: the note a semitone above F.
G-sharp minor is a minor scale based on G♯, consisting of the pitches G♯, A♯, B, C♯, D♯, E, and F♯.
Sharps
| Keys | Accidentals |
|---|
| A major / F-sharp minor | F♯, C♯, G♯ |
| E major / C-sharp minor | F♯, C♯, G♯, D♯ |
| B major / G-sharp minor | F♯, C♯, G♯, D♯, A♯ |
| F-sharp major / D-sharp minor | F♯, C♯, G♯, D♯, A♯, E♯ |
In a minor scale, a triad built on scale degree 1 is minor, on scale degree 2 diminished, scale degree 3 major, scale degree 4 minor, scale degree 5 minor, scale degree 6 major, and scale degree 7 major.
For the G harmonic minor scale, the notes are G – A – B♭- C – D – E♭- F# – G. The seventh note of the scale has been changed from F to F#. It's now a half step (or semitone) higher. The formula for forming a harmonic minor scale is W-H-W-W-H-W 1/2-H.
E-flat major (or the key of E-flat) is a major scale based on E♭, with the pitches E♭, F, G, A♭, B♭, C, and D. Its key signature has three flats: B, E, and A. Its relative minor is C minor, while its parallel minor is E♭ minor (or enharmonically D♯ minor).
The pitches B, C♯, D♯, E, F♯, G♯, and A♯ are all part of the B major scale.
Noun. (music) the theoretical major key with A-sharp as its tonic and the notes A#, B#, C??, D#, E#, F??, G??. Such a high number of accidentals (especially double sharps) is undesirable. Therefore, it is usually scored and referred to as its enharmonic equivalent; B-flat major.
The key of C has no sharps or flats The key of G has one sharp (F#) The key of D Major has two sharps (F# and C#) The key of A has 3 sharps (F#, C# and G#) The key of E has 4 sharps (F#, C#, G# and D#) The key of F has one flat (Bb) The key of Bb has 2 flats (Bb and Eb) The key of Eb has 3 flats (Bb, Eb, and Ab) The
Starting on G we can spell the G major scale: G, A, B, C, D, E, and F#. The key of A major contains 3 sharps. Those sharps would be F#, C#, and G#.
Again the order of sharps is; F, C, G, D, A, E and B. An easy way to remember that sequence is to use the memory technique of making those letters the first letters of words incorporated into a memorable phrase.
Because F always means F# in the G Major scale, it is inconvenient to do this every time the note is used. Instead, a sharp can be placed at the start of every staff, to indicate that all F notes are to be played sharp. This is known as the key signature of the G Major scale.
B# is a white key on the piano. Another name for B# is C, which has the same note pitch / sound, which means that the two note names are enharmonic to each other. It is called sharp because it is 1 half-tone(s) / semitone(s) up from the white note after which is is named - note B.
Flats and sharps are necessary to allow every version of the diatonic scale to start at any point on the chromatic scale without repeating a note letter name, or assigning different notes in our chosen diatonic scale to the same line on the musical stave.
Sharp means to go up a half step, while flat means to go down a half step. Up means moving to the right on your piano keyboard while down means moving to the left. The black key to the immediate right of C is C sharp. We moved up a half step.
F# is a black key on the piano. Another name for F# is Gb, which has the same note pitch / sound, which means that the two note names are enharmonic to each other. It is called sharp because it is 1 half-tone(s) / semitone(s) up from the white note after which is is named - note F. The next note up from F# is G.
F sharp is the enharmonic equivalent of Gb. The G flat major scale makes use of the same keys on the piano and sounds the same as the F# major scale. The difference is the names of the notes. The notes of the G flat major scale are G♭, A♭, B♭, C♭, D♭, E♭, and F.
The triad chords in the key of G major are G major, A minor, B minor, C major, D major, E minor, and F# diminished.
THE KEY SIGNATURES WITH SHARPSThe key of G major has one sharp F#. The key of D major has two sharps F# C#. The key of A major has three sharps F# C# G#.
A double sharp is two half-steps above a note. For example, D?? is also E; E?? is also F♯ (or G♭).
F# Barre Chord (A Shape)(1st string.) Place your 2nd finger on the 11th fret of the D string. (4th string.) Place your 3rd finger on the 11th fret of the G string.
E# is a white key on the piano. Another name for E# is F, which has the same note pitch / sound, which means that the two note names are enharmonic to each other. It is called sharp because it is 1 half-tone(s) / semitone(s) up from the white note after which is is named - note E. The next note up from E# is F# / Gb.
It's still a semitone apart. We named our music system after the A minor scale, and then because of the way the minor scale is cosntructed there is only a half step difference between the 2 and 3 (B and C), as well as the 5 and 6 (E and F). This makes E and B only a semitone away from F and C.
B# is the seventh degree of the C# major scale. The question is really, "Why are E# and F the same?" It's because the notes are named according to the circle of fifths starting on F. You can work it out yourself. If you go up by four fifths from C to E, that's 28 semitones, or two octaves and 4 semitones.
In short, asking why there is no B# or E# seems like asking why diatonic scales have two half steps in them. The answer to that is "it is complicated". In a very generalized sense though, it is: "because it sounds good". They do exist, IMHO to make theory correct in all instances.
F major (or the key of F) is a major scale based on F, with the pitches F, G, A, B♭, C, D, and E. Its key signature has one flat: B♭. Its relative minor is D minor and its parallel minor is F minor.
For example, if the key signature consists of only F-
sharp, each written note F in the piece should be played as F-
sharp, even though no
sharp immediately precedes the written note.
Key Signatures.
| Key Sig. | Major Key | Minor Key |
|---|
| 5 sharps | B major | G# minor |
| 6 sharps | F# major | D# minor |
| 7 sharps | C# major | A# minor |
Our scales are diatonic, which basically means you have one of every letter name. If you start a scale from G-flat, you'll find you need a C named note that's a half step higher than Bb, and a whole step lower than Db. We can't call it “B”, because the scale already has a Bb in it - so we have to call it C-flat.
[English] The musical note "F" preceded a {% double_sharp (??) symbol. The effect of the double sharp symbol raises the pitch of the indicated note by two semitones (two half steps). The resultant pitch would sound the same as the pitch "G".