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A scale in which notes are chosen to give exact intervals. Such scales cannot be transposed to a different key. The diatonic scale is just. In just intonation, the diatonic scale (as well as other scales) work differently for different starting notes, leading to the concept of the key. For example, music written in just intonation would have to be re-written if the scale were shifted in starting note in order to preserve consonance.
It depends on the scale in question: * The diatonic scale (seven notes) * The melodic and harmonic minor scales (seven notes) * The chromatic scale (twelve notes) * The whole tone scale (six notes) * The pentatonic scale (five notes) * The octatonic or diminished scales (eight notes) Then of course there are the Indian Swara scales which have varying numbers of notes too.
It depends on what scale you're trying to do. The notes just continue from the E to G then it restarts. For example, E, F, G, A, B, C, D is the E scale.
That is a misconception. Just as you can have a major scale that starts on any of the 12 tones, you can have pentatonic scales starting on any tone as well. It is the spacing and the number of notes that make a scale pentatonic. Incidentally, you can have a pentatonic melody with standard (non-pentatonic) harmonies accompanying it.
jeremie de leon ove shaira mae orcullo
A scale in which notes are chosen to give exact intervals. Such scales cannot be transposed to a different key. The diatonic scale is just. In just intonation, the diatonic scale (as well as other scales) work differently for different starting notes, leading to the concept of the key. For example, music written in just intonation would have to be re-written if the scale were shifted in starting note in order to preserve consonance.
There are keyboard instruments which are tuned to natural-scale notes. By natural-scale, I presume you are talking harmonic or just intonation. In England, especially, during the last century-and-a-half, many instruments were made in the 'harmonium' family which had special just tunings. Many of these had additional or split keys provided so enharmonic intervals could be formed. Most modern electronic keyboards have settings which change the master tuning to just intonation, usually which is specific to one key. These are more limited than the special experimental-intonation harmonia of the last century-plus, in that they still only have 12 keys per octave. They are limited to playing in "close" keys, i.e., if tuned C-just, will work in G and F, but not D or Bb. For specific details google the Natural Scale Keyboard Kit Newsletter.
It depends on the scale in question: * The diatonic scale (seven notes) * The melodic and harmonic minor scales (seven notes) * The chromatic scale (twelve notes) * The whole tone scale (six notes) * The pentatonic scale (five notes) * The octatonic or diminished scales (eight notes) Then of course there are the Indian Swara scales which have varying numbers of notes too.
The notes in an f major scale are just all notes from one f two the next with a b flat instead of a b natural.
The 3 basic types of intonation patterns are JUST INTONATION, EQUAL TEMPERMENT, and PYTHAGOREON INTONATION... :))
The three main intonation patterns are falling, rising, and level. Falling intonation typically signals a statement or a completion, rising intonation often indicates a question or uncertainty, and level intonation projects neutrality or lack of emotion.
It depends on what scale you're trying to do. The notes just continue from the E to G then it restarts. For example, E, F, G, A, B, C, D is the E scale.
No. The name just implies it's a fundamental sequence of notes in music.
The answer is rising intonation and falling intonation
Intonation can tell someone a lot more than just the words that are being said. Intonation can help you understand the speaker's emotion, intent, and exactly what the speaker means.
just emphasize what do the chords notes emphasize to start to
C Blues scale: C D# F F# G A# C And then back down again. The other scales follows the same model: D blues scale: D F G G# A C D Just check the distance between the notes and you will get the rest too!