Well you find a B and go to the black key on the left
Between A and B
If u can find b flat or b go 2 keys to the right Hope this helps =D
The IV chord in the key of B flat would be E flat so the triad notes would be e flat, g, and b flat (on keyboard) for guitar it would be e flat, b flat, e flat, g, b flat, and e flat. Played at the 11th fret as a bar chord in standard tuning.
The chorus: E flat- C#- C- B flat- B flat- A flat-C X2 E flat- C#- C- B flat- B flat- B flat E flat- E flat- E flat- C#-C-B flat- B flat-B flat-B flat-A flat Its hard 2 actually write out the notes but u can probably figure it out :/
In fixed "do" solfege, B-flat would be "tay"
When typing, you can use the letter b to signify a flat. For example: Bb would mean B-flat.
B flat scale would be b flat, C, D, E flat, F, G, A, and High B flat
E flat consists of 3 flats, B flat, E flat and A flat. E flat to B flat would be a perfect 5th interval as B flat is in E flat major, but because your question was E flat to B, B is a semitone up from B flat, this would mean the interval becomes a semitone larger, and a semitone larger from a perfect interval is augmented. Therefore, the answer to your question is an augmented 5th. Hope this helps :)
The black keys on a keyboard are in groups of three and groups of two. Looking at a group of three the black not on the right is a B flat, the white key next to it is a C
I am guessing so... I've seen something like a key signature having a B-flat, and somewhere in the piece there is a flat in front of a B, so it would be a B-double-flat. If double flats are allowed,then it would be C,B-sharp;C-sharp,D-flat;D, E-double-flat; D-sharp, E-flat; E, F-flat;F,G-double-flat;F-sharp,G-flat;G,A-double-flat;G-sharp,A-flat;A,B-double-flat;and B,C-double-flat.
Space
B flat, F, B flat are the basic three... B flat (the second one) would be your tunning note on a Bb concert scale.