A half step above G. G sharp and A flat are one in the same.
Ab is the middle black key in group of three black keys on the piano.
A V-chord is a dominant triad. The route note is on the fifth scale degree (G in the key of C; Eb in the key of Ab; etc.).
D falt is the same as C sharp on any instrument. so its the black key next to the C key.
C... Bb Ab Bb F Ab... Bb... Ab Gb Ab Eb Gb... Ab... B Ab Eb... Bb B C Db Db... b= the flats (black keys on a piano.) Hehe it took a while to work out... I hope I helped! ;-). -L
This is a statement, not question.
Ab is the middle black key in group of three black keys on the piano.
A V-chord is a dominant triad. The route note is on the fifth scale degree (G in the key of C; Eb in the key of Ab; etc.).
Ab
D falt is the same as C sharp on any instrument. so its the black key next to the C key.
yes its next to A and B
C... Bb Ab Bb F Ab... Bb... Ab Gb Ab Eb Gb... Ab... B Ab Eb... Bb B C Db Db... b= the flats (black keys on a piano.) Hehe it took a while to work out... I hope I helped! ;-). -L
C Bb Ab F G Ab F Eb D Bb F G Ab.
This is a statement, not question.
Bb is not necessarily an easier key, however it only has 2 flats in its key signature, whereas Ab has 4. So if you're composing for an instrument, the key of Ab would be better.
The three grouped black piano keys are F#, G# and A#, also notated as Gb, Ab and Bb. The two grouped piano keys above them are C# and D#, also notated as Db and Eb. The pattern continues for as many octaves as necessary. Given that bottom A is usually the lowest note on a piano, the first black key is A# or Bb.
c d e f ab ag
four