Finding The Key? |
Thu 16 Dec 2004, 17:34
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#1
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Newbie Group: Members Posts: 5 Joined: 08-Oct 04 From: Guarda - PT Member No.: 52,792 |
Hi!
I never studied music but i like to play on my MIDI keyboard into LE7 (i play by ear). I usualy start by choosing a key, a beat and a bass-line to guide me through the right key. But if i wanted to do it the other way (play first)? Is there any way of knowing in what key i'm playing? Sorry if my question is too dumb... And BTW, when importing some MIDI songs to LE7, do they transpose to the key of the project? Thanks. |
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Mon 20 Dec 2004, 18:45
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#2
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Moderator Group: Team Posts: 370 Joined: 19-Mar 03 From: Umeå - SE Member No.: 14,645 |
A short answer to a complex question - not really.
In western music you usually - but not at all always - end up on the same chord - where you started playing your tune. (This rule is so full of exceptions it has to be taken with a big grain of salt) To be certain of what key you're playing in you'd really have to know the names of the notes you're playing. You'd have to have a at least a bit of knowledge on how chords are built from notes in the scales you're using. The problem is that music are all about relationships between different musical building blocks. The same notes can be used for a variety harmonic scales depending on how you play them Example: the pentatonic C-Major scale is excactly the same notes as the pentatonic A-Minor scale (the basic blues-box on a guitar) However they sound very different while your playing them in context. In essence your putting on two different pair of glasses, different musical color/mood if you will. Chords in western music are built from notes in the correpsponding scales. You start by stacking intervals of thirds on top of each other. ( then expand and add other intevals as well for coloring ) Example: A C-Major chord needs to be built from at least three notes from the C-Major scale - using two third intervals. The three notes are C - E - G The interval between C - E -- is a major third The interval between E - G -- is a minor third Imagine the intervals as plates. The C-major chord is a bigplate first with a little plate on top. The C-minor chord: The C-minor chord is a little plate with a big plate on top. The three notes is: C - Eb - G The interval between C - Eb -- is a minor third The interval between Eb - G -- is a major third The basic rule is pretty simple, but later it gets complicated but fun. There's no substitute for knowledge and know how. Buy some books on the subject and start eating 'Bout LE7 (last question) I dont know Cheers: Dixiechicken -------------------- ==================
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