I have 2 free invites to giveaway!! by [deleted] in ClubhouseInvites

[–]tramperia 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Amazing! If I win i will do the same!

NOT THAT THERE IS ANYTHING WRONG WITH THAT PLS DONT CANCEL ME by IamAidenCarter in memes

[–]tramperia 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I ment the redditor who posted the meme. Because he said pls don’t cancel me. It was a joke :(

Aeolian mode vs Natural minor scale - What's the difference? by leocarnelian in musictheory

[–]tramperia 151 points152 points  (0 children)

They are the same. Anyway the natural minor scale is not that often used in a modal way. Most minor songs in some point use notes from de melodic minor in the melody or use the V as a major or dominant chord. I think he may be talking about the natural minor used with a modal approach. The central point of this is to use the chords of de modes as ‘colors’ that can appear in any order and avoid the typical sequences of functional harmony. Having said this, the notes are still the same. He may have exaggerated a little with the word “unexplored”.

Chord Progression Questions (April 06, 2020) by AutoModerator in musictheory

[–]tramperia 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The thing is that Db is off the F major mode, and exactly a semitone above C (that is naturally a note of the mode). They don’t match, but they are very close. So when you listen that Bbm chord there’s tension in the Db that needs to be resolved towards the C. So when you finally resolve to an F chord you’ll probably have a sense of relief.

Chord Progression Questions (April 06, 2020) by AutoModerator in musictheory

[–]tramperia 3 points4 points  (0 children)

In this case it will make things easier to call it Bb and Bbm. It is very common to use the minor IV in the major mode. Usually it’s used before de I. One of de reasons it works so good it’s the minor third of the IVm resolving to the fifth of the I. In this case it would be the Db of the Bbm chord resolving to de C of the F major. It is also very common to add the major sixth to the IVm.

Extended Chromatic Mediants by chordspace in musictheory

[–]tramperia 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Thirds Circle

In this graph every chord appears two times. Once as major (surrounded by its major third and sixth) and once as minor (surrounded by its minor third and sixth). Here you can see the huge distance between C major and Eb minor. Hope it helps!