B major:
First inversion = D♯, F♯ and B
Second inversion = F♯, B and D♯
F♭ Major:
First inversion = A♭, C♭ and F♭
Second inversion = C♭, F♭ and A♭
N.B:
F♭ Major is enharmonic with E major.
A-flat Major scale
No such major has b flat and e flat.
The tonic note of any diatonic scale is the first note (starting note) of the scale. In the case of G-flat major the tonic note is G-flat!
A flat is the note that is a half step down from the note with the flat sign. A minor is the name of a type of scale, which is the scale starting with the minor note it's named after. For example, the B minor scale would start with B minor, as opposed to starting with C (the first note of the common C major scale).
There are three flats in the e flat scale. B E and A flat. So the scale would be E flat, F, G, A flat, B flat, C, D, E flat.I hope this helps you! :)
E flat first, F open, G first and second, A second, B flat open, C first, D open, High E flat First
E flat first, F open, G first and second, A second, B flat open, C first, D open, High E flat First
if it's an A-Flat scale the first note is A-Flat...
The name of the scale is whatever the second to the last flat is. For example, if you have 3 flats, B flat E flat and A flat, the name of the scale is E flat, because it is the second to the last flat.
B flat, F, B flat are the basic three... B flat (the second one) would be your tunning note on a Bb concert scale.
Your question doesn't make much sense. But for any scale, "do" would be the first note of the scale, which is whatever the scale is called. But for a flat major, from what it sounds like you're asking, the note would be a flat. Ex: In B flat major, "Do" is b flat.
A
B
F
E
G
D