Essentially, yes, although they are used in different contexts. "Tonic" is used in discussions about harmony and "do" or "doh" in solfege, the description of melody, but either way they mean the first note on a scale.
Parallel keys in music theory are major and minor keys that share the same tonic note, while relative keys are major and minor keys that have the same key signature.
Keys that have the same tonic but different key signatures are called relative keys.
No, bars and measures are the same thing in music theory. They refer to the same concept of dividing music into equal segments of time.
No, measures and bars are not the same thing in music. A measure is a segment of time in music that contains a specific number of beats, while a bar is a vertical line that separates measures on a musical staff.
No, a bar and a measure are not the same thing in music. A bar is a segment of time in music that contains a specific number of beats, while a measure is a unit of musical time that is defined by a specific number of beats and is contained within a bar.
a keynote in music
Yes they mean the same thing.
Yes they mean the same thing.
Yes, they can mean the same thing.
an album is somthing music is played off of its old time for CD
No they're different. Different genres of music, different style, different lifestyle.
I'm doing a lab right now and trying to find the same thing!
No, they are not the same thing. Mean and average are the same thing.
Shabby and different do not mean the same thing.
These two words can mean the same thing.
It can mean the same thing if you use it right:It's a solid source.It's a dependable source.They SOMETIMES can mean the same thing.
Parallel keys in music theory are major and minor keys that share the same tonic note, while relative keys are major and minor keys that have the same key signature.