Questions tagged [accidentals]

A sign (♯, ♭, ♮) indicating a momentary departure from the key signature by raising or lowering a note a semitone, respectively called sharp, flat and natural (which cancels a previous sharp or flat.The term can also indicate the note raised or lowered. Also found as a double sharp and double flat.

Accidentals come in upward (sharp, ♯) and downward (flat, ♭) variations. If a scale degree that would normally be sharp or flat (e.g. f♯ in the D-major scale) is used as a natural (f), then this is also an accidental, indicated by the neutralizing sign ♮. That sign may also cancel a previously given accidental, but cancelling is only necessary within a measure: each bar line resets everything to the key signature given at the start of each stave.

There also exist special symbols for indicating double-sharp (𝄪) and double-flat (𝄫), i.e. a note change by a two semitones (typically used only, if the first modification was already provided by the key signature; a double-accidental is enharmonically equivalent to a full tone step), as well as microtonal extensions.

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Accidentals - some in brackets, some not

Can anyone explain what the difference is between accidentals in brackets, and those not?
Mike
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Having trouble with accidentals - Note-for-note vs traditional?

I am hoping to enter the music in the attached image into a midi sequencing program. The problem I'm having is understanding the musical notation here. Traditionally, accidentals follow pretty basic rules, at least according to the wikipedia…
S. Imp
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Accidentals in divisi parts

I've got a trumpet part which is divisi (upper and lower part on one staff). The upper part starts with a F, which has an accidental sharp in front of it. The 3rd note of the lower part is a F as well... Does the accidental also apply to this note?
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A piece has a given key. When it modulates, are the consequent accidentals *chromatic* or are they *diatonic* temporarily?

Moving tangentially from a recent question and its answers, Diatonic notes are 'of the key'. Other notes are 'chromatic'. However, if a piece is written in, say, C major, and modulates to G major for several bars, are the F♯ notes that occur…
Tim
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Are accidentals written as sharps or flats in the key of C?

The title of my question pretty well encompasses the entirety of it. It falls outside the realm of sticking with the key signature as it is neither sharp nor flat.
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Incorrect Placement of an Accidental?

This is a very quick and blunt question but here we have a deliberately incorrect notation and below it is the corrected version (the black circles). How come the eight note before the last (the pink) still has a flat accidental? That Cb note has…
Keretto
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Meaning of double accidental

A few of the notes in Weber Piano Quartet in Bb Major Op. 8 movement 1 have two accidentals in front of them. For example, in one of the measures a Bb has a sharp and a natural accidental in front of it. Does this mean that the accidentals cancel…
Gfor098
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Why written G flat instead if F sharp?

Hi thanks in advance for answering. I’m learning a tune that is written in D major, where Fs as written are sharp , the arrangement in one measure goes : G Fnat Ab Gb. Why not just write F instead of G flat? The piece is in D maj. F would be…
user85305
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Should I play a B♭ or a B♭♭

There's a passage I encountered in a piece I was practicing, the key signature was E♭ Major, which contains 3 flats: E♭, B♭, and A♭. The passage looked like this: In that passage, there is a B♭. So should it be a normal B♭ or a B♭♭ Any hints would…
supernova
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