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  2. F minor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/F_minor

    E-sharp minor is a theoretical key based on the musical note E ♯, consisting of the pitches E♯, F, G♯, A♯, B♯, C♯ and D♯. Its key signature has eight sharps, requiring one double sharp and six single sharps .

  3. 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).

  4. Just intonation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Just_intonation

    Some fixed just intonation scales and systems, such as the diatonic scale above, produce wolf intervals when the approximately equivalent flat note is substituted for a sharp note not available in the scale, or vice versa. The above scale allows a minor tone to occur next to a semitone which produces the awkward ratio 32:27 for D→F, and still ...

  5. Enharmonic scale - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enharmonic_scale

    Four of the scale notes – the tonic (C in the example), subdominant (F), dominant (G), and octave (C′) – are all fixed: They are nearly exactly the same relative pitches in all three categories of ancient Greek scales (enharmonic, chromatic, and diatonic), [4] and in ancient Greek music, the fixed tones relative pitches were very nearly the same as the corresponding notes in the modern ...

  6. F-sharp minor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/F-sharp_minor

    F-sharp minor is sometimes used as the parallel minor of G-flat major, especially since G-flat major's real parallel minor, G-flat minor, would have nine flats including two double-flats. For example, in the middle section of his seventh Humoresque in G-flat major , Antonín Dvořák switches from G-flat major to F-sharp minor for the middle ...

  7. Musical tuning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Musical_tuning

    Harmonic fragment scales form a rare exception to this issue. In tunings such as 1:1, 9:8, 5:4, 3:2, 7:4, 2:1 , all the pitches are chosen from the harmonic series (divided by powers of 2 to reduce them to the same octave), so all the intervals are related to each other by simple numeric ratios.

  8. Harmonic series (music) - Wikipedia

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

    A harmonic is any member of the harmonic series, an ideal set of frequencies that are positive integer multiples of a common fundamental frequency. The fundamental is a harmonic because it is one times itself. A harmonic partial is any real partial component of a complex tone that matches (or nearly matches) an ideal harmonic. [3]

  9. List of guitar tunings - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_guitar_tunings

    F ♯ /Gtuning – F ♯-B-E-A-C ♯-F ♯ / G ♭-B-E-A-D ♭-G ♭ One full step up from standard. Primary tuning for the band The Chameleons. Johnny Marr also used this tuning extensively with The Smiths. British singer-songwriter Dave Mason also plays in F#. Alex Lifeson of Rush used this tuning on the song "The Big Money".