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Different Musical Keys Have Different Character?
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Beatflux
I've heard it mention on forums and a few webpages that there are difference between musical keys. Do you guys have some kind of mechanical explanation or is there any kind of scientific explanation for it?
Kthought
I believe each DAW tunes each note to universal interval, meaning transposing keys makes no color difference only tonality. It is in acoustic or physical instruments such as guitar, piano, that the tunings drift between keys.

I like this thread because in the waves tune plugin, you have the option to completely customize your intervals/scale by frequency allowing full custom pitch tuning. I wonder if any pro's use this? like that epic trance lead octave note is pitched up by 10c to "accent" the uplift? or vice versa the minor chords are tuned slightly down to sit under the tonic and sound darker by comparison to the tonic.

I would like to see some insightful replies from the veterans on here, the production studio needs at least a 500% increase in activity to augment my quest for knowledge. :P
RichieV
quote:
Originally posted by Beatflux
I've heard it mention on forums and a few webpages that there are difference between musical keys. Do you guys have some kind of mechanical explanation or is there any kind of scientific explanation for it?


depends on what kind of tuning. With DAWs, unless specified, you are using equal tuning which makes the ratios between each interval identical. Same with pianos.

Just google it. Tuning has a long history. Each method has a trade off. We typically use equal and although 5ths are a little flat, we are so used to hearing it that way that it sounds perfectly in tune.

As far as moving everything up or down a few cents. It won't sound brighter or darker, just more tense as the harmonic will not line up as well thus sound a little more dissonant.
Kthought
ok, so then would you say melodically complex production such as "Garden State" by Airbase (just one of my fav choons ever) implements more of perfect tuning due to good gear/know how; or a pitch trick moving dissonance towards consonance?
RichieV
safe to say all EDM uses equal tuning. You don't need good gear or know how. It is the standard.
Kthought
thx!
cryophonik
quote:
Originally posted by Beatflux
I've heard it mention on forums and a few webpages that there are difference between musical keys. Do you guys have some kind of mechanical explanation or is there any kind of scientific explanation for it?


Sounds to me like the OP is asking about differences in mood that are conveyed by different keys (???) Can you clarify?
Sonic_c
Hey you missed a killer program here in the UK on bbc radio 4

Each day for a week they discussed a different scale and what particular qualities it has. Of course its subjective to the listener but the guy really made it interesting (even though i actually find it fascinating anyway). He started on c major saying that it has a sense of optimism and eternal hope with a definiate finality about it. He went through 6 other scales I missed a couple due to work but like he was saying B Major has a charging, energetic, conquering feel to it etc etc.

Is this what you meant?

I mentioned the other day too that if you use (help me richie) pythagoran? tuning the actual frequencies go marginally out the further around the circle of 5ths you go, so maybe they each have a unique quality about them. Like richie said though it may be irrelevant because we use equal tuning where this doesnt happen.

When i bought this question up earlier this week I was hoping for a bit more on it so hopefully people will discuss it.

Or maybe its whichever black hole was in line with the earth when you were born or something =s

edit: dunno if you can use the BBC i-player online in the US but the program was called key matters if your interested and can recieve it.
Beatflux
quote:
Originally posted by cryophonik
Sounds to me like the OP is asking about differences in mood that are conveyed by different keys (???) Can you clarify?


Yes.

I'm talking about using the same type of scale, just starting off with a different key. I heard a pro about keys, so I wanted to look into it.
Subtle
Some say yes, some say no.. some say it depends on the timbre of the sounds..

kitphillips
quote:
Originally posted by Kthought
I believe each DAW tunes each note to universal interval, meaning transposing keys makes no color difference only tonality. It is in acoustic or physical instruments such as guitar, piano, that the tunings drift between keys.

I like this thread because in the waves tune plugin, you have the option to completely customize your intervals/scale by frequency allowing full custom pitch tuning. I wonder if any pro's use this? like that epic trance lead octave note is pitched up by 10c to "accent" the uplift? or vice versa the minor chords are tuned slightly down to sit under the tonic and sound darker by comparison to the tonic.

I would like to see some insightful replies from the veterans on here, the production studio needs at least a 500% increase in activity to augment my quest for knowledge. :P


Ah now this is an interesting question. You generally won't run into any issues as such in this department, but it can make for interesting sound design opportunities. Like using microtunings on certain notes to change the emphasis.

I use this quite a bit in guitar, tuning the top strings sharp makes them stand out more and the guitar shimmer a lot more IME.

Its also worth remembering that different scales means using different positions on the keyboard/guitar, which naturally lends itself to different progressions, so for the musician each will have a different feel, even in equal tuning.

It may also have a different feel for the listener, considering that there are probably different associations with different keys which come from hearing them in different contexts. Thats just a hypothesis though...
Kysora
There's a writing about it here:

http://biteyourownelbow.com/keychar.htm

I don't know if I completely agree with some of the classifications but I really do think there are differences, especially between key signatures containing flats and ones containing sharps.

Even if I have the same progression and I move it all a half step from G to Ab, there's a pretty significant difference between the character of them. Major keys like G and E have some kind of inherent "innocent" and "happy" character to them that keys like F# and Ab don't seem to have. At least that's how they sound to me.. as far as why, I couldn't tell you.
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