C
D.
In the perspective of European-descendent theory, the degrees of any key or scale (major, minor, or modal) can be classified as follows: 1 - Tonic 2 - Supertonic 3 - Mediant 4 - Subdominant 5 - Dominant 6 - Submediant 7 - Leading Tone Let us take the case of C major as our key/scale: C - Tonic D - Supertonic E - Mediant F - Subdominant G - Dominant A - Submediant B - Leading Tone Similarily, this works in the minor keys, too. Using A natural harmonic as our key/scale: A - Tonic B - Supertonic C - Mediant D - Subdominant E - Dominant F - Submediant G - Leading Tone
The subdominant in a scale is the 4th, which in the key of B-flat major is E-flat.
E flat.
G major transposed down a major second becomes F major. In the G major scale, the notes are G, A, B, C, D, E, and F#. When you lower each note by a whole step (major second), the resulting scale is F, G, A, Bb, C, D, and E.
The subdominant is the 4th scale degree. In G major, that's C.
G
C
The subdominant of D major is G major.
The subdominant is the 4th, so in G, it's C.
The subdominant in any major scale is the fourth note. So, in C major, the subdominant is the F.
Yes. Actually it's spelled "subdominant" but that's just getting picky.
The subdominant note in a key is the 4th. In G minor, it's C.
The subdominant note is D in an A major scale
The subdominant triad of Eb major is the Ab major triad.
The subdominant note is the fourth scale degree of any key, for example in C major the subdominant note is F since the scale goes C D E F G A B C.
The subdominant is the 4th note in a scale, so in A major it's D.