Am 2018-04-17 um 07:47 schrieb Lukas-Fabian Moser <l...@gmx.de>: > Am 17.04.2018 um 01:24 schrieb Torsten Hämmerle: > >> Even if my opinion may differ from the general opinion here, I think that in >> popular music, one would use standard D major key signature. >> Reason: Two sharps clearly show D major tonic and the characteristic mixo >> tone C (flat seventh) stands out in the sheet music by the accidental used. > I very much agree. In my impression, nowadays most musicians (save medieval > or Renaissance music specialists and maybe Jazz musicians) tend to only > differentiate between "major-like" and "minor-like" scales/keys, which means > that every modal scale is measured against the one of the two "standard" > scales/keys more similar to what is at hand. ...
Speaking as a singer/songwriter with limited musical knowledge: I don’t care about the correct description of the scale, I just adhere to whatever accidentals and chord names are given. My own songs often change keys for a few measures (or how do you call chord progressions like c a f g?) or use scales that I don’t know how to classify (a bes cis d e f g = a freylach?), and I use that \key (major/minor) that fits most of the accidentals. Greetlings, Hraban --- fiëé visuëlle Henning Hraban Ramm http://www.fiee.net _______________________________________________ lilypond-user mailing list lilypond-user@gnu.org https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user