E, F#, G, A, B, C, D#, E
The E Harmonic Minor scale for the clarinet has the same key signature as its relative major scale of G major. To make the minor scale Harmonic minor the seventh note is raised (sharped). So: e - f# - g - a - b - c - d# - e are the notes you would play.
The D minor scale for violin consists of the notes D, E, F, G, A, B♭, and C. In this scale, the B is flattened, making it a B♭. There are no sharps in the natural D minor scale, but if you were to play the harmonic or melodic variations, they may include raised notes, specifically C♯ in the harmonic form.
F is the tonic. Therefore, from supertonic (the second note) to supertonic is G, A flat, B flat, C, D flat, E natural (a harmonic minor scale has the 7th note raised), F, G.
To make the Eb scale minor you would add 3 flats. Thus the Eb minor scale would have the flats of B,E,A,D,G and C. The last three flats, the Db, Gb, and the Cb, are the minor notes. If your Eb scale is already minor with only two flats, then the minors are Bb, Eb, and Ab.
Each major key has a relative minor key and vice versa. For example a key signature with one sharp can refer to either the G major or the e minor keys. For major keys there is only one scale type. For minor keys there are 3: pure, harmonic, and melodic. In pure(natural) minor none of the scale degrees are altered. In harmonic minor the seventh scale degree is raised half a step. In melodic minor the seventh and the sixth scale degrees are raised half a step, ascending and returned to their pure minor descending.
The notes to E harmonic minor are E F# G A B C D# E. You can write it out on your own staff paper.
E minor harmonic scale looks like this : E F# G A B C D# E The major scale for E minor is G major.
two. first is F# in scale E minor second is D# has sharpened from D for E harmonic scale.
The harmonic minor scale has the 7th note of the natural minor scale raised. The melodic minor scale has the 6th and 7th notes of the natural minor scale raised and then lowered. e.g. A natural minor: A, B, C, D, E, F, G, A A harmonic minor: A, B, C, D, E, F, G#, A A melodic minor: A, B, C, D, E, F#, G#, A, G, F, E, D, C, B, A
E, f#, g, a, b, c, d#, e.
E minor: E, F#, G, A, B, C, D. E melodic minor: E, F#, G, A, B, C, D# E harmonic minor: E, F#, G, A, B, C#, D#.
An E natural minor scale is written with a one-sharp key signature, so you just write out the scale in semibreves and add an additional D sharp for the harmonic minor, and two additional sharps to the sixth and seventh degrees when ascending in the melodic minor (C sharp and D sharp). You lower the sharps and revert back to the natural minor when you descend through the scale.
E, f#, g, a, b, c#, d#, e.
The notes in a G harmonic minor scale are: G A B flat C D E Flat F# G
In B harmonic Minor, you lower the third and sixth scale degree from the B major scale. So your notes will be B, C#, D, E, F#, G, A#, B There are three forms of minor: Harmonic, Melodic, and Natural.
A harmonic minor is a natural minor with a raised seventh. For example, starting with a major key: C Major C D E F G A B C A natural minor A B C D E F G A A harmonic minor A B C D E F G# A
C minor has 3 flats, B#, E#, A#. B# becomes a natural in the harmonic scale.