Ok then, what's the roman numeral for "this piece has just modulated into the relative harmonic minor and when you see iii- what we really mean is biii-". Because without that particular roman numeral (and a slew of others for any modulation or tonicization) I don't see how the "different system" works.Varadin wrote:Both of you are right. These are two different systems for Roman numeral analysis.
Most Awesome Sounding Chord Progressions Ever Vol 1
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- KVRAF
- 6519 posts since 13 Mar, 2002 from UK
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- KVRAF
- 3404 posts since 15 Sep, 2002
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- KVRAF
- 6519 posts since 13 Mar, 2002 from UK
The backdoor progression.mistertoast wrote:http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&safe ... tnG=Search
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- KVRAF
- 3404 posts since 15 Sep, 2002
No way you can just assume chords are major or minor. Too much borrowing going on from different modes to be sure. No way you can just assume they are flatted or sharped either.
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- KVRist
- 279 posts since 13 May, 2003
well, that's not wrong, that's how it's thought for classical musicians:nuffink wrote:Hey that's fascinating!Toxikator wrote:romans do NOT always reference major! they do if you start on "I" since it implies a major tonality but when you start on "i" it implies a minor tonality.
This is the roman numeral set for the natural minor scale:
i iio III iv v VI VII i
NOT
i iio bIII iv v bVI bVII
And wrong. But at least it explains some of the howlers you regularly make.
Major is: I ii iii IV V vi vii° I
Minor is: i ii° III iv (or IV) v or V VI VII (or vii°) i
(the 6th and 7th degree being movable)
I understand that it's different for jazz notation, but for the little experience I have with it, I've never encoutered small ii, iii, .. in a fake book
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- KVRAF
- 1975 posts since 4 Feb, 2005
You notate modulations like so:nuffink wrote:Ok then, what's the roman numeral for "this piece has just modulated into the relative harmonic minor and when you see iii- what we really mean is biii-". Because without that particular roman numeral (and a slew of others for any modulation or tonicization) I don't see how the "different system" works.
c[i - iio - i - iv D[IV-V-I
To indicate the key change.
If you were discussing it in non-song-specific terms, it'd be more likely that you'd notate it i - iio - i - iv - IV/iio - V/IIo - I/iio
As per your specific example, you'd write something like I-IV-V-I-biii (there's nothing stopping you from doing this). The only difference between my method and yours is my method assumes either a major or minor set of notes based on the quality of the tonic chord. Yours assumes the major set of notes regardless of what the tonic note is.
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- KVRAF
- 6519 posts since 13 Mar, 2002 from UK
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- KVRAF
- 1975 posts since 4 Feb, 2005
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- KVRAF
- 6519 posts since 13 Mar, 2002 from UK
If I were analysing a piece of sheet music I'd be using Pitch Class Set notation.Toxikator wrote:If you were analyzing a piece of sheet music that's how you'd do it. Here, I'd probably use the "V/ii, iii/ii" style, or else just say "modulate to the mediant" or whatever.
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- KVRist
- 413 posts since 11 Mar, 2004
Just checking to see if that's what the original post said...Hunter wrote:So I'm sitting here watching the sunset blowing my mind with Biomechanoid's Absynth3 pads and I need some hair-rasing chord progressions. Anyone care to share any diamonds?
(Maybe you should start another thread, Hunter...)
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- KVRist
- 499 posts since 9 Oct, 2005
Thanks I understood your previous statement. I wish you explained your previous major posts the same way. It's like a user's manual, very handy.nuffink wrote:Ok, to make up for that little bun fight, I'll expand upon…
… and hopefully show why it's so useful.nuffink wrote:2nds up/7ths down (I-ii),(IV-V) etc...
3rds down/6ths up (I-vi),(IV-ii) etc...
4ths up/5ths down (i-IV),(V-I) etc...
Mix and match to extend at will.
...
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- KVRAF
- 3404 posts since 15 Sep, 2002
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- KVRAF
- Topic Starter
- 2935 posts since 14 Dec, 2003 from Edinburgh
So its black one, white one, white one, black one yeah?
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- KVRAF
- 4908 posts since 10 Aug, 2004 from Colorado Springs
Now that's a great resource. Glad I lurked here.mistertoast wrote:This helped me until I had a feel for it all...
http://members.aol.com/chordmaps/part1.htm
-Scott
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- KVRAF
- 3404 posts since 15 Sep, 2002
Yeah. I especially like...
http://chordmaps.com/genmap.htm
Once I went through and tried to figure out "why" each chord leading might work. I remember that a couple of them had me stuck, so I figured those were just tried-and-true "they just work" leadings.
I think the chords that lead into I/5 are interesting.
http://chordmaps.com/genmap.htm
Once I went through and tried to figure out "why" each chord leading might work. I remember that a couple of them had me stuck, so I figured those were just tried-and-true "they just work" leadings.
I think the chords that lead into I/5 are interesting.


