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Posts Made By: JonR
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Forum: Music Theory
2009-12-27, 07:35
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Replies: 8
Views: 3,027
Strictly that should be Db, not C#.
You're...
Strictly that should be Db, not C#.
You're talking about some kind of phrygian key, and there are few possible variants:
Phrygian: 1-b2-b3-4-5-b5-b7
Phrygian dominant (aka major phrygian or spanish...
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Forum: Music Theory
2009-02-14, 11:52
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Replies: 13
Views: 3,125
It isn't. (apologies to davie, who knows his...
It isn't. (apologies to davie, who knows his stuff, but his assertion could cause confusion.)
Locrian mode can be regarded as a "half-diminished" mode, because a 7th chord built on its root is a...
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Forum: Music Theory
2009-02-02, 13:19
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Replies: 55
Views: 10,063
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Forum: Music Theory
2007-07-19, 11:43
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Replies: 13
Views: 2,944
Try...
Try this:
http://www.dolmetsch.com/musictheory22.htm
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Forum: Music Theory
2007-07-08, 10:55
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Replies: 6
Views: 704
A note written as "C" for French Horn...
A note written as "C" for French Horn would come out as an F on concert instruments like guitar. (That's what being "in F" means - just as a trumpet "in Bb" makes a concert Bb sound when playing a...
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Forum: Music Theory
2007-07-04, 07:35
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Replies: 6
Views: 1,775
Great idea, and nicely designed, but there's a...
Great idea, and nicely designed, but there's a few mistakes - not in the info, only in the connections between titles, text and diagrams (check it out).
I also think you should try and use a proper...
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Forum: Music Theory
2007-06-29, 05:33
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Replies: 10
Views: 970
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Forum: Music Theory
2007-06-29, 05:25
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Replies: 51
Views: 22,066
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Forum: Music Theory
2007-06-18, 03:59
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Replies: 10
Views: 970
Yes, every note and chord you mention is within...
Yes, every note and chord you mention is within the key of C major, and if Em is the main chord you start and end with, that means you are in E phrygian mode. (That's only a name, don't worry about...
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Forum: Music Theory
2007-05-22, 19:40
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Replies: 19
Views: 1,066
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Forum: Music Theory
2007-04-22, 05:55
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Replies: 18
Views: 2,699
The classical concept is that ascending melodic...
The classical concept is that ascending melodic minor has a raised 6th and 7th. In A minor:
A B C D E F# G# A
This is in order to make a major-type resolution to the upper tonic (A).
When descending,...
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Forum: Music Theory
2007-04-07, 05:56
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Replies: 32
Views: 3,871
No, I think you're correct.
"Diatonic"...
No, I think you're correct.
"Diatonic" has two related meanings:
(1) a type of 7-note scale. The derivation is "though the tones" or "across the tones", and originally referred to the old modal...
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Forum: Music Theory
2007-04-05, 10:59
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Replies: 32
Views: 3,871
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Forum: Music Theory
2007-04-04, 05:44
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Replies: 2
Views: 651
No such thing as a dissonant scale. Dissonance...
No such thing as a dissonant scale. Dissonance applies to harmony: notes sounded at the same time. You can get dissonant harmony from any scale.
Or you can simply add chromatic notes to any scale to...
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Forum: Music Theory
2007-03-27, 05:51
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Replies: 28
Views: 2,120
Actually, I have seen "Aeolian major"...
Actually, I have seen "Aeolian major" before - or was it "major aeolian"?
Or "altered", or "diminished wholetone", as jazz players generally call it.
But then it wouldn't be a minor key! The only...
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Forum: Music Theory
2007-03-26, 06:29
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Replies: 28
Views: 2,120
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