Chords progression of one of my songs - phrygian mode?
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Chords progression of one of my songs - phrygian mode?
I came up with a chords progression, liked it and built a song around it.
It goes:
G#m - C#m - Bmaj7 - G#m - E - A - G#m
Do not want to overthink it but I was curious to understand what is the key/mode of this.
The key looks to be in G# minor, but the A major chord kind of makes it phrygian mode or something. Minor phrygian ?
The song's here
https://soundcloud.com/orgasmo-sonore/ballade-a-escondida-by-orgasmo-sonore
cheers !
It goes:
G#m - C#m - Bmaj7 - G#m - E - A - G#m
Do not want to overthink it but I was curious to understand what is the key/mode of this.
The key looks to be in G# minor, but the A major chord kind of makes it phrygian mode or something. Minor phrygian ?
The song's here
https://soundcloud.com/orgasmo-sonore/ballade-a-escondida-by-orgasmo-sonore
cheers !
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- Frank Rideau
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Posts: 249 Joined: Mon Mar 21, 2011 12:00 am
Contact:
http://soundcloud.com/orgasmo-sonore Revisiting Obscure Film Music
Re: Chords progression of one of my songs - phrygian mode?
Frank Rideau wrote:I came up with a chords progression, liked it and built a song around it.
It goes:
G#m - C#m - Bmaj7 - G#m - E - A - G#m
Do not want to overthink it but I was curious to understand what is the key/mode of this.
The key looks to be in G# minor, but the A major chord kind of makes it phrygian mode or something. Minor phrygian ?
The song's here
https://soundcloud.com/orgasmo-sonore/ballade-a-escondida-by-orgasmo-sonore
cheers !
Those chords are mostly compatible with G#m Phrygian - though the Bmaj7 isn’t, and it isn’t compatible with any major mode of G# given that you have A major.
Re: Chords progression of one of my songs - phrygian mode?
All those chords except Bmaj7 are in the key of E major. If Bmaj7 was B7 then it would be in E major throughout and you're right, E major starting on G# is the phrygian mode.
It's mostly E major and the note that has changed when the chord is Bmaj7 is A has gone to A#, which is the key of B major.
It's mostly E major and the note that has changed when the chord is Bmaj7 is A has gone to A#, which is the key of B major.
It ain't what you don't know. It's what you know that ain't so.
Re: Chords progression of one of my songs - phrygian mode?
Thanks for your observations
There is indeed a chromatic voicing going on (G#, A, A#, B), that is why I was confused identifying the scale.
So Bmaj7 looks like the intruder if you see it from the E Major or G# phrygian scale, but as far as the first chords goes G#m - C#m - Bmaj7 - G#m, nothing let you think it's different than a G# minor scale until it hits the A chord.
Anyway, I came up with it without thinking about it, it's in the afterthought that I was trying to figure out the scale.
There is indeed a chromatic voicing going on (G#, A, A#, B), that is why I was confused identifying the scale.
So Bmaj7 looks like the intruder if you see it from the E Major or G# phrygian scale, but as far as the first chords goes G#m - C#m - Bmaj7 - G#m, nothing let you think it's different than a G# minor scale until it hits the A chord.
Anyway, I came up with it without thinking about it, it's in the afterthought that I was trying to figure out the scale.
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- Frank Rideau
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Posts: 249 Joined: Mon Mar 21, 2011 12:00 am
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Re: Chords progression of one of my songs - phrygian mode?
Hi Frank,
I can't think of any mode that has a chromatic run of three notes together in it. Those in your case being the A A# and B.
According to the clever bit of software here:
https://www.scales-chords.com/scalefinder.php
it's
E ichikosucho
Otherwise I would have gone for E with a extra note in
I can't think of any mode that has a chromatic run of three notes together in it. Those in your case being the A A# and B.
According to the clever bit of software here:
https://www.scales-chords.com/scalefinder.php
it's
E ichikosucho
Otherwise I would have gone for E with a extra note in
Re: Chords progression of one of my songs - phrygian mode?
I have zero knowledge on the theory but it is a nice tune.
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Ignore the post count, I still have no idea what I'm doing...
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Re: Chords progression of one of my songs - phrygian mode?
@MurrayB The chromatic run is because it's probably not one specific scale, that's what I was trying to understand. The more I think about it, it is simply G# minor modulating in the G# phrigyan.
@Blinddrew thanks !
@Blinddrew thanks !
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- Frank Rideau
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Re: Chords progression of one of my songs - phrygian mode?
manwilde wrote:Sorry to go off-topic but I´m listening to your "Best orgasms form 2011 to 2018" and enjoying it a lot!
Off-topic comment approved
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- Frank Rideau
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Re: Chords progression of one of my songs - phrygian mode?
It's in G# minor. Natural minor (aeolian), with one chromatic chord (A) towards the end. If you were improvising and thinking modally you could say that that chord puts it into the phrygian mode for a bar.
Sweet.
Sweet.
Re: Chords progression of one of my songs - phrygian mode?
manwilde wrote:Sorry to go off-topic but I´m listening to your "Best orgasms form 2011 to 2018" and enjoying it a lot!
I'm inclined to agree. It is clear that Ennio Morricone is an influence and at times sounds like the background music to some 60's 'Exotic Art Movie' but hey, nothing wrong with that, it is pleasantly quirky, and most of all quite listenable.
I often struggle with deciding what key a piece of music is in, if for example I am clearly in the key of C Major, but then, for example, a chromatic shift going from
Cmaj->Gmaj->Fmaj->Emin->#Dmaj->Gmaj->Cmaj
have I stayed in C major or have I changed key and added some 'accidentals' ?
Re: Chords progression of one of my songs - phrygian mode?
