F#(F sharp)/Gb(G flat) major. If it is written in F# major the notes of the scale are F# (black), G# (black), A# (black), B natural (white), C# (black), D# (black), E# (white), F#(black). If written in Gb major the notes of the scale are Gb (black), Ab (black), Bb (black), Cb (white), Db (black), Eb (black), F natural (white), Gb (black). Keep in mind that both scales contain the exact same pitches but are just written with different note names.
The diatonic scale that is played mostly on the black keys is F# major (also known enharmonically as Gb Major). The scale that is played only on black keys is the five note F# pentatonic scale. (AKA Gb pentatonic scale).
There are seven diatonic notes in a diatonic seven-note scale and there are five notes which are not part of the scale. The black keys (flats/sharps) are not designated as part of the basic C major scale and the notes in the C major scale are the white keys. For this reason, there are more white keys than black keys on a piano keyboard however, some of the white keys which lie on either side of the groups of two or three black keys, can be used as sharps and flats in certain cases. In the G-flat major scale, for instance, the fourth note still needs to be lowered, however the note directly below C is B, so B can be used as C-flat and likewise C can be used for B-sharp. Hope than makes sense.
7 notes are in the major scale. Example: The C major scale would be C, D, E, F, G, A, B, and C again, which is 8 notes when played, but technically the C wouldn't be counted twice so you only end up with 7 different tones. The G major scale would be the same and so on. Example: G, A, B, C, D, E, F#(G)
C Sharp Major has 6 key signatures which are all sharps:F#C#G#D#A#E#B#There is also another major key that has 7 sharp keys.
It's nothing more than a music scale such as a Major, Minor, and Dominate scale. These are seven note scales that any instrument can play. As for a guitar scale, it's a diagram that outlines the fretboard (neck) of a guitar and shows all the notes to be played for a given scale at certain positions along the guitar neck. It shows the fingering (sometimes with numbers) to help you place the correct fingering as you play each note of the scale. Not all scales are seven notes such as jazz, blues, and pentatonic scales which can have more or less notes. Hope this helped better understand! The simplest way to understand a guitar scale, it is a eight step movement using single notes it can be played anywhere on the guitar.
The C major scale uses only the white notes.
The G-flat major scale has six flats: B-flat, E-flat, A-flat, D-flat, G-flat, and C-flat. There is only one non-flat key - F - which is a white key. The reason why there are two white keys in the scale is because C-flat is the same as B-natural (which is a white key).
White keys are for the major scale, black keys for the minor.
B flat
The diatonic scale that is played mostly on the black keys is F# major (also known enharmonically as Gb Major). The scale that is played only on black keys is the five note F# pentatonic scale. (AKA Gb pentatonic scale).
The original scales came from a fairly long each white note had a scale that ranged from itself up an octave going on all the white notes in between. The one beginning on C ended up being, what we now call a major scale and the one beginning on A is, what we now call the Harmonic minor scale. The formula for a major scale is tone, tone, semi-tone, tone, tone, tone, semi-tone.
The keynote is the note which starts any scale (whether black, white, major or minor) so if the keynote is A you are in the key of A major - with three sharps.
To play the C major scale on a musical instrument, start on the note C and play the following sequence of notes: C, D, E, F, G, A, B, C. This scale consists of all the white keys on a piano keyboard. Practice playing this sequence up and down to familiarize yourself with the C major scale.
Major keys tend to sound happier and minor keys tend to sound dark or sad. Major keys have different patterns than minor keys if you start on the first note of the scale and play up the scale. I like to use C major because on a piano, you can start on a C and play up the scale without using any black keys...meaning it has no sharps or flats in the key signature. If you play from C to C on the major scale then you will see that each step is either a half step or a whole step. No matter what note you start on, it will have that same pattern if it is a major key. Now go down two white keys on the piano to the A. If you start there and play up the scale to the next A without playing any black keys on the piano, you will be playing a A natural minor scale. Your notice that it is very similar to the C major scale. It has the same key signature but starts and ends on a different note. As you play up the scale, notice that each step will be either a half step or a whole step. Every natural minor scale has the same combination of half and whole steps no matter what note you start on. Also, A minor is the relative minor of C major because they have the same key signature. Try to think about a piano keyboard when thinking about music theory ideas. The great trumpet playing stated in his autobiography that everyone should learn the piano no matter what their primary instrument is.
There are seven diatonic notes in a diatonic seven-note scale and there are five notes which are not part of the scale. The black keys (flats/sharps) are not designated as part of the basic C major scale and the notes in the C major scale are the white keys. For this reason, there are more white keys than black keys on a piano keyboard however, some of the white keys which lie on either side of the groups of two or three black keys, can be used as sharps and flats in certain cases. In the G-flat major scale, for instance, the fourth note still needs to be lowered, however the note directly below C is B, so B can be used as C-flat and likewise C can be used for B-sharp. Hope than makes sense.
A minor consists of the same chords as C major, the chords are: A minor B diminished C major D minor E minor F major G major and A minor These chords are completely made up of white keys.
The sixth and seventh degrees are raised a half-step when going up (notice that sometimes when raising a note you'll end up on another white key), like the C-sharp melodic minor scale - where you need to raise B, but most of the time you just play the black key to the right on the way up, and revert to the natural notes on the way down.