F#/Gb scale with 6 accidentals where one is E# or Cb - why not F and B?
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- KVRAF
- 7094 posts since 22 Jan, 2005 from Sweden
Struck me looking at the 6th accidental since not black keys but the half note intervals E-F and B-C.
One book list F# scale and ends with E#.
Another book list F# scale having B note and E#
- but Gb scale with Cb but end with F
Are there any implications regarding harmonizing to chords etc?
- one book list E#dim chord not Fdim
Is it just for notation purposes, and no implication at all?
- 6 accidentals and you know the key
Just curious, thanks for any input.
One book list F# scale and ends with E#.
Another book list F# scale having B note and E#
- but Gb scale with Cb but end with F
Are there any implications regarding harmonizing to chords etc?
- one book list E#dim chord not Fdim
Is it just for notation purposes, and no implication at all?
- 6 accidentals and you know the key
Just curious, thanks for any input.
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- KVRist
- 112 posts since 3 Sep, 2021
It is about musical 'spelling'. Each scale has a single occurrence of each note, i.e. ABCDEFG.
However these notes may be sharpened or flattened depending on the scale. This includes E and B even though on a piano the key for E# is the same as for F.
So in the scale of F# major there has to be an occurrence of the note E. But in this case the E needs to be sharpened. If we were to name the E# as F, then we would have two occurrences of F in the same scale.
Of course you can 'spell' notes as you wish (as with words), however this is the convention and most trained musicians find this easier to read, even if it seems confusing for beginners
However these notes may be sharpened or flattened depending on the scale. This includes E and B even though on a piano the key for E# is the same as for F.
So in the scale of F# major there has to be an occurrence of the note E. But in this case the E needs to be sharpened. If we were to name the E# as F, then we would have two occurrences of F in the same scale.
Of course you can 'spell' notes as you wish (as with words), however this is the convention and most trained musicians find this easier to read, even if it seems confusing for beginners
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- KVRAF
- Topic Starter
- 7094 posts since 22 Jan, 2005 from Sweden
Thanks, that seems like a reasonable explanation. Never would have that figured out.Farnaby wrote: Sat Jan 18, 2025 2:37 pm
So in the scale of F# major there has to be an occurrence of the note E. But in this case the E needs to be sharpened. If we were to name the E# as F, then we would have two occurrences of F in the same scale.
So no F and F# in the same scale.
I even saw a Cb key, where all 7 notes have accidentals.
So music theory of scales is woke, we must not leave out some letters A-G.
- that would be racist
Weird stuff.
- KVRAF
- 12172 posts since 7 Sep, 2006 from Roseville, CA
It actually makes perfect sense when you consider how chords are formed from the scale degrees. I’ll let you think about that and I bet it will sink in (hint: is F the third scale degree of a C# scale?)lfm wrote: Sat Jan 18, 2025 3:00 pmThanks, that seems like a reasonable explanation. Never would have that figured out.Farnaby wrote: Sat Jan 18, 2025 2:37 pm
So in the scale of F# major there has to be an occurrence of the note E. But in this case the E needs to be sharpened. If we were to name the E# as F, then we would have two occurrences of F in the same scale.
So no F and F# in the same scale.
I even saw a Cb key, where all 7 notes have accidentals.
So music theory of scales is woke, we must not leave out some letters A-G.
- that would be racist
![]()
Weird stuff.![]()
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- KVRAF
- 2596 posts since 17 Apr, 2004
It's not that weird, especially if you think of how key signatures are denoted on a score. If you've no idea how they work, take a quick look. You get to define one accidental (sharps or flats) for each of the notes A B C D E F G on the staff. You can't have two accidentals on an F or whatever.
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- KVRAF
- Topic Starter
- 7094 posts since 22 Jan, 2005 from Sweden
There the coin dropped for me, thank you.sjm wrote: Sat Jan 18, 2025 4:50 pm It's not that weird, especially if you think of how key signatures are denoted on a score. If you've no idea how they work, take a quick look. You get to define one accidental (sharps or flats) for each of the notes A B C D E F G on the staff. You can't have two accidentals on an F or whatever.
