When you are working with 7th chords it makes it minor, dominant, minor 7flat5, or diminished.
Lowering the third, fifth, or seventh steps of a major scale results in the creation of different types of chords or scales. Lowering the third produces a minor scale, lowering the fifth creates a diminished chord, and lowering the seventh results in a dominant seventh chord. These alterations lead to variations in harmony and tonality, enriching the musical texture.
In a major scale, these 3rd, 5th, and 7th steps are equal to a major third, a perfect fifth, and a major seventh, respectively. If you were to lower these (by half a step, or one semitone), you would get a minor third, a diminished fifth, and a minor seventh, respectively.
Minor scales have flats and major scales have sharps.
The seven major scales in Western music are the C major, D major, E major, F major, G major, A major, and B major scales. Each scale consists of seven notes and follows a specific pattern of whole and half steps. The C major scale has no sharps or flats, while the others vary in the number of sharps or flats they contain. These scales serve as the foundation for melody and harmony in music.
There are thousands of different scales worldwide, so really no one knows, but when talking of major scales, there are twelve (three of which go be two names).The major scales are (in chromatic order):C major, C♯/Db major, D major, Eb major, E major, F major, F♯/Gb major, G major, Ab major, A major, Bb major, and finally B/Cb major.The scales which are italicised are the 'enharmonic equivelent' scales, meaning that they are one scale going by two different names. C♯ and Db are the same key on the piano, so are F♯/Gb and B/Cb.
Lowering the third, fifth, or seventh steps of a major scale results in the creation of different types of chords or scales. Lowering the third produces a minor scale, lowering the fifth creates a diminished chord, and lowering the seventh results in a dominant seventh chord. These alterations lead to variations in harmony and tonality, enriching the musical texture.
In a major scale, these 3rd, 5th, and 7th steps are equal to a major third, a perfect fifth, and a major seventh, respectively. If you were to lower these (by half a step, or one semitone), you would get a minor third, a diminished fifth, and a minor seventh, respectively.
A major chord is the first, third, and fifth of any major scales. Example: C, E, G is a C major chord.
A major chord is the first, third, and fifth of any major scales. Example: C, E, G is a C major chord.
A major triad is built using the first (root), third, and fifth degrees of the major scale. Specifically, it consists of the root note, the major third (four half steps above the root), and the perfect fifth (seven half steps above the root). For example, in the C major scale, the C major triad includes the notes C (root), E (major third), and G (perfect fifth).
There are 12 major scales, not 7.
No, songs can have major scales, minor scales, whole tone scales, etc.
There are major scales in all twelve keys. Same with minor but their are three different types of minors which include harmonic, melodic, and natural. There are also the modes of scales including Ionian, Dorian, Phrygian, Lydian, Mixolydian, Aeolian, and Locrian. Finally there are "Blues" scales used in Jazz. This includes the root, minor third, fourth, flat fifth, fifth, and flat seventh.
Major scales generally sound happier
Minor scales have flats and major scales have sharps.
To find minor scales, you can start by identifying the key signature of the major scale and then lowering the third, sixth, and seventh notes by a half step. This will give you the relative minor scale. You can also use the natural minor scale formula (whole step, half step pattern) to construct minor scales starting from any note.
Tuba major scales refer to circle of fourths where G major is concert G.