C
C is Do
E
Fa is the 4th scale-degree of both the C major and minor scales.
The leading tone in the key of D, whether major or minor, is C#.
The key signature for D Minor is 1 flat. Here is the difference between D major and D minor: D Major: D E F# G A B C# D D Minor: D E F G A Bflat C D However, there are 3 commonly used forms of Minor Scales. The above is called the "natural minor", or Aeolian Mode. In the harmonic minor scale, the 7th note is raised one semitone, to C#. However, this added sharp does not appear in the key signature. In the melodic minor scale, the 6th and 7th notes are raised in ascending, to B and C#, but restored to the natural minor form in descending. However, these changes do not appear in the key signature. In the D minor pentatonic scale, used frequently in Rock, only the following notes are used: D - F G A - C D This form can be notated with or without a key signature, but a key signature of one flat (Bb) lets us know that D is the tonic!
It could be played in any key, but the simplest key to play in is C which has no flats and no sharps. The notes for Ode to Joy in C major are: E E F G G F E D-- C C D E E D-- E E F G G F E D-- C C D E D C-- Hold the notes with a "--" following them a little longer than the other notes.
when singing scales in the key of C what note is TE?
it is the note "A".A.
E
In the key of C, "Sol" (you referred to it as "so"), is G.
Fa is the 4th scale-degree of both the C major and minor scales.
the note of "D" :)
Ti is the seventh note in a major scale (do re mi fa so la TI do). In the key of C, the Ti note would be B.
In they key of C Major, sol would be the note G. Do (C) Re (D) Mi (E) Fa (F) Sol (G) La (A) Ti (B) Do (C).
If you mean the same key-note, the simple answer is 'no'. A home tone is the note a particular scale starts on; for example - in the Ab major scale, Ab is the keynote and in the key of D major the key-note is D. The only common scales with C as a home tone are C major, C minor harmonic, C minor melodic, C minor (natural), C blues scale etc.
You can have a musical scale starting anywhere you like. On the piano, the simplest scale is C major, in which the second note is D. In all major and minor scales, you can find the second note by moving up two semitones from the first note (C-C#-D or G-G#-A)
There are actually 15 major scales: C Major (the neutral key) and 7 sharp keys and 7 flat keys. The key with the most sharps is C# Major, where every note has a sharp. Likewise, the flattest key is Cb Major, where every note has a flat. People say there are 12 keys because three of these sound the same as three other keys (in 12 tone equal temperament, that is). Anyway, the progression of keys from the flattest to the sharpest key is: Cb, Gb, Db, Ab, Eb, Bb, F, C, G, D, A, E, B, F#, C#
It's a made-up word that basically means off-key. Although Randy Jackson may think it's a cool word to say, it actually has no real meaning in relation to vocal performances and is probably said to just confuse the singers. What's wrong with saying off-key, or flat, or sharp? These terms are actually more helpful than saying "pitchy" because they actually have explain why the vocal sound is not correct. Off-key means that the singer is not on the correct key that the song was composed in (for example, singing in D major when the song is in C major). Flat means that the singer did not hit the exact note, but sang a half-note or full note lower than intended note (for example, singing a F note instead of an F sharp). Sharp is the opposite, meaning that the singer sang a half-note or full note higher than the intended note (singing a C sharp instead of a C).