D major has two sharps - F♯ and C♯.
C major: no sharps, no flats F major: no sharps, B flat Bb (B flat) major: no sharps, B and E flat Eb major: no sharps; B, E, and A flat Ab major: no sharps; B, E, A, and D flat Db major: no sharps; B, E, A, D, and G flat Gb major/F# (F sharp) major: no sharps; B, E, A, D, G, and C flat / F, C, G, D, A, and E sharp; no flats B major: F, C, G, D, and A sharp; no flats E major: F, C, G, and D sharp; no flats A major: F, C, and G sharp; no flats D major: F and C sharp, no flats G major: F sharp, no flats
At the beginning of the piece, there will be one to seven sharps or flats. This tells you the sharps or flats that will be used unless otherwise noted. If there are no sharps or flats, then there will be no sharps or flats unless otherwise noted.
D flat major has five sharps
Identifying any major key is simple: The key of any song is notated at the beginning of the piece with a number of sharps and flats. The sharps and flats are always listed in the same order. Flats: B,E,A,D,G,C,F Sharps are the same but in reverse Sharps: F,C,G,D,A,E,B the listing of sharps and flats will always go in that order. example: 4 flats listed will go B,E,A,D For flats the key is notated by the second to last flat listed. In the above example that Key would be the key of A. For a song with 4 sharps (F,C,G,D) the key would be 1/2 step up from the last noted Sharp. 1/2 step up from D makes this the key of D#
C major has no sharps or flats.
C major: no sharps, no flats F major: no sharps, B flat Bb (B flat) major: no sharps, B and E flat Eb major: no sharps; B, E, and A flat Ab major: no sharps; B, E, A, and D flat Db major: no sharps; B, E, A, D, and G flat Gb major/F# (F sharp) major: no sharps; B, E, A, D, G, and C flat / F, C, G, D, A, and E sharp; no flats B major: F, C, G, D, and A sharp; no flats E major: F, C, G, and D sharp; no flats A major: F, C, and G sharp; no flats D major: F and C sharp, no flats G major: F sharp, no flats
A Dorain mode D to D consists of no sharps or flats.
C major - No sharps or flats D major- 2 sharps (F,C) G major- 1 sharp (F) E major- 4 sharps (F,C,G,D)
There are no flats in D major, but there are 2 sharps. C sharp and F sharp.
At the beginning of the piece, there will be one to seven sharps or flats. This tells you the sharps or flats that will be used unless otherwise noted. If there are no sharps or flats, then there will be no sharps or flats unless otherwise noted.
D flat major has five sharps
C major and A minor both have no sharps or flats.
None. There are 2 sharps, C# and F#
Identifying any major key is simple: The key of any song is notated at the beginning of the piece with a number of sharps and flats. The sharps and flats are always listed in the same order. Flats: B,E,A,D,G,C,F Sharps are the same but in reverse Sharps: F,C,G,D,A,E,B the listing of sharps and flats will always go in that order. example: 4 flats listed will go B,E,A,D For flats the key is notated by the second to last flat listed. In the above example that Key would be the key of A. For a song with 4 sharps (F,C,G,D) the key would be 1/2 step up from the last noted Sharp. 1/2 step up from D makes this the key of D#
C major has no sharps or flats.
FOR FIRST POSITION THEY ARE G, A, B, C BUT OF COURSE YOU CAN DO #'s (sharps) and b's (flats)
D major contains an F-sharp and C-sharp.