Do You Prefer Major Key or Minor Key? Why?

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Do You Generally Prefer Music in the Major Key or the Minor Key?
Major Key 8%  8%  [ 7 ]
Major Key 8%  8%  [ 7 ]
Minor Key 36%  36%  [ 30 ]
Minor Key 36%  36%  [ 30 ]
Don't Know 6%  6%  [ 5 ]
Don't Know 6%  6%  [ 5 ]
Total votes : 84

Chris
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29 Jan 2005, 12:25 am

Not necessarily. Some songs begin with the key they are in, and some don't. What note a song starts with often has little to do with what key the song is in. It's a little hard to explain... I'm really sorry :?

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Wowbagger
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29 Jan 2005, 12:26 am

Scoots5012 wrote:
So if understand what I have quoted correctly, the first note of the song is a fairly low one. I'm going to say "E", so that would mean that the song would be in a key of "E"?


Asparval was referring to scales (successions of notes with certain patterns of intervals in between, useful in understanding music theory and often used in works of music but not, by themselves, works of music). Although there is a higher than average probability that the first note of a song is its key, it is not necessary.



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29 Jan 2005, 1:09 am

The first note of a song often has nothing to do with the key but the LAST note is most of time the key of it.



cornince
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29 Jan 2005, 1:40 am

coyote wrote:
The first note of a song often has nothing to do with the key but the LAST note is most of time the key of it.


Ja, because of that coming home sense.

Still, looking at the first chord in the song (or for chords of a certain key that are recurrent) is usually instructive, but you need to look at other things too.



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TAFKASH
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29 Jan 2005, 2:36 pm

Oh well, nobody else has done it yet, so I suppose I'll have to.....

What do you get when you drop a piano down a mineshaft? A flat minor.....

The old 'uns are the best 'uns..... <cough>


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maddogtitan
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30 Jan 2005, 3:13 pm

I guess i would have to say that i like listening to something in minor. For some reason, a piece in minor has a lot more emotion for me than in major. I'm not saying that music in major isn't emotional, i just like the emotions that are put into minor keys than in major keys.

Anyways, I just love to listen to the harmonic scales. I love that sound when the 7th is raised.

Besides, in minor keys, you have the subtonic. For some reason, i love to say Subtonic. :lol:

Got a few theory questions though.

1. What's the difference between a semitone and a half step?

2. Can secondary dominants happen anytime or do they happen in a specific key, etc?

Thanks



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30 Jan 2005, 5:58 pm

maddogtitan wrote:
1. What's the difference between a semitone and a half step?


I believe its a cross-pond thing: Europeans say semitone, Americans say half step (similar to "quarter note"/"quaver", "eighth note"/"semiquaver"), although I may be wrong?


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cornince
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30 Jan 2005, 7:54 pm

maddogtitan wrote:
I guess i would have to say that i like listening to something in minor. For some reason, a piece in minor has a lot more emotion for me than in major. I'm not saying that music in major isn't emotional, i just like the emotions that are put into minor keys than in major keys.

Anyways, I just love to listen to the harmonic scales. I love that sound when the 7th is raised.

Besides, in minor keys, you have the subtonic. For some reason, i love to say Subtonic. :lol:

Got a few theory questions though.

1. What's the difference between a semitone and a half step?

2. Can secondary dominants happen anytime or do they happen in a specific key, etc?

Thanks


Well, I know about the dominant, which is a key based on the 5th note of another key. A secondary dominant is the 5th note of that dominant key? :?:



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30 Jan 2005, 8:01 pm

cornince wrote:
maddogtitan wrote:
I guess i would have to say that i like listening to something in minor. For some reason, a piece in minor has a lot more emotion for me than in major. I'm not saying that music in major isn't emotional, i just like the emotions that are put into minor keys than in major keys.

Anyways, I just love to listen to the harmonic scales. I love that sound when the 7th is raised.

Besides, in minor keys, you have the subtonic. For some reason, i love to say Subtonic. :lol:

Got a few theory questions though.

