|
|
|
|
|
Key (Music)In music and music theory, the key is the tonal center and quality of a musical piece. It is designated by a note name (the tonic), such as C, which is the base of the musical scale from which most of the notes of the piece are drawn, and by type of scale. Most commonly, that scale can be either in major or minor mode. Other modes are also possible, for example: dorian, phrygian, lydian, but most popular music and 18th and 19th century European classical music uses either the major (ionian) and minor (aeolian) modes. What a key designates to a performer is the scale in which all the diatonic notes of the piece lie. This is slightly more complicated in a minor key, because the pitch of the sixth and seventh scale degrees in a minor key can change depending on their melodic context (ascending or descending). The primary key of a piece is often indicated at the beginning of the piece with a key signature. A piece may change key at some point. This is called modulation. Modulation is sometimes done by just starting in the new key with no preparationthis kind of key change is common in various kinds of popular music, when a sudden change to a key a semi or whole tone higher is a quite frequently heard device at the end of a song. In classical music, however, a "smoother" kind of key change is more usual. Shorter modulations are considered tonicizations. An analogy that would be easy for a non-musician to encompass is that a musical key is like the force of gravity: what goes up, must come down. The entire history of music can be summed up as composers learning to "jump" higher and higher. In keeping with this analogy, Bach and Mozart were playing hop-scotch, Beethoven invented the hot-air balloon, Berlioz was the first to pilot an airplane, Wagner was the first astronaut, Scriabin went to the moon and back, and Stravinsky, Schoenberg and Miles Davis blasted off and haven't been seen since. Certain musical instruments are sometimes said to play in a certain key, or have their music written in a certain key. Instruments which do not play in the key of C are known as transposing instruments. The most common kind of clarinet, for example, is said to play in the key of B flat. This means that a scale written in C major in sheet music will actually sound as a B flat major scale when played; that is, notes sound a whole tone lower than written. Likewise, the French horn, normally in the key of F, plays notes a perfect fifth lower than written. Similarly, some instruments may be said to be built in a certain key. A brass instrument built in, say, B flat, will play a fundamental note of B flat, and will be able to play notes in the harmonic series starting on B flat without using valves, fingerholes, slides or otherwise altering the length of the vibrating column of air. An instrument built in a certain key will often, but not always, have its music written in the same key (see trombone for an exception). Different keys are often associated, especially by composers and sometimes by listeners, with different vague emotions. External links
|
 |
| |
|
|