OneWorld wrote:manwilde wrote:Sorry to go off-topic but I´m listening to your "Best orgasms form 2011 to 2018" and enjoying it a lot!
I'm inclined to agree. It is clear that Ennio Morricone is an influence and at times sounds like the background music to some 60's 'Exotic Art Movie' but hey, nothing wrong with that, it is pleasantly quirky, and most of all quite listenable.
I often struggle with deciding what key a piece of music is in, if for example I am clearly in the key of C Major, but then, for example, a chromatic shift going from
Cmaj->Gmaj->Fmaj->Emin->#Dmaj->Gmaj->Cmaj
have I stayed in C major or have I changed key and added some 'accidentals' ?
You’re still in C major. The D#maj doesn’t act as a tonic.
Re: Chords progression of one of my songs - phrygian mode?
As Richard says, a piece can still be in a given key, even if some of the notes and chords seem to lie outside that key. The rhythmic and melodic context can also be important though.
Re: Chords progression of one of my songs - phrygian mode?
As stated above, it’s what feels like ‘home’. As your progression doesn’t really have a traditional cadence, there’s not much tension pulling it home.
Phrygian is a natural minor scale with a flat II, and you would accentuate that by getting that b2 on strong beats.
Your progression goes i - IV - iii, so it’s in the i chord’s key of G#m. In this case, E and A are borrowed chords.
Phrygian is a natural minor scale with a flat II, and you would accentuate that by getting that b2 on strong beats.
Your progression goes i - IV - iii, so it’s in the i chord’s key of G#m. In this case, E and A are borrowed chords.
Re: Chords progression of one of my songs - phrygian mode?
Hey Frank,
Nice tune!
To me, it sounds solidly in G#m with the A major chord functioning as a Neopolitan chord - typically a major triad built off of the flat 2nd scale degree, you often hear it in minor more often than major and typically in the first inversion (with the third in the bass, in this case C#). You can see more here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neapolitan_chord.
Typically, it precedes the dominant (V chord, so D# major in your case) as it approaches tonic (G#m here), but the omission of the D# major gives it a cool chromatic feel that I'm totally going to steal!
Nice tune!
To me, it sounds solidly in G#m with the A major chord functioning as a Neopolitan chord - typically a major triad built off of the flat 2nd scale degree, you often hear it in minor more often than major and typically in the first inversion (with the third in the bass, in this case C#). You can see more here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neapolitan_chord.
Typically, it precedes the dominant (V chord, so D# major in your case) as it approaches tonic (G#m here), but the omission of the D# major gives it a cool chromatic feel that I'm totally going to steal!
Re: Chords progression of one of my songs - phrygian mode?
If you were jamming with someone and they asked you "what key?", then you would say "G# minor" to get them in the ballpark. If we think on the A chord as the outside chord, as Wurlitzer suggested above, then this tune is G# aeolian (scale of B major) and G# phrygian (scale of E major) for a bar when the chord is A.
To be "in a minor key" though it would have a D#7 - G#m cadence which uses the harmonic or melodic minor. Without that it's modal and uses modes of major scales.
House of The Rising Sun is in a minor key and has a real minor sound because it uses the natural, harmonic and melodic minors :
Am C (natural) D (melodic) F Am C (natural) E E (harmonic) Am
There's also a well used progression :
Am G F (natural) E (harmonic) Am
If that was
Am G F Em Am
It would be modal.
For a real theory-fest if the A chord in Frank's tune was A7 it would be more like a minor key because A7 is a tritone substitution for D#7. In A7 the third is C# and the seventh is G. In D#7 the seventh is C# and the third is F## (=G). A7 is D#7b5b9 which works in a minor key. A7 brings in a G (F##) note (the major seventh of G#) from the harmonic minor.
To be "in a minor key" though it would have a D#7 - G#m cadence which uses the harmonic or melodic minor. Without that it's modal and uses modes of major scales.
House of The Rising Sun is in a minor key and has a real minor sound because it uses the natural, harmonic and melodic minors :
Am C (natural) D (melodic) F Am C (natural) E E (harmonic) Am
There's also a well used progression :
Am G F (natural) E (harmonic) Am
If that was
Am G F Em Am
It would be modal.
For a real theory-fest if the A chord in Frank's tune was A7 it would be more like a minor key because A7 is a tritone substitution for D#7. In A7 the third is C# and the seventh is G. In D#7 the seventh is C# and the third is F## (=G). A7 is D#7b5b9 which works in a minor key. A7 brings in a G (F##) note (the major seventh of G#) from the harmonic minor.
It ain't what you don't know. It's what you know that ain't so.
Re: Chords progression of one of my songs - phrygian mode?
RichardT wrote:OneWorld wrote:manwilde wrote:Sorry to go off-topic but I´m listening to your "Best orgasms form 2011 to 2018" and enjoying it a lot!
I'm inclined to agree. It is clear that Ennio Morricone is an influence and at times sounds like the background music to some 60's 'Exotic Art Movie' but hey, nothing wrong with that, it is pleasantly quirky, and most of all quite listenable.
I often struggle with deciding what key a piece of music is in, if for example I am clearly in the key of C Major, but then, for example, a chromatic shift going from
Cmaj->Gmaj->Fmaj->Emin->#Dmaj->Gmaj->Cmaj
have I stayed in C major or have I changed key and added some 'accidentals' ?
You’re still in C major. The D#maj doesn’t act as a tonic.
Not to mention the fact that D# major doesn't exist.
Re: Chords progression of one of my songs - phrygian mode?
Wurlitzer wrote: Not to mention the fact that D# major doesn't exist.
Sure it does, it's just much easier to use its enharmonic equivalent of Eb for naming purposes.