G Major or e minor. The sharp would be F sharp.
Four key signatures have G sharp and E sharp in them: F sharp Major, D sharp minor, C sharp Major and A sharp minor.
No key signatures contain only those three sharps. With the A-sharp, it could be the keys of B major, F-sharp major, or C-sharp major (or any of their relative minor keys).
Key signatures are the sharps or flats at the beginning of the staff. To identify the key signature of a scale that consists of all sharps, look at the last sharp in the key signature. Whichever note the last sharp lies on, the key of the scale is one note above it. To identify the key signature of a scale that consists of all flats, look at the note directly before the last flat in the key signature. The second-to-last note is the name of the key signature of flat keys. However, you cannot use this helpful trick with the F Major Scale which only has one flat (B flat).
It shows which notes in a piece are natural, sharp, or flat. Without a key signature, every single accidental would have to be written in instead.
Both G major and e minor have F# in their key signatures. For e minor, the 7th note (D) is raised (to D#) when it is in harmonic form.
To find sharp key signatures, look at the last sharp in the key signature and go up one half step. This note is the leading tone and indicates the key of the music.
To find the key signature of "do" in music, look at the last sharp in the key signature. The note one half step above that sharp is "do."
There are several key signatures that contain sharps.
Sharp key signatures can be identified by looking at the number of sharps in the key signature. Each sharp symbol indicates a specific note that is raised by a half step in the scale. The order of sharps in the key signature follows a pattern: F C G D A E B. By recognizing this pattern, one can determine the key of a piece of music based on the sharps in the key signature.
Four key signatures have G sharp and E sharp in them: F sharp Major, D sharp minor, C sharp Major and A sharp minor.
No key signatures contain only those three sharps. With the A-sharp, it could be the keys of B major, F-sharp major, or C-sharp major (or any of their relative minor keys).
Key signatures in music indicate the key of a piece and the sharps or flats that are consistently used throughout. To identify the key signature, look at the sharps or flats at the beginning of the staff. The number of sharps or flats can help determine the key. For example, one sharp is the key of G major, while two flats indicate the key of Bb major.
Key signatures are the sharps or flats at the beginning of the staff. To identify the key signature of a scale that consists of all sharps, look at the last sharp in the key signature. Whichever note the last sharp lies on, the key of the scale is one note above it. To identify the key signature of a scale that consists of all flats, look at the note directly before the last flat in the key signature. The second-to-last note is the name of the key signature of flat keys. However, you cannot use this helpful trick with the F Major Scale which only has one flat (B flat).
It shows which notes in a piece are natural, sharp, or flat. Without a key signature, every single accidental would have to be written in instead.
The key signature of C sharp has seven sharps, while the key signature of D flat has five flats. This means that the notes in each key will be different, even though they sound the same.
A sharp key signature is one that contains sharps.
D major or it's relative minor (B minor). I memorized the "Circle of 5th's" to help me remember key signatures. There are many key signatures with F and C sharps. D, A, E, B, F#, C# and their relative minor scales (Bm, F#m, C#m, G#m, D#m, A#m).