For a start, the main difference is between the more martial, joyful major sound and the more sombre melancholy minor. The fact that the first note of each key (the tonic) is the same (Eb is the same as D#) is probably the only similarity. Thereafter the flattened third and sixth note of Eb minor will distinguish it in sound to the scale of D# major. The second difference is the writing; the same notes, while sounding identical, will look different on the sheet music.
The key of G-sharp minor has 5 sharps (it's the relative to B major). G-flat minor is a key that only exists in theory, because that key signature would contain 9 flats. The limit on flats or sharps in a key is 7.
Start in C major, parallel minor is C minor, relative major is E-flat major, parallel minor is E-flat minor, enharmonic respelling is D-sharp minor (which has 6 sharps).
A minor (no sharps/flats)The flat keys with the note D as a natural are:D minorG minorC minorF minor (melodic minor, but not included in the key signature), as is is Db.The sharp keys with D as a natural are:E minorB minor (relative minor to B major)F sharp minor
The corresponding minor key to G Major is e minor. The key signature will be the same, one sharp: F#.
The dominant 7th chord is composed of the root, major third, perfect fifth, and minor seventh. The dominant seventh for the F# key would be F#, A#, C# and E.
what is the relative minor of f sharp major
Fx (f double sharp) minor.
G Major or e minor. The sharp would be F sharp.
C major (no sharps or flats)Sharp Keys:G Major/E minor (1 sharp)D Major/B minor (2 sharps)A Major/F-sharp minor (3 sharps)E Major/C-sharp minor (4 sharps)B Major/G-sharp minor (5 sharps)F-sharp Major/D-sharp minor (6 sharps)C-sharp Major/A-sharp minor (7 sharps)Flat Keys:F Major/D minor (1 flat)B-flat Major/G minor (2 flats)E-flat Major/C minor (3 flats)A-flat Major/F minor (4 flats)D-flat Major/B-flat minor (5 flats)G-flat Major/E-flat minor (6 flats)C-flat Major/A-flat minor (7 flats)These are all the possible keys you can write in, enharmonic keys are italicised.
Four key signatures have G sharp and E sharp in them: F sharp Major, D sharp minor, C sharp Major and A sharp minor.
F-sharp minor
The relative major of G-sharp minor is B major. This relationship is established because the relative major key is a minor third above the minor key, which in this case means that B major shares the same key signature (five sharps) as G-sharp minor.
B Major and G sharp minor. The sharps are F, C, G, D, and A sharp, in that order.
There are a total of fifteen keys in Western music. Keys come with two forms, sharp keys and flat keys and one comes with all naturals. The complete list of major keys are shown below: C major (or A minor) - no sharps/flats G major (E minor) - 1 sharp D major (B minor) - 2 sharps A major (F-sharp minor) - 3 sharps E major (C-sharp minor) - 4 sharps B major (G-sharp minor) - 5 sharps F-sharp major (D-sharp minor) - 6 sharps C-sharp major (A-sharp minor) - 7 sharps F major (D minor) - 1 flat B-flat major (G minor) - 2 flats E-flat major (C minor) - 3 flats A-flat major (F minor) - 4 flats D-flat major (B-flat minor) - 5 flats G-flat major (E-flat minor) - 6 flats C-flat major (A-flat minor) -7 flats There you go, those are all the different keys you can write in!
G major, D major, E major, B major, F sharp major, F sharp minor, A sharp major, etc.
The parallel minor of F-sharp major is F-sharp minor. A parallel minor key is the one with the same tonic note.
The key of G-sharp minor has 5 sharps (it's the relative to B major). G-flat minor is a key that only exists in theory, because that key signature would contain 9 flats. The limit on flats or sharps in a key is 7.