![]() The direct answer is that no, A# and Bb are not the exact same notes. The double-flat symbol (♭♭) is placed before a note like other accidentals. On a piano keyboard, all of the black keys can be notated as “flats,” and can also be notated as “sharps.” Any note can be a sharp or a flat-even white keys on the piano.Ī double-flat is the equivalent of two flats, and lowers a note’s pitch by two half steps. Sharps and flats fall into a musical category called “accidentals.” They represent alterations to “natural” notes like C or D or B. ![]() In writing music in E major for B-flat instruments, it is preferable to use a G-flat rather an F-sharp key signature. Its enharmonic equivalent is F-sharp major, whose key signature also has six accidentals. G-flat major is a major scale based on G-flat. ![]() D sharp exists in other keys like the key of E or the key of B and etc. If you were to play music in the key of E flat or B flat or D flat and etc, then E flat exists in those keys. Starting on G we can spell the G major scale: G, A, B, C, D, E, and F#.Į flat and D sharp is physically the same key but theoretically in music have different positions. ![]() The order of sharps works the same way as the flat order… The key of G major contains 1 sharp. For instance, the music below has a key signature with three flats (indicating either E♭ major or C minor) and the note, D♭, has a flat accidental. In music, flat (Italian bemolle for “soft B”) means “lower in pitch”. ![]()
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