It is a scale with only five notes as opposed to the usual 7 notes in a major or minor scale.
A Major/Minor scale.
A flat minor is the relative minor of B major
I'm not sure if this is the answer your looking for, but by playing a scale, starting on the sixth degree in a major scale (also called aeolian mode), you will essentially be playing a natural minor scale. Specifically, the relative minor.
The first note of a musical scale depends on the key you're in. For instance, if you're in the key of A, the first note, known as the root, would be A. If you're in the key of F#, the root would be F#. No matter if you're playing the major scale, the minor scale, the blues scale, or any other scale, the root always matches the chord you're playing over.
The subdominant is usually the fourth scale degree of a major or minor scale.
The third note in a major or minor scale is called a mediant.
It is a scale with only five notes as opposed to the usual 7 notes in a major or minor scale.
(X) Minor Scale = 3 semitones below (Y) Major Scale E.G. C Minor = E♭ Major
C Minor
F Major has a relative minor scale of D Minor.
"That would be A minor. Go a minor third below the tonic of the major scale to find the relative minor." Technically, there is no relative harmonic major to the key of C Major. The relative minor scale of C Major would the natural minor scale of A. A harmonic minor scale raises the 7th note of the scale a half step, giving us G#, which is not in the key of C Major.
A major scale and its relative minor scale share the same key signature.
The C major scale and its relative minor, the A minor scale. C Major.
Simply a minor scale
You can have a musical scale starting anywhere you like. On the piano, the simplest scale is C major, in which the second note is D. In all major and minor scales, you can find the second note by moving up two semitones from the first note (C-C#-D or G-G#-A)
NO neither the root is B minor used in the scale of A major! yours sincerily Ima Id Iot