1. What's the difference between a semitone and a half step?

2. Can secondary dominants happen anytime or do they happen in a specific key, etc?

Thanks


Well, I know about the dominant, which is a key based on the 5th note of another key. A secondary dominant is the 5th note of that dominant key? :?:


But that's a 9th isn't it? (/me tries to show off musical knowledge, despite only a limited understanding of much of it)


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30 Jan 2005, 9:34 pm

stevie_hardy wrote:
Oh well, nobody else has done it yet, so I suppose I'll have to.....

What do you get when you drop a piano down a mineshaft? A flat minor.....

The old 'uns are the best 'uns..... <cough>


ha, ha, ha, ha...

boom boom :roll:

Basil Brush would have been proud of that one.... :P

Dunc


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30 Jan 2005, 9:55 pm

I checked major, but honestly it depends on what kind of mood I am in.

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Glenn
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31 Jan 2005, 6:11 am

maddogtitan wrote:

2. Can secondary dominants happen anytime or do they happen in a specific key, etc?

Thanks


Is "secondary dominant perhaps another term for "subdominant"? If so I am not exactly sure what you mean when tou ask if they "happen".
A 'subdominant' is one of the degrees of the scale . These 'degrees are simply names for each note of a scale, starting from the 'Tonic' (or key-note) and ascending to the next tonic (which although higher in pitch, sounds similar to the lower tonic as its frequency is exactly double).

In ascending order, the notes or "degrees " of the scale are:-
1 TONIC 2 SUPERTONIC 3 MEDIANT 4 SUBDOMINANT 5 DOMINANT
6 SUBMEDIANT 7 LEADING NOTE 8 TONIC

These names represent position not the actual note, so they remain the same for every scale, no matter what the Key. For example, in the key of A major, the Dominant is E; in C major, the Dominant is G. Etc.

And re the joke about dropping a piano down a mineshaft - well, it makes a change from dropping a piano in an army officers'mess, when all you get would be A FLAT MAJOR (and a different kind of mess, I guess) :-)

Glenn


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maddogtitan
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31 Jan 2005, 3:08 pm

Secondary dominants are kind of like if you're in a piece that's in a minor and you want to temporarily change into the key of C major. since G is the subtonic in a minor it can also act as the dominant of the mediant in a minor seeing as G is the dominant in C major.

I don't know if this helps you at all. but i hope it kind of clears it up for you



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31 Jan 2005, 6:06 pm

Glenn wrote:
maddogtitan wrote:

2. Can secondary dominants happen anytime or do they happen in a specific key, etc?

Thanks


Is "secondary dominant perhaps another term for "subdominant"? If so I am not exactly sure what you mean when tou ask if they "happen".
A 'subdominant' is one of the degrees of the scale . These 'degrees are simply names for each note of a scale, starting from the 'Tonic' (or key-note) and ascending to the next tonic (which although higher in pitch, sounds similar to the lower tonic as its frequency is exactly double).

In ascending order, the notes or "degrees " of the scale are:-
1 TONIC 2 SUPERTONIC 3 MEDIANT 4 SUBDOMINANT 5 DOMINANT
6 SUBMEDIANT 7 LEADING NOTE 8 TONIC

These names represent position not the actual note, so they remain the same for every scale, no matter what the Key. For example, in the key of A major, the Dominant is E; in C major, the Dominant is G. Etc.

And re the joke about dropping a piano down a mineshaft - well, it makes a change from dropping a piano in an army officers'mess, when all you get would be A FLAT MAJOR (and a different kind of mess, I guess) :-)

Glenn


Urrrgghhhh.... overwhelmed by..... music theory...... Urge to grab guitar..... and play repetetive I-IV-V blues songs...... overwhelming..... :lol:


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14 Jun 2005, 2:21 pm

cornince wrote:
Go to a piano. Play the notes A, C, and E at the same time...


Erm...I wouldn't know one from another, having never had the benefit (or probable enjoyment) of any musical training (except about a month of guitar lessons when I was 16 that ended in frustration). I'm musically illiterate! Ugh. :(


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