Natural minor: C#, D#, E, F#, G#, A, B, C#
Harmonic minor: C#, D#, E, F#, G#, A, B#, C#
Melodic minor: C#, D#, E, F#, G#, A#, B#, C#, B, A, G#, F#, E, D#, C#
The F-sharp natural minor scale consists of these notes:F-sharp, G-sharp, A,G,C-sharp,D, and EThe F-sharp harmonic minor scale consists of these notes:F-sharp, G-sharp, A, B, C-sharp, D and E-sharp.The F-sharp melodic minor scale consists of these notes:[going up] F-sharp, G-sharp, A, B, C-sharp, D-sharp and E-sharp.[going down] F-sharp, E, D, C-sharp, B, A and G-sharp.
That would be either A major or F# minor.
There is not three notes in any scale or key, if you are asking about the accidentals, there is one flat (Bb) in the key signature plus an additional C sharp for the harmonic minor scale.
C sharp, D sharp, E natural, F sharp, G sharp, A natural, B sharp & C sharp We call the note C "B sharp" to avoid using the same letter name twice. If we used the note name "C" we would have 2 C-notes and no B-notes in the scale!
C# major, E major, A major, B major, and C# minor.
The C major scale and its relative minor, the A minor scale. C Major.
The F-sharp natural minor scale consists of these notes:F-sharp, G-sharp, A,G,C-sharp,D, and EThe F-sharp harmonic minor scale consists of these notes:F-sharp, G-sharp, A, B, C-sharp, D and E-sharp.The F-sharp melodic minor scale consists of these notes:[going up] F-sharp, G-sharp, A, B, C-sharp, D-sharp and E-sharp.[going down] F-sharp, E, D, C-sharp, B, A and G-sharp.
The scale of 'C' - it uses neither sharp or flat notes.
There is no such thing as a C sharp minor on a piano. C sharp minor refers to a key signature or tonal center, not a singular note. Remember, the individual notes in music mean nothing until they are made relative to each other by the scale or chords used. Right but also the C# minor scale (C#m) means take the C# scale and flat the third note in the scale progression. The third note here is E# (E Sharp). Start by counting the first note of the scale, it is called the root, in this case C#. So, C#, D#, then E#. The chord is the usually the first (root), 3rd and fifth notes of the scale progression. In a minor key/scale you flat the 3rd note of the scale/chord. So here the E# is flatted to be natural E. The chord C# minor (C#m) consists of the notes C#, E and G#. Have fun.
The notes in an F sharp minor chord are F, A, and C.
Hi! Im Kitty_1616! I play the alto sax anbd I know almost all scales. So..... The notes to the A minor Harmonic scale are: * A * B * C * D * E * F * G sharp * A The notes for the A minor Melodic scale GOING UP are: * A * B * C * D * F SHARP * G SHARP * A Going down, the F & G are not sharped. Glad I could help you! Kitty_1616 Hi! Im Kitty_1616! I play the alto sax anbd I know almost all scales. So..... The notes to the A minor Harmonic scale are: * A * B * C * D * E * F * G sharp * A The notes for the A minor Melodic scale GOING UP are: * A * B * C * D * F SHARP * G SHARP * A Going down, the F & G are not sharped. Glad I could help you! Kitty_1616
That would be either A major or F# minor.
The notes in the A minor scale are A, B, C, D, E, F, and G.
There is not three notes in any scale or key, if you are asking about the accidentals, there is one flat (Bb) in the key signature plus an additional C sharp for the harmonic minor scale.
The notes for C-sharp minor are the following. C# D# E F# G# A B C#
C sharp, D sharp, E natural, F sharp, G sharp, A natural, B sharp & C sharp We call the note C "B sharp" to avoid using the same letter name twice. If we used the note name "C" we would have 2 C-notes and no B-notes in the scale!
D major is: D, E, F sharp, G, A, B, C sharp, D. D minor is: D, E, F, G, A, A sharp, C sharp, D.