What is the music symbol called?
What is "clef"?
What is the key signature with no sharps or flats?
What is a "C major"?
What is the distance in pitch between two tones called?
What is an "interval"?
What is the first degree of a scale called?
What is a "tonic"?
What are the notes of a G triad?
What are "G, B, and D"?
Which articulation is used to shorten notes?
What is "staccato"?
What is it called when the major and minor scales have the same notes?
What are "relative keys"?
This interval contains five half steps.
What is a "perfect fourth"?
How many harmonic minor scales are there?
What is "twelve"?
What do you call the I, IV, and V chords?
What are "primary triads or chords"?
What are the lines that extend the staff called?
What are "ledger lines"?
What is the term for placing any accidentals needed in a song at the beginning of the music?
What is a "key signature"?
Any interval larger than an octave is a?
What is a "compound interval"?
There are three forms of minor scales.
What are "natural, harmonic, and melodic"?
This chord features a significant triad with an added m7 above the root.
What is the "dominant 7th chord"?
What is a curved line that connects two notes of the same pitch?
What is a "tie"?
What is the order of sharps in a key signature?
What is "F, C, G, D, A, E, and B"?
What type of interval is formed between two pitches that sound simultaneously?
What is a "harmonic interval"?
This scale has five notes per octave and typically contains no half-steps.
What is the "pentatonic scale"?
This triad inversion creates an interval of a fourth between the lower two pitches.
What is "2nd inversion"?
What increases the duration of the note by half of its original value?
What is a "dotted note"?
What diagram shows us the relationship between all the different musical keys?
What is the "circle of fifths"?
When you lower a perfect interval by a half step, it becomes?
What is "diminished"?
A musical scale with intervals that mutate between major and minor is used primarily in jazz.
What is a "blues scale"?
This type of chord occurs when the notes of a chord are all played separately in ascending or descending order.
What is an "arpeggio"?