Now it makes perfect sense.
You cannot have both an accidental and not have it on the same letter note.
- not without complicating and have naturals everywhere too
So it's a notation thing more than anything, as I see it.
- KVRAF
- 26033 posts since 20 Oct, 2007 from gonesville
It's a coherence thing. It's more than anything about using simple facts about a key so that the thing is understood by anyone. "Key of C minor" and we know there is no D# to talk about (outside of a probably untoward chromatic conception, ie., a stretch past breakage.). It is unnecessarily complicating matters out of not knowing the lay of the land.
BTW, not all scales are limited to seven notes, so an octatonic scale will necessarily have one repeated letter name.
C Db Eb E F# G A Bb. Also dodecaphonic serialism is well over a century old now. Spelling matters where music is in key, and also in modal music. When that's out the window it's the composer's choice what to write a note as.
BTW, not all scales are limited to seven notes, so an octatonic scale will necessarily have one repeated letter name.
C Db Eb E F# G A Bb. Also dodecaphonic serialism is well over a century old now. Spelling matters where music is in key, and also in modal music. When that's out the window it's the composer's choice what to write a note as.
Last edited by jancivil on Wed Jan 29, 2025 8:58 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- KVRAF
- 26033 posts since 20 Oct, 2007 from gonesville
One hopes you don't believe that correct spelling of the vii harmony of F# major is down to which book you happen across.lfm wrote: Sat Jan 18, 2025 5:57 am Are there any implications regarding harmonizing to chords etc?
- one book list E#dim chord not Fdim
The dominant harmonies of key of F# major are the V and the vii chord. C# E# G# B for the full dominant seventh (of which vii may be considered contained within). Any C to any F is the interval of a 4th, C D E F, 1 2 3 4. Triadic harmony is by definition built by 3rds.
Yes, you'll tend to unnecessarily need to write more signs if you write F natural, particularly when E# is in the key signature. If OTOH in say the key of B, F vs E# are chosen for reasons. A secondary dominant, "V of V", C# as per F# the thirds rule above applies; as it does if the secondary dominant V7b5 of IV in B (dominant of the E harmony) is done, its spelling will be B D# F A.
You may note that in the latter example, target is E, D# and F natural collapse to E in contrary motion. In part-writing harmony this is a thing. E# to E is a mistake in that case. Also convention has it that a flat inflection descends, a sharp inflection ascends, linearly. Strings players are trained to bring this out while intoning.
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- KVRer
- 8 posts since 26 Jan, 2025
Each scale have a precise name.
- KVRAF
- 26033 posts since 20 Oct, 2007 from gonesville
I'd be remiss not to explicate flat five substitute per V7 of V as I did with V7 of IV.
Let's go with key of B again: V7 of V = C#7 sp. C# E# G# B. flat five substitution principle basis is C#7b5; C# E# G B. Target = F#. the flat five substitute for C#7b5 itself is G7b5; G B Db F. (NB: bII7b5) Here there isn't a big crime to write C#. So kind of an exception to 'thirds rule' because of the equivalence. This seeming misspelling happens all the time in jazz under that principle.
Let's go with key of B again: V7 of V = C#7 sp. C# E# G# B. flat five substitution principle basis is C#7b5; C# E# G B. Target = F#. the flat five substitute for C#7b5 itself is G7b5; G B Db F. (NB: bII7b5) Here there isn't a big crime to write C#. So kind of an exception to 'thirds rule' because of the equivalence. This seeming misspelling happens all the time in jazz under that principle.
Last edited by jancivil on Mon Oct 13, 2025 4:11 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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- KVRist
- 147 posts since 19 May, 2017
Actually it has a very simple reason: staffs. For most scales you have your pre #'s and pre b's, so instead of writing Bb for every note on the staff, you'll write it at the beginning.
It's also important to know that for certain tunings or instruments b and # ins't always a halfstep:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flat_(music)
It's also important to know that for certain tunings or instruments b and # ins't always a halfstep:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flat_(music)
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