This is the way that she intended the song to sound like. She wrote it this way to have her own "sense of style"
It depends on the event. She only really performs at major events/TV shows.
In the key of D major, the accidentals are F# and C#. The key signature consists of two sharps: F# and C#. These accidentals are essential for establishing the major tonality and contribute to the scale of D major, which consists of the notes D, E, F#, G, A, B, and C#.
b flat
YOU learn about accidentals in level 2 in piano. Accidentals in piano are when there are flats or sharps next to a note that was not given in the key signature.
In the key of C major, there are no accidentals; it consists solely of the white keys on a piano: C, D, E, F, G, A, and B. This scale is characterized by a natural sound without any sharps or flats. Therefore, all notes in the C major scale are in their natural form.
Instead of writing a sharp in the key signature, write one next to the F when you write out the scale.
look for any accidenatls in the scale. If there are no accidentals, then it's a major scale, vise versa. All the sharps and flats should be included in the key signature of the scale.
Harmonic Minor - The first minor scale you will learn, uses the accidentals in the key signature with a sharp 7th. Melodic Minor - First half of the scale is minor, the second half is major (ascending). Descending, only the accidentals in the scale are used. Natural Minor - Same notes as the relative major but ending on the first note of the minor scale. Hope this helps.
Johann Sebastian Bach 'discovered' the chromatic scale, and composed the Circle of Fifths. The Circle of Fifths starts with the key of C, which has no accidentals (flats or sharps). The fifth note of C is G, when means when you play or write these scales, you move from the key of C to the key of G - moving up a perfect fifth; hence, the term 'circle of fifths'. The key of G major has one accidental, the F sharp. The fifth note of the key of G is D, and the key of D major has TWO sharps - so you see, as you move through the circle of fifths each change increases the number of accidentals by one. For instance, the fifth note of D is A, and the key of A major has THREE accidentals. That is pretty much why the key of G major has an accidental, which in the case of that scale, happens to be F sharp.
Hi, it's Ray Quinn (winner of ITV’s Dancing on Ice and runner up to Leona Lewis in The X-Factor. Full casting info is published at http://www.ambassadortickets.com/57/672/London/PiccadillyTheatre/Grease Hope that helps!
It means they belong to that scale, and when the key of a song is "C", these are the notes to use. If their are any accidentals next to a note though, remember to raise or lower the note accordingly.
the Lewis and clark expedition.