
mshilarious
Banned
Elmo89m said:but F# isnt minor
Well if they are power chords, they have no thirds, so they aren't major or minor. If F# really is major, then you're just playing with the major/minor tonality which is common.
Elmo89m said:but F# isnt minor
Elmo89m said:how would i know which three chords to plug into the I ii iii IV V vi vii format?
mshilarious said:Well that's the trick. If we start with the assumption that all of the chords' roots fall on scale degrees (a dangerous assumption), then with F#, A, D, E, you could be in the keys of G, D, A, or their relative minors:
G: vii - ii - V - iii
Em (relative of G): ii - iv - (b)VII - i
D: iii - V - I - ii
Bm: v - (b)VII - III - iv
A: vi - I - IV - V
F#m: i - (b)III - (b)VI - (b)VII
I put the (b) in parentheses because those notes are flatted in the minor mode, but they aren't actually notated that way because they aren't modifications. So in trying to be clear I probably muddied it up![]()
Generally you'd prefer a key where the chord progression contains the tonic. You also like to see a V or even a v. Finally, if the I or i is at the beginning or end of a progression, that's another good hint.
If you change some of the notes so they don't all fit in a single key, then the analysis gets more complicated.
Back to your song, if you want to modulate a bit, say in a chorus or a bridge, you have many choices. You could move decidedly into F# with an F# - C# progression. You could move pretty easily into Em with a B. You could confuse the issue with F# - G - A - B. The lack of thirds in power chords creates an ambiguous tonality that you can change pretty easily.
famous beagle said:Maybe it's because in my music I use so many borrowed chords that I run into a lot of problems like that. For instance, here are the chords to one of my songs. I'm interested, if you don't mind, how you would label the chords. I have my way, but I'd like see how someone from your school of thought would do it.
mshilarious said:I hadn't identified the problem as the frequency of borrowed chords, but I see that makes sense.
OK:
Verse: Am - Cmaj7 - Fmaj7 - G6
i - IIImaj7 - VImaj7 - VII6
Heh, caught me. If I presume you know the III, VI, and VII are flatted, then I should presume you'd know the 7ths are major![]()
Chorus: Dm - G - C - Bb - Dm - A - Bb - F
iv - VII - III - bII - iv - I - bII - VI
Dm - G - Ab - Db
iv - VII - bI (!!) - bIV
I'm not sure I like that solution. Doesn't that lend more of a harmonic minor feel? So maybe G# - C#, #VII - #III? That more understandably drops back to A via F#. Wish I had a keyboard, my ear training never got anywhere near this.
famous beagle said:yeah ... see though .. I think this was a little unfair, because you don't know the vocal melody. Now that I think about it, the chorus actually kind of modulates to C major (except for that very brief Dm-A-Bb-F that tonicizes F for a second.)
mshilarious said:Hmmm. I wanted it as a modulation to Dm:
Chorus: Dm - G - C - Bb - Dm - A - Bb - F
i - IV - VII - VI - i - V - VI - III
Dm - G - G# - C#
i - IV - #IV - #VII
Elmo89m said:seven isnt major....its diminished isnt it?
jimistone said:my method is:
"if it sounds cool...its right"
Explains why a song I wrote with the chords D A G is in G, and Em scale worked to solo over it. Actually no, that still confused me.Purge said:To get a more general idea of where you should be playing, try this then: Look for the major chords in your song. (even if you're using power chords, they will still have an implied tonality in the context of the rest of the song--just make the "full" version of the chord, and you'll see what I'm talking about) In a very generalized sense, each key will only have 3 major chords and this will help you narrow things down a bit. Until you really start going after theory, this isn't a bad way to figure out where your fingers should be.
The idea of the "first chord in the song is the key you're playing in" needs to be put to rest. Yes, it can happen sometimes. But that is absolutely not how it works in reality. It's possible, for example, to play in the key of G without ever even hitting a G note.
Rokket said:Explains why a song I wrote with the chords D A G is in G, and Em scale worked to solo over it. Actually no, that still confused me.
Wow, who says you can't teach an old dog new tricks. Thanks, man! I love it when I finally figure out what I am doing. Repetative as it is!mshilarious said:It's modal. You are probably playing your solo in E dorian:
E F# G A B C# D
Which corresponds with D major.
As for your song being in G, Em is the relative minor of G, so perhaps you are loosely switching being Em or G and E dorian. The only difference is the C#, the third in your A chord.
If by Em solo you mean Em pentatonic, then you just have:
E G A B D
Which fits in any of those keys.