F, F#, Ab, Bb, B, C, C#
Can somebody help solve the mystery?
Nothing, I'm just ignorant on the matter. It should be a mode then I suppose?cryophonik wrote:The first two questions that pop into my mind are:
1) What made you conclude that this is a scale?, and
F or C# now that I read your postcryophonik wrote:2) Which note is the tonic?
Well, this definitely helps. So maybe the (B) is an accidental in this case? It enters into play only on the last bar of that melody (a simple 8 bar trance melody) but it really fits well in that context. It goes from C# and concludes on B.cryophonik wrote:Unless there is an implied F-natural a diminished fourth above the C#, it doesn't conform with octave equivalency and thus, apparently, has two tonics (F and C#), so maybe that's a clue? Moreover, though, if these are just notes in a piece/passage, then the context is important to know if we're talking about scale vs non-scale notes. My guess is that Mace404 is on the right track - either your B-natural is an accidental/non-scale tone and your scale is C#-major/A#-minor (C# D# [omitted] E# F# G# A# B#), or the C-natural is an accidental/non-scale tone and your scale is F#-major (F# G# A# B C# D# [omitted] E#) (since the D# is omitted, it's not D# minor). Note that in both cases, I used the appropriate enharmonic equivalents for the named scales (i.e., your F would be an E# and your Ab and Bb are be G# and A#, respectively).
Well, not necessarily. My point was more that a scale is not just an inventory of all the notes used in a particular track. In many songs, all of the notes are from the same scale (i.e., all in the same key), but there are many uses for notes (or chords that use notes) not found in that scale. It sounds like that's what's going on here, but there's not enough info to go on.Passante wrote:Nothing, I'm just ignorant on the matter. It should be a mode then I suppose?cryophonik wrote:The first two questions that pop into my mind are:
1) What made you conclude that this is a scale?, and
this is just how i hear it.....it's not about being correct...it's music...there is no correct.....this is just the way i would interpret it....based on my background. plus ther is no context.....you dont have an audio clip or anything so...it'sPassante wrote:Thanks zethus909.
But Cryophonic says I'm in C# Major. You say I'm in F#/Gb Major.
For the rest you're correct cause I don't use the D# and add the B on the last 2 bars.
If F#/Gb was the root note and you included a D#/Eb you would have the Japanese scale F#/Gb ichikosucho. It's basically a major scale with an added #4 (1-2-3-4-#4-5-6-7-1).Passante wrote:What kind of scale did I just ended up with?
F, F#, Ab, Bb, B, C, C#
Can somebody help solve the mystery?
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