C natural
B (B natural).
B sharp if it is one and a half step up, but if just half then it is A sharp. -BJ
a flat lowers a not a half step
It means the tone is 1/2 step above the note given. A full step would be to go from A to B, therefore a half step would be A sharp.
A whole step consists of two half steps, the smallest note division excluding semitones, so one half step brings the pitch to an "A" and the second up to "B flat"
B (B natural).
B sharp if it is one and a half step up, but if just half then it is A sharp. -BJ
C Natural is a whole step above B flat. If you look at a piano, a half step above B Flat is B Natural, and one more half step above that is C Natural. So it's a whole step from B Flat to C Natural.
No, a sharp and B flat are not the same. A sharp raises a note by a half step, while B flat lowers a note by a half step.
C Natural is a whole step above B flat. If you look at a piano, a half step above B Flat is B Natural, and one more half step above that is C Natural. So it's a whole step from B Flat to C Natural.
C Natural is a whole step above B flat. If you look at a piano, a half step above B Flat is B Natural, and one more half step above that is C Natural. So it's a whole step from B Flat to C Natural.
A sharp, also known as B flat.
a flat lowers a not a half step
As on any instrument B# is one half step above B, which is the same pitch as C. There are technical reasons why a note might be notated as B#, but just play C.
No, a sharp and B flat are not the same in music theory. A sharp raises a note by a half step, while B flat lowers a note by a half step.
It means the tone is 1/2 step above the note given. A full step would be to go from A to B, therefore a half step would be A sharp.
A whole step consists of two half steps, the smallest note division excluding semitones, so one half step brings the pitch to an "A" and the second up to "B flat"