-
Originally Posted by garybaldy
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
-
04-10-2025 07:41 AM
-
Originally Posted by Christian Miller
-
On the other hand, Musescore has an easily-typed slashed zero: just type a zero, and then exit the chord.
The slashed 0, or ø , is what is sometimes used for half-diminished.
A theta, on the other hand, is a zero with a horizontal line, which I have never seen depicting a half-diminished chord.
And even though I copied and pasted these things from the internet, neither the slashed-zero nor the theta show up in this post...Last edited by Ukena; 04-12-2025 at 05:10 PM.
-
Originally Posted by Ukena
-
Originally Posted by Woody Sound
That's how I learned it from my teacher at the time, Joe Monk. Today, it takes up less horizontal space in Finale.
-
Originally Posted by Woody Sound
Last edited by charleyrich99; 04-12-2025 at 01:02 PM.
-
Use whatever you want as long as other people understand it. Who cares?
-
Originally Posted by charleyrich99
I like the little m for minor. I don't like the dash "-" for minor.
I don't want M and m on the same score, especially not handwritten.
I like the superscript numbers to be appropriately displaced.
-
Originally Posted by rpjazzguitar
-
Originally Posted by Ukena
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
-
The problem with the triangle for major is it’s unclear whether this refers to a triad or a major seventh chord.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
-
Originally Posted by Christian Miller
ps I have always considered the triangle to represent major 7th.
-
Originally Posted by rpjazzguitar
Originally Posted by Christian Miller
-
Originally Posted by Mick-7
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
-
Originally Posted by Christian Miller
Just strive for clarity for the reader. If you need to, put a little disambiguating symbol table at the bottom of the score.
-
-
Originally Posted by charleyrich99
-
Originally Posted by Christian Miller
-
Please check me on this...
Assuming:
3 is "major"
b3 is "minor"
b5 is "flat five"
#5 is "augmented"
b3 b5 is "diminished"
7 is "major seventh"
b7 is "seventh" (not "flat seven") and "dominant seventh"
These names are coherent and consistent...
1 3 5 7 major seventh
1 b3 5 7 minor major seventh
1 3 #5 7 augmented major seventh
1 3 b5 7 major seventh flat five
1 b3 b5 7 diminished major seventh
1 3 5 b7 dominant seventh
1 b3 5 b7 minor seventh
1 3 #5 b7 augmented seventh
1 3 b5 b7 dominant seventh flat five
1 b3 b5 b7 minor seventh flat five
These chords are "misnamed"...
1 b3 b5 b7 half-diminished seventh
(should be "diminished seventh"
or "minor seventh flat five")
1 b3 b5 bb7 diminished seventh
(should be "diminished flat seventh"
or minor flat seventh flat five")Last edited by pauln; 04-16-2025 at 05:19 AM.
-
Originally Posted by pauln
-
Originally Posted by djg
-
Originally Posted by pauln
-
Originally Posted by djg
P.S. - Web search answer was (below), don't know why you wouldn't call it an octave.
"In classical music from Western culture, an augmented seventh is an interval produced by widening a major seventh by a chromatic semitone."
-
Originally Posted by Mick-7
Probably not often.
-
Originally Posted by Mick-7
Spelling is important in classical theory
Most obvious example is the chord of the augmented six, which jazzers write as “dominant seventh” chord (and lets not get into the confusion about dominant sevenths haha.)
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
1: Basic CAD For Archtop Manufacturing: A Beginners Guide
Today, 08:08 AM in The Builder's Bench