G is half a note higher than F#. The full scale is C C# D D# E F F# G G# A A# B C
The note above F can be labelled as F sharp or G flat.
A whole step above C sharp (C#) is D sharp (D#). In music, a whole step consists of two half steps, and moving from C# to D# involves skipping the note D, which is a half step above C#.
C#/Db is a half step above C.
One half step lower than G sharp is G. In musical terms, a half step down means moving to the immediate next note on a keyboard or scale, which in this case is G.
Do you mean the note? An enharmonic of D sharp is E flat.
B (B natural).
B sharp if it is one and a half step up, but if just half then it is A sharp. -BJ
The note above F can be labelled as F sharp or G flat.
It is a note a half step above or below the original note (a sharp or flat).
A sharp, also known as B flat.
It is usually written just to the right of the note. A sharp means to raise one half step and flat means to lower one half step.
A major third (M3) above F-sharp is A-sharp. To find this, you count four half steps up from F-sharp: G, G-sharp, A, and A-sharp. Therefore, the note that is a major third above F-sharp is A-sharp.
In Music, a sharp is a symbol indicating the note is to be raised by one semitone. for example: A-sharp (A#) is the note one semitone (or one half-step) above A.
Sharp (usually a half step above the natural note)
The symbol to lower a note a half step is called a flat.
A whole step above C sharp (C#) is D sharp (D#). In music, a whole step consists of two half steps, and moving from C# to D# involves skipping the note D, which is a half step above C#.
One half step above G is G-sharp (or A-flat). In musical terms, this means that if you move up from G to the next closest note, you reach G-sharp/A-flat.