users of fruity loops question:)

Chords, scales, harmony, melody, etc.
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hello folks:)

please..

in fruity loops u have nice feature.. chords.. chords is in piano rool pop-up button very left and up.. u know..

and my question is..

is all scales there moll or dur? or question.. every scale in fruity loops is moll or dur? or iam absolutely wrong?(exist only one moll and that is pure minor and only one dur and that major scale?)

simply every scale in there only dur or moll? and if is where i can found it is it dur or moll?(last question isnt much important because maybe i can found it in one great program for scales(guitar power))

very thank you:)

bye..

kamil..

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Dur is German for "major" and Moll is German for "minor".
Unfamiliar words can be looked up in my Glossary of musical terms.
Also check out my Introduction to Music Theory.

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ok dude but i remembering i learning in school some exist moll and dur scales and in some learning blogs are in some scales used "b" and in some "#" thus i think some scales for example dorian have signing C D Eb F G A Bb there is "b" which i think is moll and lydian C D E F# G A B where there je "#" which i think is dur.. or iam absolutly on laught?:)

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You can use any scales you want, but the key signature (displayed in the piano roll hint) is limited to standard key signatures, i.e. major (dur) and the relative minor (moll).

The use of flats (b) or sharps (#) in scales depends on the scale and is down to the fact that you only want one of each letter in the scale, i.e. you don't want two A notes, such as A and A#; instead you have A and Bb.

For example the scale of Bb major is Bb C D Eb F G A; one each of A, B, C, D, E, F and G. If you were to use A# instead, the scale would be A# C D D# F G A - giving you two As and two Ds; but no B or E.

I've no idea if you can change the key name displayed in FL to flats or sharps and personally I don't care.


Note: In German (at least traditional, non-internet German) notation, Bb = B and B = H, but that makes everything super-confusing and I'd urge you to use the standard English conventions online or everyone will be confused.

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psychoxkps wrote: think some scales for example dorian have signing C D Eb F G A Bb there is "b" which i think is moll and lydian C D E F# G A B where there je "#" which i think is dur.
no. Dorian has a raised sixth degree, there your 'B', or German "H", compared to [the Bb in] natural minor.

these modes are not going to correspond with your software limited to strict terms major or natural minor, unless you know at once the relationship of them to the major aka Ionian mode.

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psychoxkps wrote:some scales used "b" and in some "#"
Yes, some scales have sharps (#) and some have flats (b).
But the presence or absence of sharps and/or flats does not in itself tell you whether the scale is major, minor, or a mode (such as Dorian, Lydian etc.)

So, G major has an F# in it, but F major has a Bb in it.
E minor has F# in it, but D minor has Bb in it.

The following may be of some use:
An Introduction to Music Theory
Scales, Modes and Chords
Unfamiliar words can be looked up in my Glossary of musical terms.
Also check out my Introduction to Music Theory.

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JumpingJackFlash wrote:
psychoxkps wrote:some scales used "b" and in some "#"
Yes, some scales have sharps (#) and some have flats (b).
But the presence or absence of sharps and/or flats does not in itself tell you whether the scale is major, minor, or a mode (such as Dorian, Lydian etc.)

So, G major has an F# in it, but F major has a Bb in it.
E minor has F# in it, but D minor has Bb in it.

The following may be of some use:
An Introduction to Music Theory
Scales, Modes and Chords
Durrr
:oops:
I run a netlabel http://oligopolistrecords.bandcamp.com
Free chill, hip-hop, lo-fi, ambient, experimental, for you! (Send me demos too!)

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