Circle of 5ths

Chords, scales, harmony, melody, etc.
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poonna wrote:I think the circle might also be useful as a practice aid to master something in all 12 keys, no?
Well. If you know about all 12 keys, what would you need it for?
I'm really serious about this question.
I mean, when it comes to practising, to me it has always made more sense to simply pick a random key or some key I knew I wasn't that familiar with. It's never been like "ok, now that I practised XYZ in C, so let's proceed to G". I'd rather proceed with something such as Ab or whatever.
There are 3 kinds of people:
Those who can do maths and those who can't.

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I must admit, that in practise, I do agree with Sascha and others. The cycle of fifths is just another of those theory things that is useful to know, but has little practical application. - I've only used it when analysing I think, not actually when composing (except by accident). - It's not like I sit down and think "oh, what can I do now? - I know, let's use the cycle of fifths!"

But it is still good to know, or at least be familiar with.

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JumpingJackFlash wrote:I must admit, that in practise, I do agree with Sascha and others. The cycle of fifths is just another of those theory things that is useful to know, but has little practical application. - I've only used it when analysing I think, not actually when composing (except by accident). - It's not like I sit down and think "oh, what can I do now? - I know, let's use the cycle of fifths!"
I don't know much about pop music, but you'll find portions of the circle of fifths everywhere in classical music, from Bach's 2 voices inventions to Mahler symphonies, so 'little application' is a bit exaggerated :shock:

Also the name "circle of fifths" is used both to talk of the circle of tonalities ("the theory thing" to teach about accidentals) and to name a "sequence" based on fifths root movements, which, like all sequences can be modulating or not. A song like "Autumn leaves" is entierly built on a non-modulating sequence of fifths; so is for example, the music for the hollywood chewing-gum commercial, and plenty of songs I'm sure.

In classical music, it is often used to modulate back to the tonic of the piece, after some excursions to remote tonalities.

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