F Sharp usually, but sometimes it can be G flat
notice how there are no black noted between e and f or between b and c, but all the other notes on a keyboard have a black note between them? The distance from E to F or from B to C is calles a semitone. Alle the other white notes have a black note between them and this distance is called a tone! glad i could help
F#(F sharp)/Gb(G flat) major. If it is written in F# major the notes of the scale are F# (black), G# (black), A# (black), B natural (white), C# (black), D# (black), E# (white), F#(black). If written in Gb major the notes of the scale are Gb (black), Ab (black), Bb (black), Cb (white), Db (black), Eb (black), F natural (white), Gb (black). Keep in mind that both scales contain the exact same pitches but are just written with different note names.
F sharp is the same note.
A double sharp is a way to raise a note one whole step. On the piano, this is done by playing the note two keys above the natural note.------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------To double sharp a note - all you do is move up from one white key to the next, AS LONG as there is a black key in between the two white keys (e.g. F and G). If you try to double sharp a note with no black key directly to the right, you'll have to skip over that white key and play the black key to the right of the "skipped" white key (e.g. E and F).The same procedure is done when double flatting a natural note.
black and white but more white than black HORAY
notice how there are no black noted between e and f or between b and c, but all the other notes on a keyboard have a black note between them? The distance from E to F or from B to C is calles a semitone. Alle the other white notes have a black note between them and this distance is called a tone! glad i could help
E, F#, G, A, B, C, D#, E (F# is the black note after F; D# is the black note after D)
The III note is A. However, the 3rd note in the chord is the V note. That is C. The F major chord is F, A, C.
The note "F" is located to the immediate left of the set of three black keys on the piano keyboard.
F#(F sharp)/Gb(G flat) major. If it is written in F# major the notes of the scale are F# (black), G# (black), A# (black), B natural (white), C# (black), D# (black), E# (white), F#(black). If written in Gb major the notes of the scale are Gb (black), Ab (black), Bb (black), Cb (white), Db (black), Eb (black), F natural (white), Gb (black). Keep in mind that both scales contain the exact same pitches but are just written with different note names.
Well the white notes are normal notes c's, d's, e's, f's, g's, a's and b's. The black notes are sharp, the black note to the right of c is c sharp and so on
F sharp is the same note.
A double sharp is a way to raise a note one whole step. On the piano, this is done by playing the note two keys above the natural note.------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------To double sharp a note - all you do is move up from one white key to the next, AS LONG as there is a black key in between the two white keys (e.g. F and G). If you try to double sharp a note with no black key directly to the right, you'll have to skip over that white key and play the black key to the right of the "skipped" white key (e.g. E and F).The same procedure is done when double flatting a natural note.
A double sharp is a way to raise a note one whole step. On the piano, this is done by playing the note two keys above the natural note.------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------To double sharp a note - all you do is move up from one white key to the next, AS LONG as there is a black key in between the two white keys (e.g. F and G). If you try to double sharp a note with no black key directly to the right, you'll have to skip over that white key and play the black key to the right of the "skipped" white key (e.g. E and F).The same procedure is done when double flatting a natural note.
black and white but more white than black HORAY
The same symbol (♯) is used to indicate that the tone is raised a half-step. For the name of the note, the Suffix "-is" is added (e. g. F → Fis).
Any note which is "flat" is always one half step lower that the specific white note you're talking about, B-flat is one half step lower than B, so that is the black key just to the left of B. Thus A-flat is the black key just to the left of A, G-flat is the black key just to the left of G, E-flat is the black key just to the left of E and D-flat is the black key just to the left of D. For C-flat and F-flat, there are no black keys between B and C & E and F so therefore C-flat would have to be B and F-flat would have to be E. Any note which is "sharp" is always one half step to the right of the specific white note your labelling. Thus F-sharp is the black key directly to the right of F, G-sharp is the black key to the right of G, A-sharp is the black key to the very right of A. C-sharp is the black key to the right of C and D-sharp is the black key to the very right of D. For E-sharp and B-sharp, since there is no black key between the notes I mentioned above, E-sharp would sound the same as F and B-sharp would be the same as C. Most of the time when we're talking about "sharps" and "flats", we're referring to a black key.