Well, it depends on what you want. See there are no rules in piano you can do anything you want. The c major scale is just a series of notes used to give the player an idea of which keys to use. If you are writing music go ahead and add it in there if you feel like it, it will still be in the key of C.
A "blues scale" is a minor pentatonic scale with the additional sharped 4th/flatted fifth. Blues scales can start on any note but an example of the C minor blues scale is: C, E♭, F, G♭, G, B♭, and C. The structure of the scale is root (C), flatted 3rd (E♭), natural 4th (F), flatted 5th (G♭), natural 5th (G♮), flatted 7th (B♭) and back to the root again.
G major scale
C, D, and E are the first three notes of the C major scale.
There are no sharps or flats in C Major.
The C major scale...
the major pentatonic scale ( notes played are 1st note or "Root" note, then the 2nd, 3rd, 5th and the 6th) differs from the the minor pentatonic (1st, 3rd flatted, 4th, 5th, and 7th flatted) D major pentatonic: D, E, F#, A, and B (1st, 2nd, 3rd, 5th, and 6th notes of the D scale.) D minor pentatonic: D, F, G, A, and C (1st, 3rd flatted, 4th, 5th, and 7th flatted) (D =1st note , 3rd flatted = F (F# becomes F when flatted), G = 4th note, A = 5th note and 6th note flatted = C (C# becomes C when flatted). Hope that is helpful.. Same pattern applys to other notes for creating major and minor pentatonic scales.
All 7 notes are flatted in the Cb Major scale. The Cb Major scale is enharmonic to the B Major scale and that scale has 5 sharps.(F.C,G,D,E). If you compare the 2 scales you will notice they are identical.
A minor scale is the same as its major scale with the third and the seventh notes "flatted" or lowered half a step. For example, the key of C has the notes C D E F G A B C in C minor the E is changed to E-flat and the B is B-flat
The sixth of the scale is lowered. For example, in C major, the sixth note is A natural. When this note is lowered it becomes an A flat. The note is generally lowered by a semitone.
Each time you go lower by a fifth and you add one flat until you reach C flat (with all 7 notes flatted in the scale).
The sixth of the scale is lowered. For example, in C major, the sixth note is A natural. When this note is lowered it becomes an A flat. The note is generally lowered by a semitone.
C major is a major scale starting from C.
The minor scale is different from a major scale because the third, sixth, and seventh are one half step lower than a major scale. For example, a C major scale is C, D, E, F, G, A, B; a C minor scale is C, D, Eb, F, G, Ab, Bb. The Eb, Ab, and Bb are one half step lower, which gives the minor scale its distinct sound.
A "blues scale" consists of the root, minor third, fourth, flatted fifth, natural fifth, minor seventh and the root again. The notes for the C Blues Scale would be C, Eb, F, Gb, G, Bb and C again.
The C major scale is: C, D, E, F, G, A, B, C.
The C major scale is: C, D, E, F, G, A, B, C.
The primary difference between a major and minor scale is in the positioning of the tones and semitones that make up the scale. Both scales have eight notes. In the standard harmonic minor scale, the semitones occur between the 2nd and 3rd notes of the scale, whilst in the major scale, the semitones occur between the 3rd and 4th notes, and the 7th and 8th notes.