The keys of Eb Major and c minor have three flats in their key signatures: Bb, Eb, and Ab.
Eb Major and C minor
The keys of C major and A minor have no sharps or flats.
C Major, zero flats and zero sharps. The minor scale with the same number of flats and sharps is A Minor.
How do you memorize relative minors? Learn the major scales (key signatures, sharps, and flats). Get accustomed to thinking of scale degrees simultaneously by note and number. To convert to relative minor, I find it easier to count backwards 8-7-6 (C-B-A) from the octave root (8th degree), and then add sharps or flats as I know them to be in the relative major. I play guitar so it's easy to recover from mistakes by using it as a chromatic approach or a slow bend.
There are three flats in the key signature of E flat major
To make the Eb scale minor you would add 3 flats. Thus the Eb minor scale would have the flats of B,E,A,D,G and C. The last three flats, the Db, Gb, and the Cb, are the minor notes. If your Eb scale is already minor with only two flats, then the minors are Bb, Eb, and Ab.
E flat
Eb Major
The keys of C major and A minor have no sharps or flats.
Three flats is either E-flat major or C minor.
C Major, zero flats and zero sharps. The minor scale with the same number of flats and sharps is A Minor.
Bb Eb Ab go up the keyboard three notes and it's relative major is Eb...which has three flats..therefore..c minor will also have 3 flats
There are seven keys with sharps and seven keys with flats, one key has no accidentals altogether, making a total of 15 possible major keys you can write in. There are also 15 minor keys with the same key signatures, totalling 30 keys. The 15 Major Keys Are: C Major (no sharps or flats) G Major (one sharp) D Major (two sharps) A Major (three sharps) E Major (four sharps) B Major (five sharps) F♯ Major (six sharps) C♯ Major (seven sharps) F Major (one flat) Bb Major (two flats) Eb Major (three flats) Ab Major (four flats) Db Major (five flats) Gb Major (six flats) Cb Major (seven flats) Hope that helped!
There are time signatures and key signatures. Time signatures indicate how many beats are in a measure, and which note represents the beat. For example 3/4 would mean three beats in each measure, with each beat lasting one quarter note. Key signatures indicate what key a piece or passage is to be played in. a key signature with three flats could be E-flat major, or C minor, depending on the resting tone. A key signature with two sharps could be D major or B minor, again depending on the resting tone.
The key signatures are the same in both clefts, but the flats are placed in different locations since the notes themselves are found in different places. The key of Eb major has three flats: Bb, Eb, and Ab.
How do you memorize relative minors? Learn the major scales (key signatures, sharps, and flats). Get accustomed to thinking of scale degrees simultaneously by note and number. To convert to relative minor, I find it easier to count backwards 8-7-6 (C-B-A) from the octave root (8th degree), and then add sharps or flats as I know them to be in the relative major. I play guitar so it's easy to recover from mistakes by using it as a chromatic approach or a slow bend.
There are three flats in the key signature of E flat major
Three