Is F Major the most hateful chord? (AKA what chords do you least like to use...)
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- KVRian
- 882 posts since 20 Feb, 2004
The fully barred F major on the guitar is pretty smarmy, but the 4 string one is pretty humble and plays nicely with others.
- KVRAF
- 25849 posts since 20 Jan, 2008 from a star near where you are
Just add an E at the end, makes all the difference:Doug1978 wrote:Hi
I appreciate that this isn't a very rational viewpoint (and no, I haven't been on the booze yet tonight), but there's something about F Major that I despise.
F A C + E
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- KVRAF
- 6272 posts since 25 Mar, 2004
"D minor is really the saddest of all keys..." -Nigel Tufnelrobojam wrote:I combine F Maj with D min and get some really sad hatred out of my songs
Last edited by BERFAB on Fri Oct 04, 2013 7:07 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Berfab
So many plugins, so little time...
So many plugins, so little time...
- KVRAF
- 3878 posts since 28 Jun, 2009 from Wherever I lay my hat
F Major - triumphant, manly, ballsy.
If it's too strong, it means you're too weak.

If it's too strong, it means you're too weak.
- KVRAF
- 5223 posts since 20 Jul, 2010
F major in what tuning exactly? Equal temperament? 
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- KVRist
- 160 posts since 30 Aug, 2008 from USH, Germany
F major rocks, but only if A=432Hz.
Sei wachsam
- KVRAF
- 5223 posts since 20 Jul, 2010
Integer frequencies are grating. A=441.91913040534995382394... is much better.Heathcliff wrote:F major rocks, but only if A=432Hz.
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- KVRAF
- 4589 posts since 7 Jun, 2012 from Warsaw
F major seems to be popular in hard trance - when you want to blow the walls into pieces and cause heart attack on audience.
D minor, however, is my favourite key - as someone mentioned, the saddest one. For me it's magical and atmospheric, perfect for progressive / anthem trance, as well as epic (gothic? evil?) climax.
For uplifters, E major all the way. It's just warm and beautiful and I can't help it.
D minor, however, is my favourite key - as someone mentioned, the saddest one. For me it's magical and atmospheric, perfect for progressive / anthem trance, as well as epic (gothic? evil?) climax.
For uplifters, E major all the way. It's just warm and beautiful and I can't help it.
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- KVRAF
- 5223 posts since 20 Jul, 2010
It makes no sense to speak of the feeling of a chord without specifying the tuning/intonation you're using. In equal temperament all major chords are the same object, transposed up and down.
This is essentially why I insist as many synths as possible should have at least rudimentary scale modification options (either from a scala file or by being able to tune each note in the octave). Try playing ii-V-I in a bunch of different tunings and you'll see what I mean.
This is essentially why I insist as many synths as possible should have at least rudimentary scale modification options (either from a scala file or by being able to tune each note in the octave). Try playing ii-V-I in a bunch of different tunings and you'll see what I mean.
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- KVRAF
- 26033 posts since 20 Oct, 2007 from gonesville
well, I don't know. but I wonder how many of the people with a strong feeling for a chord will consistently identify it in blind tests. Give them a Gb major, see if they don't call it F major given suggestion.
the 'what key is this' thread, I for some reason knew C was C there, and I can identify things by certain properties, open strings relationships on guitar fairly reliably; but that is preserved by a capo which I might be tricked by. I don't have perfect pitch, but...
I think the transposition itself gives a different 'color' but I'm not going to get into science, it isn't my field. For instance I use lower than A=440 for effect and there is a different property - TONE - that belongs to that (eg., guitar feedback/acoustical phenomena). Tuning strings on a guitar to a [lower] pitch, there is a physical difference in vibration. Additionally there is no way to ensure 100% the actual relationships as a tuner! "all things being equal", but they're not. Tensors vary owing to construction.
A person's voice is going to be different in different keys/ranges. Cf., Formants. Why do we mitigate the chipmunk effect? Why do we need all of these samples to make a piano library a viable product, if it's a matter of a simple object and transposition? etc. Electronic instruments, not so much, I guess.
