tone cluster APEX
melody
They are the same set.
Major: major second, major second, minor second, major second, major second, major second, minor second.In other words, there are whole steps the whole way except between the third and fourth tones and seventh and eighth tones of the scale, where there are half steps.Minor: major second, major second, minor second, major second, major second, minor second, major second, major second.In other words, there are whole steps the whole way except between the second and third tones and fifth and sixth tones of the scale, where there are half steps.
The diatonic scale consists of seven notes and follows a specific pattern of whole tones (W) and semitones (H). The pattern is: whole, whole, half, whole, whole, whole, half. In terms of intervals, this translates to the sequence: W-W-H-W-W-W-H. This pattern forms the basis for major and natural minor scales, with the major scale starting on the first note and the minor scale on the sixth note of the scale.
Mixed numbers contain whole numbers and fractions
tone clusters
Tone Cluster
tone cluster apex!!
melody
A series of single tones that add up to a recognizable whole is called a melody. It is also the what forms the main part of a song or piece of music
A tritone is called so because it spans three whole tones in music, creating an interval of three whole steps between two notes.
3 halvtones which equals one and a half whole tones.
A seminote, frequently called a semitone is the equivalent of a half-step in a musical scale. There are six whole tones, or steps in every scale, and consequently, 12 half tones/steps.
cause it tones the whole body.
the chords are..... EM AM C B7 play this for the whole song Hope this helps
They are the same set.
The "whole tones" in music are most easily defined in the key of "C", due to the piano being the most commonly played musical instrument. On a piano, all of the "white" keys are whole tones, some separated by semi-tones, as shown by the "black" keys. In an octave, one will find seven "whole" tones, with eight in total due to a repetition of the starting tone at the end. There are five "semi-tones" (black keys) in between in each octave, after the first, second, fourth, fifth and sixth whole tones. "middle" C on a piano is ~260hz, while the ending tone on the octave is double this, at ~520hz, and each "whole" note interval in between progressively and incrementally is staged in between.