No scale has an F♯ and a D♯ alone, however the keys of E, B, F♯, C♯ major and likewise their relative minors have both the notes F♯ and D♯ as degrees in their scale.
Many scales have an F sharp in them. G is the only key that contains only a F sharp in its major scale, but F is present in D, A, E, B, F sharp, and C sharp major scales. F sharp is also present in E, B, F sharp, C sharp, G sharp, D sharp, and A sharp pure minor scales. There are several other types of scales that contain F sharps, but these 14 scales are the most common.
Both D major and B minor have F and C sharp.
G harmonic minor
The G major scale.
For the major keys, C# and G.
There is no difference in terms of each scale would sound, as F-sharp and G-flat are the same exact note. However, when notated on sheet music, they would look different, as the F-sharp scale would use only sharps, and the G-flat scale would use only flats.
there is no F# scale on Eb saxaphone....
E to F-sharp is one whole step. F-sharp is a major 3rd above D, so it's part of the D major scale.
d d sharp e f f sharp g g sharp a a sharp b c c sharp d
the notes for the f clarinet 1 octave is f, f sharp, g, g sharp, a, b flat, b, c, c sharp, d, d sharp, e, f, f sharp you just repeat it for how many octaves to want to do x
The G-major scale has only one sharp (which is F#)
There is no difference in terms of each scale would sound, as F-sharp and G-flat are the same exact note. However, when notated on sheet music, they would look different, as the F-sharp scale would use only sharps, and the G-flat scale would use only flats.
The F-sharp natural minor scale consists of these notes:F-sharp, G-sharp, A,G,C-sharp,D, and EThe F-sharp harmonic minor scale consists of these notes:F-sharp, G-sharp, A, B, C-sharp, D and E-sharp.The F-sharp melodic minor scale consists of these notes:[going up] F-sharp, G-sharp, A, B, C-sharp, D-sharp and E-sharp.[going down] F-sharp, E, D, C-sharp, B, A and G-sharp.
The mediant of any major scale is the note that is a third above the tonic (root) of the scale. In the key of F sharp major, the tonic is F sharp, so the mediant would be A sharp.
there is no F# scale on Eb saxaphone....
Only one: the F-sharp.
C, F, and G are sharp in this scale.
The D Major scale has two sharps, F and C. The notes in this scale are D, E F sharp, G, A, B, C sharp, D.
G major, D major, E major, B major, F sharp major, F sharp minor, A sharp major, etc.
E to F-sharp is one whole step. F-sharp is a major 3rd above D, so it's part of the D major scale.
The dominant in a scale is the 5th, which in the key of F# major is C#.
F sharp C sharp G sharp D sharp