Even if you use the piano roll you still have to have a nomenclature that allows you to discuss abstract concepts. For chordal harmony that nomenclature, for better or worse, is roman numerals.herodotus wrote:Well the dots are cool, but a piano roll, or even a template of a piano keyboard with the keys in question colored in would be vastly superior to these chord name thingies.nuffink wrote: If you're talking about the dots then experience shows that the vast majority of newbies, even the ones who want to learn, will take one look and find something better to do.
I mean, it's not just 'jazz' and 'classical' that are different. There is a Germanic tradition, a French tradition, an American tradition (non-jazz). I am sure there are others I have forgotten.
Each is, pointlessly, a little different from the others. And each is a cumbersome form of communication.
It's like the whole 'movable do' versus stationary do debacle.
I know, I am probably being irrelevant. But damn how I hate those Roman numerals.
Yes, there are a lot of detailed differences but every working muso understands the underlying similarities. That is until you get a vociferous advocate of a alternative system who insists that it should be used despite admitting that it has a strictly limited ambit (i.e. it doesn't work outside of diatonic major harmony).

