What's the exact difference between key and scale? I understand that key is the "tonality" of the song, and a scale is more like a palette to draw notes from, but for example, can a song be in D phyrgian? If so, what's the point in them being differentiated?
When writing a chord progression: do you have to draw each note from the scale of the key (see my confusion above) you're in? Like, imagine I'm in D phyrgian: do I have to use only notes from D phyrgian to build the chords? The reason I'm asking this is because sometimes I get advice like "play with the fifth", "introduce some diminished/whatever chords to bring tension/make it more interesting". But then I look at the scale and think "damn, can't do that, the flat fifth is not on this scale". From what I understand, if you "use" that sort of thing, you're introducing "chomaticism" right? Like, "borrowing" notes from other scales. But then, how do I know when to do that, and when I'm going to stray away from the scale/key too much and make my use of a certain scale irrelevant?
On that point, what's the point of saying you're using the chormatic scale? If you're using all twelve semitones, isn't it like not restricting yourself to a certain scale?
Any tips on "training my ear" to recognize chords? I'm trying to figure out the chords to a tune, but I get lost on the exact voicings, I would like to learn to recognize intervals and chords, but it sounds difficult once I get away from basic triads and 7th chords.
Last question: any good online tutorials or lessons to get my feet on writing melodies based on different scales, including adding variation, etc? I was trying to write a melody the other day, and it sounded repetitive, bizarre (not in a good IDM way, but in a, "why the hell does it start doing all these things" way)... would like to get some pointers.
THanks a lot in advance