Hi again, please always reply to all ;)
2015-03-15 14:19 GMT+01:00 Amelie Zapf <a...@ameliezapf.com>: > Hi Thomas, > > > Though, I can easily imagine situations where <c e g d> is dominant or > > subdominant or tonic, depends on the surrounding circumstances. > > True. But the reverse doesn't hold. > So far, I'd agree > > > Again, I disagree here. Correct ChordNames (together with some common > > agreements) will show only which pitches are present, not their harmonic > > function. > > And that's precisely what C9 for <c e g d'> doesn't do. It implies the > minor 7th that just isn't there, but, if present, would drastically > change the chord type. Let's put it like that: two vastly different > chords would become synonymous. > Agreed as well. (My point was to emphasize the absence of any functional harmonic meaning with ChordNames.) > > > Though this will have the above already mentioned disadvantage, see the > > following example, last chord. > > > > \new ChordNames > > \chordmode { > > \set additionalPitchPrefix = #"add" > > <c' e' g' bes' d''> > > <c' e' g' d''> > > c:7.9 > > c:5.9 > > c:5.7+.11+.13 > > In practical jazz improvisation you'd just omit a few tones from a 6 or > 7 note chord. I don't know anybody who'd write a double "add" there. > Everybody would call it a C [triangle] #11 13. And that's the reason why 'additionalPitchPrefix' was changed. > Plus, the presence or > absence of the d in said chord wouldn't nearly make as much of a > difference as the b flat in the 9th chord. > > Kind regards, > > Amy > All in all I'd go for adding <c e g d> to 'chordNameExceptions', see my previous mail. I'll likely put up a patch for it. Cheers, Harm
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