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Generally speaking, the black key is a note with a sign, a B sign, an X sharp sign, a BB sharp sign or a reduced sign, some of these marks are written on the clef, and some are used as temporary marks, so I still recommend that you learn music theory related to staves, which will be of great help to you learn to read music.
If you look at the keys, the arrangement of the notes is like this (both black and white keys are sung):
do # do re #re mi fa # fa sol #sol la #la si do’ …
Among them, because the mi in the C key is fa and the si is do', the C key is generally not written as mi and si.
The black key sandwiched between do and re is called 1 (ascending do), also called b 2 (falling re), which is an equal tone. The same is true for the other sounds, rising for the left note and descending for the right note.
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Black keys are not specifically represented on staff.
The keys are arranged by chromatic tones from low to high, and the staff also records the pitch, so there is no special representation, and if you insist on saying that it is different, then there must be tonality as a premise. For example, in C major, the black keys are 1(b2), 2(b3), 4(b5), and so on. That's probably what you're talking about.
However, in C major, these differences are reflected in the white keys.
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Black keys. You need to look at the top of the score, where it is generally marked with what key the song belongs to, for example, it is marked with C 1, which means that the song is in C key, and if it is 1, it means that the song is in E flat key.
Then find the scale of the key according to the key of the piece, for example, the scale in C is cdefgab, and the scale in F is fgabbcde. Then at this time, BB is the black key, that is, for example, F 1, then do is the F bond, RE is the G bond, Mi is the A bond, Fa is the BB bond, SOL is the C bond, LA is the D bond, and SI is the E bond.
Keyboard. Medium black keys for playing variable scales; The black keys of the electronic keyboard do not need to be represented on the notation, which has a tonality. in staves.
, a variable scale does not necessarily indicate a black key, but a black key can only be represented by a variable scale. In white notation, the variable scale always represents the black key, and the black key can only be represented by the variable scale.
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In front of the note there is.
To play the black key on the top left, yes.
to play the black key on the top right.
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In C major, for example, taking a single note is to divide it into twelve parts from one do to another.
In order: do, do, re, re, mi, fa, fa, so, so, la, la, si
The difference between each of these two adjacent notes is a semitone, and the difference between do and re is a whole tone, in which the one with the ascending and descending symbols, that is, the bands (of course, can also be represented by the flat B symbol of the next tone) are all the tones on the black keys, do is the tone on the next plus line, do is the tone of the next plus one, that is, the black key on the right of do on the keyboard, and so on.
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See if there is b or , b is the flat sign, which is the left side of the white key, which is the right side of the white key.
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The black keys on the piano indicate a change in the key of C. The white and black keys in the piano represent the pitch relationship, the smallest unit of measurement for the pitch relationship between tones, called semitones with a flat notation, for sharps and bs for flats.
It can also be understood that it is "ascending" and "descending", you can play it together with the white key, it is easy to find from the keyboard, the whole keyboard is basically composed of the "1234567" above the white key located in "**1 (c)". These seven Arabic numerals are also called musical notes.
For example, let's try to play the seven notes of "1234567" in order and try to sing each note in the order of "1234567". After playing the "7" note, and then play the note with a red dot on it, you can realize that the sound of the dot is the same as the sound feeling of the **"1" note, but the pitch is a little higher, which is the so-called "octave higher" sound.
Located on the keyboard "**1(c)" with seven notes circled in yellow, the white and black keys are separated. The black keys repeat the symbols "b" and "". "b" is a falling chromatic horn and "" is a sharp chromatic horn.
They are all notes that define their bottom right. The black key between "1" and "2" can be represented by the sounds "b2" and "1", i.e., "b2" = ".
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Of course, it works, the black key is called "rising semitone or flat semitone", when the black key is behind the white key 1 and in front of the white key 2, then the black key is called "sharp 1 or flat 2", the rising semitone is represented by a mark, and the falling semitone is represented by a b mark. So that key can be written "1 or b2."".The brief score can be found in the ** area of Xinhua Bookstore.
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Two adjacent keys (both black and white) on the piano are one semitone apart. That is to say, whether a white key is adjacent to a black or white key, there is a semitone difference between them.
In the short spectrum, there are only 1234567. That is, a set of white keys on the piano keyboard. There are semitones between 3 and 4, and between 7 and 1, so you'll find that two of the 7 white keys in each set of 7 on the piano keyboard are white keys adjacent to each other, and there are no black keys in between.
On the spectrum, the black key is generally represented as either B or B, which is an ascending or falling sign. If it's a liter sol, it's represented as 5, and then on the key, it's the black key to the right of 5. Again, the sol flat is the black key to the left of the 5 on the key.
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