If you mean music scales, you need to be more specific, there are all sorts of scales - A m(inor), E flat (major),D (major)...
In the music world a minute scale is used for practicing scales. It is the performing a musical scale, the notes up and down in an octave, in under a minute.
The notes for scales on the piano are the exact same notes for corresponding scales on the saxophone. However, as the alto saxophone is in Eb and the tenor saxophone is in Bb, you will have to account for these differences by raising the piano notes by a minor third or lowering the piano notes by a whole step, respectively.
It depends on the scale in question: * The diatonic scale (seven notes) * The melodic and harmonic minor scales (seven notes) * The chromatic scale (twelve notes) * The whole tone scale (six notes) * The pentatonic scale (five notes) * The octatonic or diminished scales (eight notes) Then of course there are the Indian Swara scales which have varying numbers of notes too.
I think the general consensus is that our concepts of scales and notes originated in ancient Greece.
because of half notes. they are in both major and minor but major scales push out the halfs. you see the great full notes and the sick half notes but it doesnt matter they are only existing for the whole twelve. nothing more. but if you look minor scales you ll see the acceptence of half notes like life nothing glorius nothing damned.
In the music world a minute scale is used for practicing scales. It is the performing a musical scale, the notes up and down in an octave, in under a minute.
Pentatonic scales consist of five notes, and are mostly used for soloing, as the five notes tend to not clash with the chord progression.
The notes for scales on the piano are the exact same notes for corresponding scales on the saxophone. However, as the alto saxophone is in Eb and the tenor saxophone is in Bb, you will have to account for these differences by raising the piano notes by a minor third or lowering the piano notes by a whole step, respectively.
For specific notes, ask about a specific scale.
A run of notes, most scales have eight notes.
It depends on the scale in question: * The diatonic scale (seven notes) * The melodic and harmonic minor scales (seven notes) * The chromatic scale (twelve notes) * The whole tone scale (six notes) * The pentatonic scale (five notes) * The octatonic or diminished scales (eight notes) Then of course there are the Indian Swara scales which have varying numbers of notes too.
The sharps and flats (black notes)
I think the general consensus is that our concepts of scales and notes originated in ancient Greece.
no
Natural minor scales do not have raised 7ths as in harmonic minor scales. They don't have raised 6th in ascending scales as in melodic minor scales. Hence the notes are the same for ascending and descending scales: C D Eb F G Ab Bb C.
The notes for a D scale are D, E, F#, G, A, B, C#, and back to the root, D.
because of half notes. they are in both major and minor but major scales push out the halfs. you see the great full notes and the sick half notes but it doesnt matter they are only existing for the whole twelve. nothing more. but if you look minor scales you ll see the acceptence of half notes like life nothing glorius nothing damned.