E flat.
The subdominant in a scale is the 4th, which in the key of B-flat major is E-flat.
b flat, c, d, e flat, f, g, a, b flat
D.
Two flats, B flat and E flat
C
The subdominant note of E-flat minor is A-flat.
F Major
There is no such thing as B major. There is B minor and B flat major. The subdominant triad of B minor ( I'm pretty sure) is E minor.
The subdominant in a scale is the 4th, which in the key of B-flat major is E-flat.
The tonic of E flat major is E flat. Its dominant is B flat and its subdominant is A flat.
Yes. Actually it's spelled "subdominant" but that's just getting picky.
The sub-dominant of Db is Gb.
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 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.
Subdominant. 5th lower.
The subdominant in any major scale is the fourth note. So, in C major, the subdominant is the F.
It depends on what scale you're talking about. B flat major = B flat, C, D, E flat, F, G, A B flat harmonic minor (ascending and descending) = B-flat, C, D-flat, E-flat, F, G-flat, A (natural), B-flat, A (natural), G-flat, F, E-flat, D-flat, C, B-flat B flat melodic minor (ascending and descending) = B-flat, C, D-flat, E-flat, F, G (natural), A (natural), B-flat, B-flat, A-flat, G-flat, F, E-flat, D-flat, C, B-flat B flat natural minor = B-flat, C, D-flat, E-flat, F, G, A, B-flat