semitone. B to C and E to F are semitones
B
your bum
A flat note, often indicated by the symbol "♭", looks like a lowercase "b" and is used in musical notation to lower the pitch of a note by a half step. For example, if you see a B♭ note, it means to play the B note one semitone lower. In sheet music, it appears before the note it modifies on the staff, affecting its pitch throughout the measure unless canceled by a natural sign.
c flat. the semitone above b flat is b, with is equal to c flat. So the diatonic semitone is c flat because it has to be a different note name.
semitone. B to C and E to F are semitones
B
your bum
A flat note, often indicated by the symbol "♭", looks like a lowercase "b" and is used in musical notation to lower the pitch of a note by a half step. For example, if you see a B♭ note, it means to play the B note one semitone lower. In sheet music, it appears before the note it modifies on the staff, affecting its pitch throughout the measure unless canceled by a natural sign.
c flat. the semitone above b flat is b, with is equal to c flat. So the diatonic semitone is c flat because it has to be a different note name.
Raises it by a semitone
Sharps are the note one semitone higher than a given natural note, for example, D-sharp is one semitone higherthan D.Flats are the note one semitone lower than a given natural note, so D-flat is one semitone lower than D.Natural signs get rid of a previous sharp or flat in the same bar, or raises or lowers a sharp or flat already included in the key signature - e.g. the F-sharp in G major.Sharps and flats can be modified further too - resulting in a double sharp or double flat - which means that any double sharp or double flat will be a whole tone higher or lower than a given natural note, for example, D double-sharp would be the same key as E and D double-flat would be the same as C. Again a natural sign would get rid of the double flat or sharp.Sometimes natural keys have to be named as either sharp or flat, e.g. in C-sharp minor the seventh degree is B, but we have to raise B to B-sharp to create a C-sharp harmonic minor scale, which uses a raised seventh. Now we could call the B-sharp 'C' but that would not be correct as we need to use all letter names in a diatonic scale, and technically the C is functioning as a raised B in the key or C-sharp minor.
It would be a sharp/flat. Like A would be A#/Bb
B
If you are referring to the lowest note a normal, C foot flute can play, the answer is yes... sometimes. A flute with a B foot joint can go half a step lower, which is B. There is an extra key to allow you to go lower.
B flat major is a scale, which is a series of notes played in succesion, going up and down. The musical note B flat is just one frequency which is a semitone above A. Concert A (the most used middle A) is at 440Hz.
C sharp