E major
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E major
Summary
E major is a tonal system[1]. It draws 391 Wikipedia views per month (tonal_system category, ranking #3 of 10).[2]
Key Facts
- E major's image is recorded as E-major c-sharp-minor.svg[3].
- E major's instance of is recorded as tonal system[4].
- E major's instance of is recorded as major mode[5].
- E major's follows is recorded as D-sharp major[6].
- E major's follows is recorded as A major[7].
- E major's followed by is recorded as F major[8].
- E major's followed by is recorded as B major[9].
- E major's followed by is recorded as C-flat major[10].
- E major's Commons category is recorded as E major[11].
- E major's said to be the same as is recorded as F-flat major[12].
- E major's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/04jyvd[13].
- E major's IMSLP ID is recorded as Category:E_major[14].
- E major's BBC Things ID is recorded as f423d3fa-377c-4745-9a26-0fe1a614d138[15].
- E major's different from is recorded as E major scale[16].
- E major's Great Norwegian Encyclopedia ID is recorded as E-dur[17].
- E major's related category is recorded as Category:Compositions in E major[18].
- E major's IFLA value vocabularies ID is recorded as key#e[19].
Why It Matters
E major draws 391 Wikipedia views per month (tonal_system category, ranking #3 of 10).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 21 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[20] It is known by 18 alternative names across languages and contexts.[21]