That said I think most of the claims in this thread are imagination, tripping.
the 'what key is this' thread, I for some reason knew C was C there, and I can identify things by certain properties, open strings relationships on guitar fairly reliably; but that is preserved by a capo which I might be tricked by. I don't have perfect pitch, but...
I think the transposition itself gives a different 'color' but I'm not going to get into science, it isn't my field. For instance I use lower than A=440 for effect and there is a different property - TONE - that belongs to that (eg., guitar feedback/acoustical phenomena). Tuning strings on a guitar to a [lower] pitch, there is a physical difference in vibration. Additionally there is no way to ensure 100% the actual relationships as a tuner! "all things being equal", but they're not. Tensors vary owing to construction.
A person's voice is going to be different in different keys/ranges. Cf., Formants. Why do we mitigate the chipmunk effect? Why do we need all of these samples to make a piano library a viable product, if it's a matter of a simple object and transposition? etc. Electronic instruments, not so much, I guess.
That said I think most of the claims in this thread are imagination, tripping.
Last edited by jancivil on Sat Oct 05, 2013 1:45 am, edited 1 time in total.
- KVRAF
- 12194 posts since 7 Sep, 2006 from Roseville, CA
I stopped hanging around minor chords after I turned 21.Doug1978 wrote: Which chords do you seldom use?
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- KVRAF
- 5223 posts since 20 Jul, 2010
But formants are way beyond the scope of this discussion. Obviously accoustic instruments and synth patches with filters and other processes that don't keytrack 100% have complex formants and specifying that the abstract notion of a chord in ET is the same in all keys isn't a statement that everything sounds the same when transposed. >_>jancivil wrote:A person's voice is going to be different in different keys/ranges. Cf., Formants. Why do we mitigate the chipmunk effect? Why do we need all of these samples to make a piano library a viable product, if it's a matter of a simple object and transposition? etc. Electronic instruments, not so much, I guess.
The thing with formants is that they're circumstancial and don't really pertain to the abstract notion of a chord. You can't generalize about formants because without knowing what instrument we're even talking about, which is the typical context of these "chord colour" discussions, they're a mystery factor.
If someone were to say "in the upright piano in my front room, a theme I wrote in C major sounded much sweeter when transposed to E major" that would be plausible, but that kind of specificity hasn't entered the equation when people speak of chord colours in general in western music (especially in a synth-based forum where formants have to be arbitrarily set up).
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- Rad Grandad
- 38041 posts since 6 Sep, 2003 from Downeast Maine
I had this problem with the F Maj when I was 14, but then I learned to use a bar chord although I still didn't like the tone of the bar chord as much as an open F Maj...I stayed that way into my 30s like a lot of guitar players I know...but then I figured out the solution...this is one bar of a very old song of mine which starts out with an open F Maj (played on a super cheap Dean acoustic)...it's called scordatura (not the song, the technique) and it's been a way of life for me for at least 20 years now...surely one of the single most things that really advanced my style of playing and my options for writing
https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/45487351/NEW1.mp3
btw here is a cool site about "affective key characteristics"...I dont care if people laugh at me, I dont really care if anyone agrees with this as it doesn't matter. While I dont finish a lot of songs I do play and record an awful lot and one thing that I like as an exercise is to attempt to achieve those characteristics pertaining to whatever particular key I choose to attempt...as far as I am concerned such exercises have also been a major factor in helping me grow as a guitar player...that's all that matters to me...oh and FWIW, I watched Spinal Tap exactly once in my life...and really did not care for it at all
http://www.wmich.edu/mus-theo/courses/keys.html
https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/45487351/NEW1.mp3
btw here is a cool site about "affective key characteristics"...I dont care if people laugh at me, I dont really care if anyone agrees with this as it doesn't matter. While I dont finish a lot of songs I do play and record an awful lot and one thing that I like as an exercise is to attempt to achieve those characteristics pertaining to whatever particular key I choose to attempt...as far as I am concerned such exercises have also been a major factor in helping me grow as a guitar player...that's all that matters to me...oh and FWIW, I watched Spinal Tap exactly once in my life...and really did not care for it at all
http://www.wmich.edu/mus-theo/courses/keys.html
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