C major scale Key signature : no sharp or flat
C - D - E - F - G - A - B - C
G major scale Key signature : 1 sharp
G - A - B - C - D - E - F# - G
D major scale Key signature : 2 sharps (Down - Up - Top)
D - E - F# - G - A - B - C# - D
A major scale Key signature : 3 sharps
A - B - C# - D - E - F# - G# - A
E major scale Key signature : 4 sharps
E - F# - G# - A - B - C# - D# - E
B major scale Key signature : 5 sharps (Down - Up - Top)
B - C# - D# - E - F# - G# - A# - B
F# and Gb major scales Key signature : 6 sharps , 6 flats
F# - G# - A# - B - C# - D# - E# (=F) - F#
Gb - Ab - Bb - Cb (=B) - Db - Eb - F - Gb
Db and C# major scales Key signature : 5 flats , 7 sharps
Db - Eb - F - Gb - Ab - Bb - C - Db
C# - D# - E# (=F) - F# - G# - A# - B# (=C) - C#
Ab major scale Key signature : 4 flats (Down - Up - Top)
Ab - Bb - C - Db - Eb - F - G - Ab
Eb major scale Key signature : 3 flats
Eb - F - G - Ab - Bb - C - D - Eb
Bb major scale Key signature : 2 flats
Bb - C - D - Eb - F - G - A - Bb
F major scale Key signature : 1 flat (Down - Up - Top)
F - G - A - Bb - C - D - E - F
The 12 major scales are part of Music Theory in general and are not specific to individual instruments. There are some instruments that produce different pitches when the same written note is played by the instrument and a piano, but this has to do with ease of notation because of the instrument's range of pitch rather than anything fundamentally different about music theory. Just go up a chromatic scale for the 12 different notes that can be the tonic of a scale: C, C sharp = D flat, D, E flat, E, F, F sharp = G flat, G, A flat, A, B flat, B. Scales can be constructed with D sharp, G sharp, or A sharp as the tonic, but they require double-sharps, and the flat equivalent is much easier.
C, C#, D, D#, E, F, F#, G, G#, A, A#, B.
Since E# = F natural, there is no extra "E#" but instead F natural, which would have been there anyways. Same for B# and C.
There are 7 different white-key scales and 5 black-key scales, totaling 12 scales.
Each of those 12 different notes on the keyboard have 4 different types of scales, of which one of each is the major scale.
I think there are only 12 major scales whatever the instrument. They are: C - G - D - A - E - B - F# - D(flat) - A(flat) - E(flat) - B(flat) - F
The major scales with only one black key on the piano are G major (with an F sharp), and F major (with a B flat).
It was a long time ago, but I believe it may be around... 104 bpm?
The notes for scales on the piano are the exact same notes for corresponding scales on the saxophone. However, as the alto saxophone is in Eb and the tenor saxophone is in Bb, you will have to account for these differences by raising the piano notes by a minor third or lowering the piano notes by a whole step, respectively.
no keep your wrist level and balanced while playing your scales...its good and common practice to not raise your wrists while playing the piano
I think there are only 12 major scales whatever the instrument. They are: C - G - D - A - E - B - F# - D(flat) - A(flat) - E(flat) - B(flat) - F
There are 12 major scales, not 7.
The major scales with only one black key on the piano are G major (with an F sharp), and F major (with a B flat).
It was a long time ago, but I believe it may be around... 104 bpm?
Eb Major and C Minor scales have 3 flats.
For c major there are no sharps, for b flat major there are two flats, b flat and e flat
There are thousands of different scales worldwide, so really no one knows, but when talking of major scales, there are twelve (three of which go be two names).The major scales are (in chromatic order):C major, C♯/Db major, D major, Eb major, E major, F major, F♯/Gb major, G major, Ab major, A major, Bb major, and finally B/Cb major.The scales which are italicised are the 'enharmonic equivelent' scales, meaning that they are one scale going by two different names. C♯ and Db are the same key on the piano, so are F♯/Gb and B/Cb.
The notes for scales on the piano are the exact same notes for corresponding scales on the saxophone. However, as the alto saxophone is in Eb and the tenor saxophone is in Bb, you will have to account for these differences by raising the piano notes by a minor third or lowering the piano notes by a whole step, respectively.
In my experience, the easiest set of piano chords to play on the piano are the major scales. C Major: C-E-G D Major: D-F#-A E Major E-G♭-B F Major: F-A-C G Major: G-B-D A Major: A-C♭-E B Major: B-D♭-F# Well that's the basic major chords which is the easiest in all of them.
The phrygian scales have a menacing ring to them.
There are 7 white notes, and 5 black notes on the piano, so all together you have 12 different notes, and therefore, 12 different sounding major scales.If we include the three enharmonic ones - that makes fifteen key signatures and, therefore, fifteen major scales in total.They are, from the flattest key (the one with the most amount of flats) to the sharpest key, in order: Cb, Gb, Db, Ab, Eb, Bb, F, C, G, D, A, E, B, F# and C#. These are all the "real keys".Now, if you want to get theory crazy - you can look at the "imaginary scales" as well - which are scales you can figure out theoretically, but you wouldn't use them for practical reasons. This would include keys like D# Major (9 sharps) and Gbb Major (13 flats), in which case there would be an additional 20 major scales (one for every note and its enharmonic equivalent) as well, making a total of 35 scales (for the 15 real key signatures and the 20 imaginary keys).
Any scale can start on any note. That's why there are 12 major scales.