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URL:https://www.learndesk.us/class/4605070148632576/lesson/ddfcbd0dbbd8e41b404f6898be5ca0ca?ref=outlook-calendar
SUMMARY:Key of C Major
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20260506T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20260506T200000
LOCATION:https://www.learndesk.us/class/4605070148632576/lesson/ddfcbd0dbbd8e41b404f6898be5ca0ca?ref=outlook-calendar
DESCRIPTION: 
The C Major Scale
Listen to this series of eight notes:

This is a scale of C major. (A “scale” is any defined series of musical notes.) 
In the C major scale, both the first and the last notes are Cs- but how do we know what the in-between notes are?
On the piano, a C major scale uses all the white notes (so it doesn’t have any sharps or flats), but on other instruments, we don’t have “white” notes, so how do we know which notes to use?
In fact, what we need to know is the distance between each of the notes in the scale. The distance between any two notes of the scale which are next to each other will be either a tone (whole note) or a semitone (half note). 
All major scales are built from the same pattern of tones and semitones.
Tones and Semitones in the Major Scale
Let’s look at the C major scale again, and see what the pattern of tones and semitones is.
The distance between each pair of notes is written below the stave: T for tones (whole steps) and S for semitones (half...

https://www.learndesk.us/class/4605070148632576/lesson/ddfcbd0dbbd8e41b404f6898be5ca0ca?ref=outlook-calendar
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