The enharmonic equivalent to A-flat is G-sharp; The enharmonic equivalent to G-flat is F-sharp.
G sharp
B-flat to C-sharp is an augmented 2nd.
G-sharp is the same as A-flat.
A sharp.
The homophone for A-sharp is B-flat. In music theory, A-sharp and B-flat are enharmonic equivalents, meaning they are two different ways of notating the same pitch on a musical staff.
That would be the key signature.
C sharp/D flat, D sharp/E flat, F sharp/G flat, G sharp/A flat, A sharp/B flat
a flat( or g sharp),a, b flat( or a sharp), b, c flat (or b sharp), c, c sharp (or d flat), d, e flat (or d sharp), e, f flat( or e sharp), f, f sharp ( or g flat)and g.
a flat( or g sharp),a, b flat( or a sharp), b, c flat (or b sharp), c, c sharp (or d flat), d, e flat (or d sharp), e, f flat( or e sharp), f, f sharp ( or g flat)and g.
No. There are a (plus a flat and a sharp), b (plus b flat and b sharp), c (flat and sharp), d (flat and sharp), e (flat and sharp), f (flat and sharp), and g (flat and sharp). That makes a, b, c, d, e, f, g Plus the flat and sharp for each, making 21 notes of the scale.
E-flat can also be D-sharp, F-sharp can be G-flat, and A-flat can be G-sharp
an a flat only can be called an a flat There is no double sharp equivalent, but it is the same as G sharp.
A natural cancels a sharp or flat.
No. It would be F#X or Bb bb. (F sharp double-sharp or B flat double-flat.)
C, C sharp/D flat, D, D sharp/E flat, E, F, F sharp/G flat, G, G sharp/A flat, A, A sharp/B flat, B, C.
the way i play amazing Grace is with sharps and flats the notes are: F sharp, high B flat(2 times), A flat F sharp B flat A flat, F sharp Eflat D flat (twice) F sharp high B flat A flat F sharp B flat A flat Bflat high C sharp B flat twice C sharp twice B flat A flat, F sharp B flat Aflat F sharp B flat A flat F sharp D flat E flat D flat F sharp Bflat A flat F sharp B flat A flat F sharp.REMEMBER THE A B D E ARE FLAT AND THE C AND F ARE SHARP!