C flat Major
G-flat major scale has the most with 6 flats: b-flat, e-flat, a-flat, d-flat, g-flat, and c-flat.Of course, one could argue that other scales have more flats (such as C-flat major, F-flat major, B-double-flat major, etc), but these scales are typically notated as their enharmonic equivalent (e.g. A major instead of B-double-flat major).
You notes in the A minor chord are A, C, and E. Simply transpose your C one step higher to a C#, and you have an A major! Most chords are easily transposed from major to minor, or visa versa, with a transposition of one note. However, this is for the piano, you didn't specify which instrument =)
Any note can be do especially when warming up but most people use c to start there warming up and then move half steps up the scale and each new note becoming a do
main is the most important the most known and major is like the biggest .
what is the most pay raise for no-4
B flat
The A Flat Natural Minor Scale
They are not the same but are closely related. A scale is any series of notes that goes from a note to the same pitched note an octave higher or lower. So a scale goes from C to C, or from E flat to E flat, and so on. A major scale is a special scale pattern that forms the basis of most Western music. A major key is the key that the music is played in. For any given key, the default notes will be the notes in the major scale of the same name. So in the key of C major the default notes are the 7 notes in the C major scale, and in the key of E flat major the default notes are the 7 notes in the E flat major scale. To further clarify, the interval between the two C's or E flats is called an octave. There are twelve specific notes in the octave. lets start with A. (Some notes have two names and they will be given in parentheses (The symbol # is pronounced sharp, the symbol b is pronounced flat). The notes are A, (A#, Bb), B, C, (C#, Db), D, (D#, Eb), E, F, (F#, Gb), G, (G#, Ab). A major scale uses seven of those notes. They are the starting point, skip one, then skip again, then the next one, skip, skip skip. So if you start with C, you get C, D, E, F, G, A, B and end it with the note of the next octave, C. This makes eight, hence the name octave.
The Keys of B-flat, E-Flat, A-Flat, D-Flat, G-Flat, C-Flat, and F-Flat major all contain the note E-flat. F-flat major is a key which only exists in theory and not in practice, since there is a double flat in that scale (subdominant). The major scale with the most flats is C-flat major - with all seven flats.
In most music, the majority of the notes in a tune are a set of seven notes chosen from the 12 notes of western music. The "major scale" is one way of selecting these seven notes. In the key of C, the major scale is C-D-E-F-G-A-B-C. The song "Do-Re-Mi" is all about the major scale. If you can sing that, then you know the major scale intuitively.As an example, the main Star Wars theme uses a major scale:C G F E D C GThe "Jedi" theme does not use a major scale; it includes e-flat which is not in the major scale.G G C D E-flat F E-flat GNote that the notes of the major scale are not evenly spaced in frequency. The interval between C and D is twice as big as the interval between E and F. The intervals (in terms of semitones) is:C(2)D(2)E(1)F(2)G(2)A(2)B(1)C
G-flat major scale has the most with 6 flats: b-flat, e-flat, a-flat, d-flat, g-flat, and c-flat.Of course, one could argue that other scales have more flats (such as C-flat major, F-flat major, B-double-flat major, etc), but these scales are typically notated as their enharmonic equivalent (e.g. A major instead of B-double-flat major).
B flat major is a scale, which is a series of notes played in succesion, going up and down. The musical note B flat is just one frequency which is a semitone above A. Concert A (the most used middle A) is at 440Hz.
D flat, E flat, F flat, G Flat, A flat, B Double flat, C flat, D flat. However, since D flat and C sharp are, essentially, the same, it would be easier to write in terms of C sharp. The scale would then read C sharp, D sharp, E, F sharp, G sharp, A, B, C sharp.
isn't it 1 7 1??
The Pentatonic is by far the most useful, because anything you play with the pentatonic will sound good. Major/Minor pentatonics are exactly the same shapes for related scales e.g. A minor and C major use the same notes, and B minor and D major use the same notes. You only need to add a few notes to get a full Major or Minor scale, of a Modal Scale.The octave ( eight steps single notes) is probably the most easiest, it propably sounds like this do ra me fa so la te do. This can be used with any major scale.
A run of notes, most scales have eight notes.
C, D, E, F, G, A, B, C. no flats or sharps. It's probably the most basic scale in the world...