• @TootSweet
    link
    English
    65
    edit-2
    6 months ago
    • C
    • C#
    • D
    • D#
    • E
    • E𝄲
    • F
    • F#
    • G
    • G#
    • A
    • A#
    • B
    • B𝄲
    • C
    • C#
    • D
    • Mystery note
    • C
    • C#
    • pancakes
      link
      fedilink
      English
      11
      edit-2
      6 months ago

      Amazing that you can tell. They all look the same to me.

      • @LesserAbe
        link
        316 months ago

        Lol their joke is that the layout doesn’t actually match a piano. Normally there are seven white keys and five black keys. So E# isn’t a thing, that’s just F. And B# isn’t a thing, that’s C.

        • @Stovetop
          link
          26 months ago

          Makes me wonder why they even bothered to have 7 different notes instead of 6, with B# and E# as valid notation.

          • @TempermentalAnomaly
            link
            26 months ago

            First, you don’t have to, it’s a useful convention.
            Since the middle ages, the west has used a seven note scale with five whole steps and two half steps. This gives one scale, c major, with seven natural (neither flat nor sharp) notes.

            As an aside, I believe there are six note scales.

          • @chiliedogg
            link
            26 months ago

            There are 12 notes in most Western music. When you double a frequency you go up an octave, but keep the same note.

            Music is played in different “keys” though with 7-note scales, with letters assigned A-G. If you play the notes in order starting and ending at the letter for which the scale is named, then do the same for a different scale, the relationship between the notes will sound the same between the 2 scales, but your starting and ending pitch will be different.

            Piano keys are arranged with all 12 notes being available, but arranged in the key of C-major or A-minor, where all notes are natural notes (no sharps or flats).

            If you play just the white keys starting from C, you’ll be playing a C-major scale : C, D, E, F, G, A, and B. However, to play the F-major scale, you’re going to need to skip one white key and hit a black key: (F, G, A, Bb, C, D, and E). No letter repeats on a scale.

            A sharp (#) or flat (b) note is just moving the smallest step you can to the right or left, respectively. For most notes, that’s moving to a black key, but there’s no black key between B and C or E and F sometimes it’s moving to another white key.

            Why don’t we just ignore weird notes like Cb? Because every letter needs to be represented on a scale. Ab-minor, for instance has Ab, Bb, Cb, Db, Eb, Fb, and Gb. So even though Cb is the same frequency as B-natural, it serves the same role in the scale as E does in the key of C, and if you didn’t represent it as a flat note, your scale would have 2 "B"s and no “C.”

            This gets even more important when you get into different instruments with different natural keys. A Piano, flute, bassoon, and other instruments are what we call “Concert C” instruments, which means they have the same natural key of C. However, other instruments are different.

            A standard clarinet is a Bb instrument, meaning its Bb scale matches the C scale of a piano. You also have Eb-clarinets that are a little smaller, meaning that if they play a “C” they’ll be playing a concert Eb, which uses the same fingerings as a Concert Bb from a standard clarinet.

            So when an Orchestra is playing something in the key of A-major (A, B, C#, D, E, F#, G#), an Eb-clarinet is playing in F#-major (F#, G#, A#, B, C#, D#, E#).

      • Bob
        link
        fedilink
        146 months ago

        It’s astonishingly obvious once it’s pointed out:

        There’s no B#/Cb and no E#/Fb, so the groups of two black notes are between C and E, and the groups of three are between F and B.