Guide to Chord Formation by Howard Wright (Howard@jmdl.com)
Appendix C : Circle of 5ths and Key Signatures
Appendix C : Circle of 5ths and Key Signatures
You've probably heard the phrase '
circle of 5ths' before.
It relates to the way key signatures are written, which
tells us how many
sharps or
flats to play.
C major has no sharps or flats
G major has one sharp (
F#)
D major has 2 sharps (
F# and
C#)
If we carry on finding the
keys with 3, 4, 5 sharps
we find that the next key in the series is a
5th
higher than the previous one.
So when we start with
C major, go up a
5th to
G major,
then up a
5th to
D, then
A and so on.
It also works for the
flat key signatures if we go down
in
5ths. So a 5th down from
C is
F (one flat), then another
5th down is
Bb (2 flats), then
Eb and so on.
Here is my attempt at drawing it as the famous 'circle' of
5ths (more like an
ellipse in my case).
Everytime you move round one position, you go up or
down by a 5th. The
+ signs are for the sharps, the
- for
the flats.
Note that this is for the major keys only.
0
-1 +1
C
F G
-2 +2
Bb D
-3 Eb A +3
-4 Ab E +4
Db B
-5 +5
Gb F#
-6 +6
Cb C#
-7 +7
The only other thing you need to know here is which are
the flat and sharp notes.
Here again there is another
5ths relationship.
If we list the
sharp notes we need to add as we move
clockwise round from
C major we get:
-
F#, C#, G#, D#, A#, E#, B#
So starting from the
F#, the series goes up a 5th every time.
So how does it all work?
-
For G major, from the circle we see it has 1 sharp.
Take the 1st sharp from the series above: F#.
So we need F# for a G major scale/key signature.
For D major, we need 2 sharps, so we take F# and C#.
For A major, we take F#, C# and G#.
.. and so on for all the other sharp keys.
For the flat notes, the series is:
-
Bb, Eb, Ab, Db, Gb, Cb, Fb.
(yet another 5ths relationship...)
-
So if we pick a flat key, say Eb major, from the circle
we see it has 3 flats, so we need Bb, Eb and Ab.
Because all the things you need to know here are connected
with relationships of a 5th, it's fairly easy to learn the
circle of 5ths. This makes it very easy to work out
notes of
a
scale.
Note that this is all for the major scale.
For
minor scales you need to find the
relative major key.
The relative
major key is always 3 semitones higher than
the minor key (e.g
Cmajor /
Aminor -
C is 3 semitones
above
A).
-
So, say you want to know the scale of Ab minor.
The relative major key is Cb major.
So you need all 7 flats!
The scale is: Ab, Bb, Cb, Db, Eb, Fb, Gb, Ab.
When you see things like
Fb, it sounds a bit strange,
but it makes things a lot easier if you stick to these
conventions instead of saying '
E is the same as
Fb'.
The idea is that for
every scale, the letter names appear
once only. So every scale will have an
F of some sort, but
in some it will be F
natural, some it will be
F# and some it
will be
Fb.
Guide to Chord Formation by Howard Wright
Reformatted and noded (with permission) by Space Butler
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