C major transposed down a minor third becomes A minor. In Music Theory, a minor third consists of three half steps down from the original note, so starting from C, going down three half steps leads to A. Since A minor is the relative minor of C major, they share the same key signature but have different tonal centers.
A symbol that appears the same rightside up or upside down is called an "ambigram." Ambigrams can be words or designs that maintain their appearance when rotated 180 degrees. A common example of an ambigram is the word "ON," which looks the same when flipped upside down.
the further the angle down the faster it will burn, but the wax of the furthest down one drips on the flame so it goes out. But it is still the fastest
you need to do alt x
45 degrees
does anyone know this question i am stuck on mathswat ch
Music in B major transposed down a major third will be in the key of G major.
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♯).
Ab major
Ab major
E-flat
A minor chord is major third on top of a minor third. to make a minor chord take a major chord and move the middle note down a half step
A minor third is the same distance as the tonic to the third in a natural minor scale. This is one tone followed by on semi tone, which equates to 3 semi tones. A major sixth would equate to ten semi tones. If you are going from the sixth of a major scale, to the third of a minor scale, you would be going down by 7 semi tones. However, if you are on the sixth note of a major scale, and go down by a minor third, then you will be going down by 3 semi tones.
A minor down a minor third refers to a musical interval where you start on a minor chord and then move down by a minor third. For example, if you begin with an A minor chord (A, C, E) and move down a minor third, you would land on an F major chord (F, A, C). This interval is often used in music composition to create movement and variation in harmony.
G major transposed down a major second becomes F major. In the G major scale, the notes are G, A, B, C, D, E, and F#. When you lower each note by a whole step (major second), the resulting scale is F, G, A, Bb, C, D, and E.
F major transposed down a major second becomes E major. In terms of notes, the F major scale consists of F, G, A, B♭, C, D, and E. When you transpose it down a major second, you shift each note down by two half steps, resulting in the E major scale: E, F♯, G♯, A, B, C♯, and D♯.
Major and Minor chords are determined by the third of the chord making them sound different. Major chords have a more happy, open sound and minor chords have a "sad" sound. For example: In the key of C, A C Major triad would be the notes C, E, G and C minor triad would be C, E flat, G. (the third in the minor triad goes down a half-step from the third in the major triad) E---> E flat.
A minor chord (triad, at least) is the first, third, and fifth notes of any minor scale played at the same time.