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It depends. If the note is not sharped or flatted due to the key signature or an accidental earlier in the measure, it is a flat. If the note is sharped, the natural sign indicates that you play it a semitone lower.
a flat note is slightly lower than a normal note. You can tell the difference on a bassoon with E and E flat.
b flat
No. On a certain note with both a sharp and flat, (G, for example) they are the same distance from G, but going in diferent directions. G sharp raises the note by one half step while G flat lowers the note by one half step. However, it is possible for a sharp note to mean the same note as a flat note. For example, G sharp is the same note as A flat. This is called being enharmonic.
A note which is neither sharp nor flat is called natural.A natural
B flat note, C note, D note, E flat note, F note, G note, A note, B flat note.
if it's an A-Flat scale the first note is A-Flat...
It depends. If the note is not sharped or flatted due to the key signature or an accidental earlier in the measure, it is a flat. If the note is sharped, the natural sign indicates that you play it a semitone lower.
the longest note is the flat note
a flat note is slightly lower than a normal note. You can tell the difference on a bassoon with E and E flat.
e flat
G flat
b flat
No. On a certain note with both a sharp and flat, (G, for example) they are the same distance from G, but going in diferent directions. G sharp raises the note by one half step while G flat lowers the note by one half step. However, it is possible for a sharp note to mean the same note as a flat note. For example, G sharp is the same note as A flat. This is called being enharmonic.
A double flat is a tone lower than the natural note.
The note is A flat.
If "note" means a musical note, then the translation is as follows: "la note d'or".