enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. List of musical scales and modes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_musical_scales_and...

    List of musical scales and modes Name Image Sound Degrees Intervals Integer notation # of pitch classes Lower tetrachord Upper tetrachord Use of key signature usual or unusual ; 15 equal temperament

  3. B major - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/B_major

    [1] Few large-scale works in B major exist: these include Haydn's Symphony No. 46. The aria "La donna è mobile" from Verdi's opera Rigoletto is in the key, as is the "Flower Duet" from Lakmé. Schubert's Piano Sonata, D. 575 and Dvořák's Nocturne Op. 40 are in B major. Brahms's Piano Trio No. 1, Op. 8, is in B major, though the piece ends in ...

  4. Music written in all major or minor keys - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music_written_in_all_major...

    4 sharps 10 E minor: 1 sharp 11 F major: 1 flat 12 F minor: 4 flats 13 Either F# major: 6 sharps F# major was the choice of Bach, Hummel, Chopin, Heller, Busoni, Lyapunov, Arensky, Blumenfeld, Ponce, Shostakovich, Cui and Glière. G♭ major was preferred by Alkan, Rachmaninoff, Scriabin, Shchedrin, Stanford and Winding. or G♭ major: 6 flats ...

  5. Enharmonic equivalence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enharmonic_equivalence

    A musical passage notated as flats. The same passage notated as sharps, requiring fewer canceling natural signs. Sets of notes that involve pitch relationships — scales, key signatures, or intervals, [1] for example — can also be referred to as enharmonic (e.g., the keys of C ♯ major and D ♭ major contain identical pitches and are therefore enharmonic).

  6. Accidental (music) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Accidental_(music)

    m. 3: G ♭ (which is tied from the previous note), G ♯, G ♮ (the natural sign cancels the sharp sign) Though this convention is still in use particularly in tonal music , it may be cumbersome in music that features frequent accidentals, as is often the case in atonal music .

  7. Key signature - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Key_signature

    Examples of the latter include the E ♭ (right hand), and F ♯ and G ♯ (left hand) used for the С diminished (С octatonic) scale in Bartók's Crossed Hands (no. 99, vol. 4, Mikrokosmos); the B ♭, E ♭ and F ♯ used for the D Phrygian dominant scale in Frederic Rzewski's God to a Hungry Child; and the E ♭ and D ♭ (right hand) and ...

  8. Quarter tone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quarter_tone

    For example, some 17th- and 18th-century theorists used the term to describe the distance between a sharp and enharmonically distinct flat in mean-tone temperaments (e.g., D ♯ –E ♭). [2] In the quarter-tone scale, also called 24-tone equal temperament (24-TET), the quarter tone is 50 cents , or a frequency ratio of 24 √ 2 or ...

  9. Sharp (music) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sharp_(music)

    Historically, lowering a double sharp to a single sharp could be notated using a natural and sharp sign or vice-versa instead of the conventional sharp sign (♯), but the natural sign is often omitted in modern notation. The similar principle of the natural sign notation can apply when canceling a triple sharp or beyond. [4]