augmented 5th, as e flat to b flat is a perfect 5th and b is a semitone above b flat, making the interval augmented
The chorus: E flat- C#- C- B flat- B flat- A flat-C X2 E flat- C#- C- B flat- B flat- B flat E flat- E flat- E flat- C#-C-B flat- B flat-B flat-B flat-A flat Its hard 2 actually write out the notes but u can probably figure it out :/
The natural minor scale with the most flat notes is G♭ natural minor, which consists of 6 flats: B♭, E♭, A♭, D♭, G♭, and C♭.
The key signature with one flat is either F major or D minor.
Natural minor scales do not have raised 7ths as in harmonic minor scales. They don't have raised 6th in ascending scales as in melodic minor scales. Hence the notes are the same for ascending and descending scales: C D Eb F G Ab Bb C.
The naturals in the key of C major are C, D, E, F, G, A, and B.
E-flat up to B-natural is an augmented 5th.
E flat consists of 3 flats, B flat, E flat and A flat. E flat to B flat would be a perfect 5th interval as B flat is in E flat major, but because your question was E flat to B, B is a semitone up from B flat, this would mean the interval becomes a semitone larger, and a semitone larger from a perfect interval is augmented. Therefore, the answer to your question is an augmented 5th. Hope this helps :)
The notes for Pink Panther for the trombone are the following: B natural, C, D, E flat, B natural C, D, E Flat, A, G, C, E Flat, G, G Flat F, E Flat, C, B Flat C. B natural, C, D, E Flat, B natural, C, D, E Flat, A, G, E Flat, G, C, B natural, B B natural, C, D, E Flat, B natural, C, D, E Flat A, G, C, E Flat, G, G Flat. F, E Flat, C, B, C. C, B, G, F, E Flat, C, G Flat, F, G, F, G, F, G, F, E Flat, C, B, C. B natural, C, D, E Flat, B natural, C, D, E Flat, A, G, C, E Flat, G, G Flat. F, E Flat, C, B, C. B natural, C, D, E Flat, B natural, C, D, E Flat, A, G, E, G, C, E Flat, B natural, B natural, C, D, E Flat, B natural C, D, E Flat, A, G, C, E Flat, G, G, Flat, F, E Flat, C, B, C. C ,B, G, F, E Flat, C, G Flat, F, G, F, G, F, G, F, E Flat, C, B, C. E Flat, C, B,C, E Flat, C, B, C. :)
It depends on what scale you're talking about. B flat major = B flat, C, D, E flat, F, G, A B flat harmonic minor (ascending and descending) = B-flat, C, D-flat, E-flat, F, G-flat, A (natural), B-flat, A (natural), G-flat, F, E-flat, D-flat, C, B-flat B flat melodic minor (ascending and descending) = B-flat, C, D-flat, E-flat, F, G (natural), A (natural), B-flat, B-flat, A-flat, G-flat, F, E-flat, D-flat, C, B-flat B flat natural minor = B-flat, C, D-flat, E-flat, F, G, A, B-flat
Going from b-flat and e-flat is equal to a perfect fourth interval, which is five semitones (or "half-steps").
E flat augmented raises the Bb to B natural.
You cant. The lowest you can go is E natural which is fingered the same as high B natural.
not sure BUT i know the main music... its e-g-g-a-a-c-b-c-b-c-b-g-g-a-a
Ascending: F, G, A flat, B flat, C, D natural, E natural, F Descending: F, E flat, D flat, C, B flat, A flat, G, F
E-flat Major: E-flat, G-natural, B-Flat E-flat minor: E-flat, G-flat, B-Flat
For b flat major: b flat, c, d, e flat, f, g, a, b flat. For b flat natural minor: b flat, c, d flat, e flat, f, g flat, a flat, b flat. For b flat harmonic minor: b flat, c, d flat, e flat, f, g flat, a, b flat. For b flat melodic minor, ascending: b flat, c, d flat, e flat, f, g, a, b flat. (Melodic minor descending is the same as the natural minor.)
D flat E flat F natural F sharp A flat B flat C natural D flat (: