A tonic triad consists of three notes that form the basic chord of a key, typically built on the first scale degree. In a major key, it includes the root, major third, and perfect fifth, while in a minor key, it includes the root, minor third, and perfect fifth. For example, in C major, the tonic triad is C-E-G, and in A minor, it is A-C-E. This triad serves as the foundation for harmony and chord progressions in music.
In a major key, the triad built on the 7th scale degree is diminished. Using C major as an example, the triad on the 7th is B D F. B to D is a minor 3rd, as is D to F, so B to F is a diminished 5th.
The augmented triad does not appear in any major or natural minor scales.
There is no such thing as B major. There is B minor and B flat major. The subdominant triad of B minor ( I'm pretty sure) is E minor.
The note "A"
C major triad : C - E - GG major triad : G - B - DD major triad : D - F# - AA major triad: A - C# - EE major triad : E - G# - BB major triad : B - D# - FC# major triad: C# - E# - G#F# major triad : F# - A# - C#Cb major triad : Cb - Eb - GGb major triad : Gb - Bb - DbDb major triad : Db - F - AbAb major triad : Ab - C - EbEb major triad : Eb - G - BbBb major triad : Bb - D - FF major triad : F - A - CA natural minor triad : A - C - EE natural minor triad : E - G - BB natural minor triad : B - D - F#F# natural minor triad : F# - A - C#C# natural minor triad : C# - E - G#A# natural minor triad : A# - C# - EG# natural minor triad : G# - B - D#D# natural minor triad : D# - F# - A#Eb natural minor triad : Eb - Gb - BbAb natural minor triad : Ab - C -EbBb natural minor triad : Bb - Db - FD natural minor triad : D - F - AG natural minor triad : G - Bb - DC natural minor triad : C - Eb - GF natural minor triad : F - Ab - C
E, G and B.
It depends what key is this tonic triad in.
A chord is classified as diminished when it contains a diminished 5th above the tonic note.
Chords don't have "tonic notes". Scales do. The tonic note of the G major scale is G (in fact, the tonic note of the X major/minor scale will always be X). Chords do have roots, but that's equally boring: the root of the G major chord is G.
The tonic of F major is F major.
The difference is that F major's tonic is F and D minor's tonic is D. Most songs and pieces end either with the tonic of the key signature or a chord with the tonic. Both have a key signature of 1 flat and all the notes are the same except that in D minor the C is raised (incidentally) to C sharp.
The tonic of A is A.
tonic
The tonic minor (or parallel minor) of a flat major is a flat minor.
It's in the tonic key, D minor.
In a major key, the triad built on the 7th scale degree is diminished. Using C major as an example, the triad on the 7th is B D F. B to D is a minor 3rd, as is D to F, so B to F is a diminished 5th.