an f minor scale written with sharps instead of flats, that uses e sharp as the tonic.
E Minor Scale has a key signature note of F-Sharp and with a G Major Scale.
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.
An E natural minor scale is written with a one-sharp key signature, so you just write out the scale in semibreves and add an additional D sharp for the harmonic minor, and two additional sharps to the sixth and seventh degrees when ascending in the melodic minor (C sharp and D sharp). You lower the sharps and revert back to the natural minor when you descend through the scale.
A key signature with one sharp (F#) would be either G major or E minor.
A minor
E Minor Scale has a key signature note of F-Sharp and with a G Major Scale.
The natural minor scale with the most sharp notes is E natural minor, which has one sharp note (F#).
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.
An E natural minor scale is written with a one-sharp key signature, so you just write out the scale in semibreves and add an additional D sharp for the harmonic minor, and two additional sharps to the sixth and seventh degrees when ascending in the melodic minor (C sharp and D sharp). You lower the sharps and revert back to the natural minor when you descend through the scale.
E natural minor: E, F sharp, G, A, B, C, D natural, E E harmonic minor: E, F sharp, G, A, B, C, D sharp, E E melodic minor: E, F sharp, G, A, B, C sharp, D sharp, E, D natural, C natural, B, A, G, F sharp, E.
The E# minor scale is as follows: E#, Fx, G#, A#, B#, Cx, D#, E#
A, B, C, D, E, F and G (natural minor) A, B, C, D, E, F-sharp, and G-sharp (melodic minor ascending - descending is the same as natural minor) A, B, C, D, E, F, and G-sharp (harmonic minor).
The key of 'E' major is the 5th key in the circle of 5ths, meaning it would have 4 sharps. F sharp, C sharp, G sharp and D sharp. Obviously since it is an E major scale, it starts on E, then F sharp, G sharp, A, B, C sharp, D sharp and E again. If you are talking about 'E' minor, the relative major is G, which has 1 sharp: F sharp. You would start an 'E' minor natural scale once again on 'E', then go to F sharp, g, a, b, c, d and e.
A key signature with one sharp (F#) would be either G major or E minor.
Firstly, lets think about your major cghords. All major chord consist of the first (root) third and fifth notes of the major scale from which they come. so, for c major for eg, C E and G. you chords will all contain 1st 3rd and 5th notes somwhere. so, to make them minor, simply lower the third by a semitone, ie one fret, and hey presto, a minor chord. Jason, Essex UK
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.
A minor