharp minor (4 sharps)B Major/G-sharp minor (5 sharps)F-sharp Major/D-sharp minor (6 sharps)C-sharp Major/A-sharp minor (7 sharps)Flat Keys:F Major/D minor (1 flat)B-flat Major/G minor (2 flats)E-flat Major/C minor (3 flats)A-flat Major/F minor (4 flats)D-flat Major/B-flat minor (5 flats)G-flat Major/E-flat minor (6 flats)C-flat Major/A-flat minor (7 flats)These are all the possible keys you can write in, enharmonic keys are italicised.
an f minor scale written with sharps instead of flats, that uses e sharp as the tonic.
two. first is F# in scale E minor second is D# has sharpened from D for E harmonic scale.
C major and A minor both have no sharps or flats.
There are no sharps in F minor.
E natural minor has one sharp on F. The key signature is the same as G major.