Reading Sharps in music?!


Question: Reading Sharps in music!?
heyyy if there are like 4 sharps after the treble clef sign what does that mean!.!.!?!
same with the flats im confused!.!.!?!!?!Www@Enter-QA@Com


Answers:
The sharps occur in a consistent order: F# C# G# D# A# E# B#!. In any sharp key the last sharp in the order shown from left to right is the seventh scale tone!. To cite your example of four sharps: you're showing F# C# G# D#, thus the piece is in E major (or its' relative minor, C# minor; the way to tell is by the note patterns used at the beginning and/or the end- E major would show E G# B and C# minor would use C# E G#)!.
There is a consistent order to the listing of flats, too: Bb Eb Ab Db Gb Cb Fb (notice that this is the exact reverse of the order of sharps)!. To determine what major key you're in, go to the last flat, which is always scale tone four!. If only one flat is showing (Bb, which is scale tone four), walking down the scale to scale tone one means you're in F!.
Check out the link below for help on this topic; it's on the circle of fifths, which is useful for transposition issues as well as help with key names and accidentals in key signatures!.Www@Enter-QA@Com

it's just the key of the piece!. so if you have a flat on the B line all the b's in the song will be flat unless there is a naturalWww@Enter-QA@Com



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