"Secrets
of Exciting Chords & Chord Progressions!"
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"
Secrets of Exciting
Piano
Chords &
Piano
Chord Progressions!"
Transposition and
Modulation
Piano Lessons Online Week 41
How do
transposition and modulation relate? Are they the same? In this newsletter
we're going to take a look at both of them and see what makes them tick.
I'm sure that you have had the experience sometime in your
piano-playing life when someone asks you to play a song -- but in a
different key than in which it is written. It might be a singer wanting
you to lower the song a step so he/she doesn't screech. It might be a song
leader wanting you to play a song in a more comfortable keys for a
congregation or group. It might be a trumpet player looking over your
shoulder and wanting to play along with you -- but when he/she plays the
same note you are playing, it sure doesn't sound the same!
So....it's your job, as pianist, to get that song moved to a
different key. That's transposition --playing or writing a song in a different
key than in which it was originally written.
Modulation is similar but different -- modulation means
the process of getting from the old key to the new key. In other
words, if I'm playing in the key of C, and then want to play in the key of
Eb, I have to learn to modulate -- move smoothly from one key to
another without being too abrupt and jarring.
There are basicly 3 ways to transpose:
1. by intervals
2. by scale degrees
3. by solfege -- the moveable "do" system.
But since solfege applies mostly to singers, we
will ignore that possibility and just take up the first two:
1. Intervals: If the new key is an
interval of a minor 3rd above the old key, then all notes in the song will
also be an interval of a minor 3rd higher. In other words, if you are
transposing from the key of C to the key of Eb, which is a minor 3rd
higher (or major 6th lower -- whichever way you want to look at it), then
all melody notes will also be a minor 3rd higher:
"G" in the key of C would
become "Bb" in the key of Eb. "E" in the key of C would become ":G" in the new key of Eb. "A"
would become "C", "B" would become "D", and so on. All chords would also
move a minor 3rd higher. The "C chord" would become the "Eb chord", the "F
chord" would become the "Ab chord", and so on.
2. Scale degrees: Each key you play in has it's own scale degrees.
In the key of C the scale degrees are: C=1, D=2, E=3, F=4, G=5, A=6, B=7,
C=8. In the key of Eb, however, Eb=1, F=2, G=3, Ab=4, Bb=5, C=6, D=7, Eb=8.
So if I want to transpose Silent Night, for example, from the key of C to
the key of Eb, I need to notice what scale degrees I am using in the key
of C, and then use those same scale degrees in the key of Eb. For example,
Silent Night starts on the 5th degree of the scale, goes up to the 6th,
back to the 5th, then down to the 3rd. In the key of C that is: G-A-G-E.
But in the key of Eb it is Bb-C-Bb-G. Why? Because the scale degrees
5-6-5-3 are constant -- we just need to apply them in each key. What about
chords? Same idea. If the chord progression on Silent Night is the I chord
followed by the V chord, followed by the I chord, followed by the IV
chord, etc. -- then in the key of C that means C-G-C-F-etc., but in the
key of Eb it means Eb-Bb-Eb-Ab-etc.
Modulation means getting between keys,
so let's say you are playing in the key of C, but you want to get to the
key of Eb smoothly, without jarring the nerves of the listeners. There are
lots of ways to do it, but the main point is that you have to get to
the V7 chord of the new key. So from the key of C to the key of Eb,
that means getting to Bb7. How do we do that smoothly? We look for chords
with common notes. Since the V of the V of the new key would be Fm7, we
have C as a common note. So we hold the C in the C chord, and move the
rest of the C chord to Fm7, then Bb7, then Eb, and presto -- we are there!
I realize that may be a bit hard to follow with just printed words to
follow, but if you saw it happen (like on a video) you would understand it
instantly, I think.
Hope this has helped you understand both the process and the
difference between transposing and modulating. For those of you that would
like to follow-up on this in depth, you can click on this link:
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