Yes.
the musical alphabet is A,B,C,D,E,F,G and the sharps and flats
Nope, sharps arre sharps, flats are flats, and naturals are naturals.
There are no flats or sharps. Its relative major scale is C major, which has all of the same notes.
A chromatic scale will, by definition, have sharps and/or flats.
There's no sharps of flats in the key signature in either C major or A minor.
the musical alphabet is A,B,C,D,E,F,G and the sharps and flats
At the beginning of the piece, there will be one to seven sharps or flats. This tells you the sharps or flats that will be used unless otherwise noted. If there are no sharps or flats, then there will be no sharps or flats unless otherwise noted.
C major and A minor both have no sharps or flats.
No. All the black keys are either a sharp or a flat. The black keys do not have their own note names, however in German musical notation B flat is denoted by the letter B on it's own - unlike the other sharps or flats. This is how BACH could spell his own name in musical notes.
C major has no sharps or flats.
Up to 2 sharps or flats.
C Major, zero flats and zero sharps. The minor scale with the same number of flats and sharps is A Minor.
Sharps and flats in music are called accidentals; this also includes naturals.
Nope, sharps arre sharps, flats are flats, and naturals are naturals.
Sharps and Flats - 1915 is rated/received certificates of: UK:A
There are no flats and no sharps in A minor
Flats and Sharps - 1915 was released on: USA: 6 November 1915