B Major and G sharp minor. The sharps are F, C, G, D, and A sharp, in that order.
D major or it's relative minor (B minor). I memorized the "Circle of 5th's" to help me remember key signatures. There are many key signatures with F and C sharps. D, A, E, B, F#, C# and their relative minor scales (Bm, F#m, C#m, G#m, D#m, A#m).
The two sharps that occur on white keys are F# (F sharp) and C# (C sharp). F# is the sharp of F, which is a white key, and C# is the sharp of C, also a white key. These sharps appear in the context of various musical scales and key signatures, such as D major and B minor.
There are five key signatures with G sharp, they are: A major/F♯ minor (3 sharps) E major/ C♯ minor (4 sharps) B major/G♯ minor (5 sharps) F♯ major/D♯ minor (6 sharps) C♯ major/A♯ minor (7 sharps)
B-minor has no flats in it's natural key signature (of course, accidentals can always be added to alter a melody without altering the key signature). The key of b-minor (relative minor of D-major) has two sharps in its key signature; F-sharp(#) and C-sharp(#). If you wanted to play a b-natural-minor scale, you would play; B-C#-D-E-F#-G-A-B For a b-harmonic-minor; B-C#-D-E-F#-G-A#-B For a b-melodic-minor; B-C#-D-E-F#-G#-A#-B-A(natural, remove the sharp)-G(natural, remove the sharp)-F#-E-D-C#-B I hope this helps.
G-sharp natural minor has five sharps (F♯, C♯, G♯, D♯, A♯) but the raised seventh degree turns the F♯ into Fx (F double sharp). So the key of G-sharp harmonic minor has four sharps and one double sharp.I hope that helps.
F# major, C# major, D# minor, and A# minor
There are four sharps in C sharp minor. These sharps are C# D# F# and G#. The harmonic minor also has B#. (which is C)
Four key signatures have G sharp and E sharp in them: F sharp Major, D sharp minor, C sharp Major and A sharp minor.
D major or it's relative minor (B minor). I memorized the "Circle of 5th's" to help me remember key signatures. There are many key signatures with F and C sharps. D, A, E, B, F#, C# and their relative minor scales (Bm, F#m, C#m, G#m, D#m, A#m).
The key signature with 7 sharps is C-sharp major. In this key, the sharps are F-sharp, C-sharp, G-sharp, D-sharp, A-sharp, E-sharp, and B-sharp. Its relative minor is A-sharp minor, which also features the same key signature.
The two sharps that occur on white keys are F# (F sharp) and C# (C sharp). F# is the sharp of F, which is a white key, and C# is the sharp of C, also a white key. These sharps appear in the context of various musical scales and key signatures, such as D major and B minor.
There are five key signatures with G sharp, they are: A major/F♯ minor (3 sharps) E major/ C♯ minor (4 sharps) B major/G♯ minor (5 sharps) F♯ major/D♯ minor (6 sharps) C♯ major/A♯ minor (7 sharps)
The parallel minor of F-sharp major is F-sharp minor. A parallel minor key is the one with the same tonic note.
The notes in an F sharp minor chord are F, A, and C.
D major has a key signature of F sharp and C sharp D minor has a key signature of B flat
B-minor has no flats in it's natural key signature (of course, accidentals can always be added to alter a melody without altering the key signature). The key of b-minor (relative minor of D-major) has two sharps in its key signature; F-sharp(#) and C-sharp(#). If you wanted to play a b-natural-minor scale, you would play; B-C#-D-E-F#-G-A-B For a b-harmonic-minor; B-C#-D-E-F#-G-A#-B For a b-melodic-minor; B-C#-D-E-F#-G#-A#-B-A(natural, remove the sharp)-G(natural, remove the sharp)-F#-E-D-C#-B I hope this helps.
G flat minor or F sharp minor. F♯, C♯, G♯, D♯, and A♯ minor all have a G♯ in their key signature.