C Natural is a whole step above B flat. If you look at a piano, a half step above B Flat is B Natural, and one more half step above that is C Natural. So it's a whole step from B Flat to C Natural.
A whole step above C sharp (C#) is D sharp (D#). In music, a whole step consists of two half steps, and moving from C# to D# involves skipping the note D, which is a half step above C#.
B flat. I picture it on the piano, one key is one semi-tone or half a tone. Two of these makes one whole tone, or one whole step. One half step down from C would be the note B, another half step would then go to B flat. That is one whole step.
A sharp.
A whole step above D sharp (D#) is E sharp (E#). In music theory, a whole step consists of two half steps, so moving from D# to E# involves skipping over D natural and landing on E#. However, E# is enharmonically equivalent to F, meaning they sound the same but are notated differently.
C#/Db is a half step above C.
C Natural is a whole step above B flat. If you look at a piano, a half step above B Flat is B Natural, and one more half step above that is C Natural. So it's a whole step from B Flat to C Natural.
C Natural is a whole step above B flat. If you look at a piano, a half step above B Flat is B Natural, and one more half step above that is C Natural. So it's a whole step from B Flat to C Natural.
C is one step above B
One whole step above B is C#. In musical terms, a whole step consists of two half steps, and moving from B to C# involves skipping B# (which is enharmonically equivalent to C) and landing on C#.
A whole step consists of two half steps, the smallest note division excluding semitones, so one half step brings the pitch to an "A" and the second up to "B flat"
whole step. you go from B flat to B natural. from B natural you go to A. each of those steps are half steps. 1/2 + 1/2 = 1 whole step.
The answer is C. Since B is one half step up from B flat, and C is one half step up from B, and two halves make a whole :)
B flat. I picture it on the piano, one key is one semi-tone or half a tone. Two of these makes one whole tone, or one whole step. One half step down from C would be the note B, another half step would then go to B flat. That is one whole step.
A sharp.
f
A whole step below B natural is A natural. This is because a whole step consists of two half steps, and moving down from B natural to A natural covers that interval.
The interval from B to C is a minor second (m2) or a half step.