Bb Harmonic Minor has 4 flats, since in the harmonic version of the scale the A flat (7th degree) is raised to A natural.
A chromatic scale will, by definition, have sharps and/or flats.
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.
The C major scale...
E Minor is the same key as G Major, and there is one sharp. It is the F#, which in E Minor scale is the second.
No, It only has 3, Bb, Ab and Eb... x
C minor has 3 flats, B#, E#, A#. B# becomes a natural in the harmonic scale.
To remember the flats in a scale you can use their corresponding sharps.
a harmonic minor
A chromatic scale will, by definition, have sharps and/or flats.
C major scale and A minor.
The E flat scale
The C major scale...
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.
The difference between a melodic minor scale and a harmonic minor scale is that in a melodic minor scale, the sixth and seventh scale degrees are raised on the way up, and on the way down they are the same as they would be in natural minor. In a harmonic minor scale, only the seventh scale degree is raised and stays the same on the way down.
The 7th note (leading note) is raised by a semitone in a harmonic minor scale.
C major has no sharps or flats.
The F minor scale has four flats.