E flat major transposed down a minor second becomes D major. In music, transposing down a minor second means lowering the pitch by one whole step. Therefore, the notes in the E flat major scale (E♭, F, G, A♭, B♭, C, D) are shifted down to D major (D, E, F♯, G, A, B, C♯).
Transposed up a minor third, B flat major becomes D flat major.
Ab major
E A major second is equivalent to a whole note, or two semitones, and two semitones down from G-flat (which is enharmonically equivalent to F-sharp) is E, although it might be written as F-flat depending on the key signature. F-flat, E to G-flat would be a diminished 3rd, not a major second..
The chords in the key of E flat major are E flat major, F minor, G minor, A flat major, B flat major, C minor, and D diminished.
There are a total of fifteen keys in Western music. Keys come with two forms, sharp keys and flat keys and one comes with all naturals. The complete list of major keys are shown below: C major (or A minor) - no sharps/flats G major (E minor) - 1 sharp D major (B minor) - 2 sharps A major (F-sharp minor) - 3 sharps E major (C-sharp minor) - 4 sharps B major (G-sharp minor) - 5 sharps F-sharp major (D-sharp minor) - 6 sharps C-sharp major (A-sharp minor) - 7 sharps F major (D minor) - 1 flat B-flat major (G minor) - 2 flats E-flat major (C minor) - 3 flats A-flat major (F minor) - 4 flats D-flat major (B-flat minor) - 5 flats G-flat major (E-flat minor) - 6 flats C-flat major (A-flat minor) -7 flats There you go, those are all the different keys you can write in!
Transposed up a minor third, B flat major becomes D flat major.
Music in B major transposed down a major third will be in the key of G major.
E-flat
Ab major
C major
D major
The tonic minor (or parallel minor) of a flat major is a flat minor.
E A major second is equivalent to a whole note, or two semitones, and two semitones down from G-flat (which is enharmonically equivalent to F-sharp) is E, although it might be written as F-flat depending on the key signature. F-flat, E to G-flat would be a diminished 3rd, not a major second..
E A major second is equivalent to a whole note, or two semitones, and two semitones down from G-flat (which is enharmonically equivalent to F-sharp) is E, although it might be written as F-flat depending on the key signature. F-flat, E to G-flat would be a diminished 3rd, not a major second..
The chords in the key of E flat major are E flat major, F minor, G minor, A flat major, B flat major, C minor, and D diminished.
B flat Major has 2 flats and G Minor has 2 flats.
B flat (Bb)