If you mean the same key-note, the simple answer is 'no'. A home tone is the note a particular scale starts on; for example - in the Ab major scale, Ab is the keynote and in the key of D major the key-note is D. The only common scales with C as a home tone are C major, C minor harmonic, C minor melodic, C minor (natural), C blues scale etc.
That would be the relative major or minor (example: C major and A minor).
No. Parallel key signatures share the same tonic, or starting note. Relative minor/major are the scales that share a key signature.
C Major, zero flats and zero sharps. The minor scale with the same number of flats and sharps is A Minor.
Replace. Keys are not the same
The same as on any other instrument, these are all the white keys except F♯.
There are three keys which are called "enharmonic keys", the three enharmonically equivalent key signatures are B major/C-flat major, F-sharp major/G-flat major, and C-sharp major/D-flat major and likewise their relative minors. B/C-flat, F-sharp/G-flat and C-sharp/D-flat all share the same pitch but are just notated in two different ways. In an other way the keys mentioned above are just one key going by two different names but they use different accidentals and are written on different lines/spaces.
The home keys are considered the middle row of characters on the keyboard, running from "a" on the left to the colon or semicolon key on the right. The pointer fingers align on the "f" and "j" keys, and the middle, ring and pinky fingers are also utilized on the same row of home keys.
There are seven keys with sharps and seven keys with flats, one key has no accidentals altogether, making a total of 15 possible major keys you can write in. There are also 15 minor keys with the same key signatures, totalling 30 keys. The 15 Major Keys Are: C Major (no sharps or flats) G Major (one sharp) D Major (two sharps) A Major (three sharps) E Major (four sharps) B Major (five sharps) F♯ Major (six sharps) C♯ Major (seven sharps) F Major (one flat) Bb Major (two flats) Eb Major (three flats) Ab Major (four flats) Db Major (five flats) Gb Major (six flats) Cb Major (seven flats) Hope that helped!
There are actually 15 major scales: C Major (the neutral key) and 7 sharp keys and 7 flat keys. The key with the most sharps is C# Major, where every note has a sharp. Likewise, the flattest key is Cb Major, where every note has a flat. People say there are 12 keys because three of these sound the same as three other keys (in 12 tone equal temperament, that is). Anyway, the progression of keys from the flattest to the sharpest key is: Cb, Gb, Db, Ab, Eb, Bb, F, C, G, D, A, E, B, F#, C#
C MINOR is the relative minor to Eb major, meaning both keys have the same key signature.
The minor keys usually have a darker sound and feel to them - as opposed to the major keys which sound generally brighter. The minor keys are based on the sixth degree of a given major scale (lets take D major as an example, if we go up six steps in this scale we get the notes D, E, F♯, G, A, and B). So B minor will have the same key signature as D major (with two sharps). In a major scale there are four semitones between the first and third degrees of the scale but in minor keys there are only three semitones. So in the D major scale the third scale degree (mediant) is F♯ but the same degree in D minor if F♮ (natural). As with the major keys, minor keys can also contain up to seven sharps or flats in their key signature too.
That would be the relative major or minor (example: C major and A minor).
Parallel major and minor keys have the same tonic pitch. Therefore, E minor is the parallel minor of E Major.
the same fingers you use to type all the other keys
C Major, zero flats and zero sharps. The minor scale with the same number of flats and sharps is A Minor.
No. Parallel key signatures share the same tonic, or starting note. Relative minor/major are the scales that share a key signature.
C Major, zero flats and zero sharps. The minor scale with the same number of flats and sharps is A Minor.