II, V, I and I, IV, V .......... the same thing?
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Stamped Records Stamped Records https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=426472
- KVRist
- 351 posts since 20 Sep, 2018 from UK
I've just been farting around as usual and suddenly realised that a II, V, I in F is the exact same sequence as a I, IV, V in C.
I'll keep digging to find the significance that I'm sure exists in this discovery but it would be interesting to hear thoughts and perspectives on the two relationships which I can only call enharmonic progressions at this stage.
I'll keep digging to find the significance that I'm sure exists in this discovery but it would be interesting to hear thoughts and perspectives on the two relationships which I can only call enharmonic progressions at this stage.
- KVRAF
- 11000 posts since 15 Apr, 2019 from Nowhere
It’s going to happen a lot, and shows why in this case modulation between these keys is straightforward.
It also shows why sometimes it not that easy to determine which key a piece is in when it’s simple and has few notes.
It also shows why sometimes it not that easy to determine which key a piece is in when it’s simple and has few notes.
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Stamped Records Stamped Records https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=426472
- KVRist
- Topic Starter
- 351 posts since 20 Sep, 2018 from UK
I would assume that there is some baring on the significance of the ii, V, I in Jazz improv in this discovery. That's where I'm going when I discovered it and a little flicker of a lightbulb has gone on.
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- KVRAF
- 6370 posts since 8 Jun, 2009
V, I, IV (Gmaj, Cmaj, Fmaj) in C, surely?Stamped Records wrote: Wed Mar 11, 2020 2:41 pm I've just been farting around as usual and suddenly realised that a II, V, I in F is the exact same sequence as a I, IV, V in C.
II isn't really in F major. ii (Gmin) is. Faced with that progression, yer average musicologist is going to assume that II is a V/V secondary dominant, given it's a circle of fifths type progression.
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Dazedanconfused Dazedanconfused https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=459006
- KVRer
- 2 posts since 13 Mar, 2020
Think he got you there buddy, the g in f is minor in c it's a dominant chord, major w a 7? Don't know how they might correlate, but they might in some jazz universe... might be confusing the supertonic w the dominant?
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someone called simon someone called simon https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=185637
- KVRian
- 543 posts since 24 Jul, 2008 from a small city in a small country in the antipodes
No, Its just that any chord in a given key is also going to present in a bunch of other keys.Stamped Records wrote: Wed Mar 11, 2020 3:11 pm I would assume that there is some baring on the significance of the ii, V, I in Jazz improv in this discovery. That's where I'm going when I discovered it and a little flicker of a lightbulb has gone on.
So in F, the IV is Bb. Obviously Bb is a key too, so in Bb it will be the I. What you discovered is just that chords in one key can (and will) be present in another key. Which is a good thing to know, but it's not a big cosmic deal
Also, only 2 of the chords matched really, not 3. As someone else posted, in F the G chord would usually be minor, in C it's usually major, so your progression in G it would be written ii V I, in C: V I IV.
There's no particular significance or jazz connection, and it's not related to substitutions at all.
We could pick any simple progression, say in G - V I iii IV or in D - I IV vi bVII. In both cases these chords would be D G Bm C. This sequence of chords chord could plausibly be in either key. But the more complex the chord structure, the less likely it would be in more than one key.
And there's most similarity between closely related keys - a 4th or a 5th apart, as you discovered, C and F. They have many of the same tones, so it stands to reason they would share some chords, though their function will be different.
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Stamped Records Stamped Records https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=426472
- KVRist
- Topic Starter
- 351 posts since 20 Sep, 2018 from UK
Yeah, granted the II in this case is major so it's not an authentic ii, V, I (hope I don't get shot for using the word authentic). But it is an interesting relationship with a I, v instead of a I, V, giving the v/ii it's minor quality for the succeeding C (V) and F (I). So this substituting major V for minor v must be a useful trick in modulating from C to F, bar just using a Cdom chord.
- KVRAF
- 26033 posts since 20 Oct, 2007 from gonesville
It’s called a coincidence.Stamped Records wrote: Wed Mar 11, 2020 2:41 pm I've just been farting around as usual and suddenly realised that a II, V, I in F is the exact same sequence as a I, IV, V in C.
I'll keep digging to find the significance that I'm sure exists in this discovery.
We have G, C, and F, then C, F, and G. This is identical?
The chords function per the key; if we did have II we’d have secondary dominant (or a borrowed harmony from elsewhere), then V, then I. V of V, V, I in F. Compare I IV V in C. It’s similar root movement, but objectively two different progressions, because key.
You apparently made a guess based in the former, believed it was something it isn’t. One notes the supreme confidence of “significance ... I’m sure” and “discovery”, which is either sad or hilarious depending on one’s disposition.
There’s nothing here really.
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- KVRer
- 2 posts since 13 Apr, 2020
What's the significance of ivii on the end of your name Jancivii?
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- KVRian
- 880 posts since 26 Oct, 2011
You're using harmonic analysis notation where these terms (ii, V, I, IV) have somewhat defined meaning. So the answer is no; F requires tonicization of F whereas C requires tonicization of C and the degrees are based on whatever is actually perceived as the tonic
Even if the order of the sequence would be the same (and it is not, nor are the chords identical either in standard use, since ii would be typically minor rather than major), it still wouldn't be the same thing
Now if you were asking if F | G | C is the same thing as F | G | C then the answer would be yes
Even if the order of the sequence would be the same (and it is not, nor are the chords identical either in standard use, since ii would be typically minor rather than major), it still wouldn't be the same thing
Now if you were asking if F | G | C is the same thing as F | G | C then the answer would be yes
- KVRAF
- 26033 posts since 20 Oct, 2007 from gonesville
Clarification needed methinks: tonicization actually means treating non-tonic degrees as tonic.
“II V I in F” is only ‘II V I’ in F;
II being secondary dominant aka V/V. In the basic sense V is tonicized there. This is not the function of G C F in C, let alone
“II V I in F” is only ‘II V I’ in F;
II being secondary dominant aka V/V. In the basic sense V is tonicized there. This is not the function of G C F in C, let alone
What the term does not mean is recognition that a given I is the tonic chord.I, IV, V in C