Firstly, lets think about your major cghords. All major chord consist of the first (root) third and fifth notes of the major scale from which they come. so, for c major for eg, C E and G. you chords will all contain 1st 3rd and 5th notes somwhere. so, to make them minor, simply lower the third by a semitone, ie one fret, and hey presto, a minor chord.
Jason, Essex
UK
Minor chords, scales and pieces are normally more meloncholy to the positive major ones. Perhaps look up some minor and major scales, c for example, the difference is clear.
To one octave: C major & D minor To two octaves: F, G major & A minor
Lighter, happier, and bouncy music go with major scale. Dark, scary terrifying, and sad music go with minor scales.
No. Parallel key signatures share the same tonic, or starting note. Relative minor/major are the scales that share a key signature.
If you mean music scales, you need to be more specific, there are all sorts of scales - A m(inor), E flat (major),D (major)...
No, songs can have major scales, minor scales, whole tone scales, etc.
Minor scales have flats and major scales have sharps.
all instruments have the same minor scale.... actually they all have the same scales whether they be minor, major, melodic... etc. scales are not instrument specific but rather mode specific. there are also three different types of minor scales.
You have to do all the scales and arpeggios slurred as well. scales in 2 to a bow, and arpeggios 3 to abow. f major a major a minor a minor melodic d major d minor d minor melodic c minor melodic
There are a total of 24 major and minor scales in music theory.
The same scales as any instrument, all instruments play all scales. In western music - major scales, minor scales and modes are the main ones, but there are more.
Major scales generally sound happier
no :}
Minor scales are a series of notes that follow a specific pattern of intervals, resulting in a different sound than major scales. The main difference is that minor scales have a different arrangement of whole and half steps, giving them a darker and more melancholic sound compared to the brighter and happier sound of major scales.
No, C major and A minor are not the same. They are different keys in music, with different scales and tonalities. C major is a major key, while A minor is a minor key.
D Major and B Minor
Minor and major are two diatonic scales. A minor has no key signature. The key signature of A Major is three sharps, F# C# G#.