Nashville Number Minor Keys
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Nashville Number Minor Keys
I've always looked at minor keys in there relative major key when notating, on a gig, or in the studio. I thought that was common but one of my friends was telling me he doesn't do that. He always treats the tonic as the 1. I did a little research and found that he might be in the majority. An example I found was Tom Petty's "Last Dance with Mary Jane". The progression is Am - G - Dm - Am. So he would look at that as a i-VII-iv-i. I would have looked at that as vi-V-ii-vi. How do you all approach minor keys?
Thanks,
Christopher
Thanks,
Christopher
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For me, it depends on the melody and tonal center of the particular tune. If and when it comes around to any of the other chords (4's 1's, etc) and they sound like they're obviously a 4 or a 1, then I'll treat it as though it's a 6 minor...since it'll most likely sound like a 6 minor when we come back around to it.
If it's an obvious minor tune - as in "The Thrill Is Gone" for example, then I'll do it the other way, mentioning somewhere along the line that we're in a minor vibe for this song.
The majority of times, it's the relative minor.
If it's an obvious minor tune - as in "The Thrill Is Gone" for example, then I'll do it the other way, mentioning somewhere along the line that we're in a minor vibe for this song.
The majority of times, it's the relative minor.
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It will be interesting to see where this thread goes. It is one thing to think in terms of relative keys, but to chart a song in something other than its natural key.....I don't know about that.
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- Dave Mudgett
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I'm trying to figure out how you're getting Am - G - Dm - Am for Last Dance with Mary Jane. That D does not feel minor to me - you can hear the guitar periodically accentuate the first-string F# (major 3rd) on the open-position D chord, other times it's left ambiguous by omitting the 3rd altogether or suspending the second.
The way I would notate this depends on whether or not it feels like the progression is based on Ionian, or some other modal scale. To me, this verse (and tune in general) seems more modal with the root on the Am, so I'd notate it i, bVII, IV, i. Then for the chorus, it moves to Em - Amaj; A feels like the I, so it's v, I, with a Gmaj (V) segue back to the chorus. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L5pHM-o2_Dk
As Skip says, I'd definitely notate the tonic of a minor blues as the i - again, it feels more modal to me.
This is sort of like the discussion about Sweet Home Alabama, which goes D - C - G. Some people view the key as D (thinking more modally), and others insist that it has to be G. I'd notate a chord chart in D, but I suppose there's an argument to make that if you're gonna view it from an Ionian scale point of view, strict musical notation would use G. But I don't think strictly in terms of major scales - I was brought up on the blues, at least on guitar.
YMMV - I think as long as everybody's clear on what convention will be used, it shouldn't be a problem.
The way I would notate this depends on whether or not it feels like the progression is based on Ionian, or some other modal scale. To me, this verse (and tune in general) seems more modal with the root on the Am, so I'd notate it i, bVII, IV, i. Then for the chorus, it moves to Em - Amaj; A feels like the I, so it's v, I, with a Gmaj (V) segue back to the chorus. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L5pHM-o2_Dk
As Skip says, I'd definitely notate the tonic of a minor blues as the i - again, it feels more modal to me.
This is sort of like the discussion about Sweet Home Alabama, which goes D - C - G. Some people view the key as D (thinking more modally), and others insist that it has to be G. I'd notate a chord chart in D, but I suppose there's an argument to make that if you're gonna view it from an Ionian scale point of view, strict musical notation would use G. But I don't think strictly in terms of major scales - I was brought up on the blues, at least on guitar.
YMMV - I think as long as everybody's clear on what convention will be used, it shouldn't be a problem.
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I tend to think in relative major too. I would write it just as you did, if the chord was D minor. That bluesy bending riff at the end does not sound quite right over D minor though. I use a D (major) harmonica on this song, which is typically used for blues in A. The chords are Am G and D. The D is not dominant but implied by the melody note C. This might imply a major key of G, which is also the turnaround chord. The verse melody is mostly just C and A. I dont use the number system really, but I might write it as ii I V in the key of G. The chorus chords go from Em to A, so I might use vi and II. Its all relative as long as it is understood what letter = 1. The song hinges around the A minor chord in the verses and the A dominant in the chorus, so it switches key regardless. I just picked those numbers because they are close to I ii IV V7 vi, which are easy to digest.Christopher Wray wrote:I've always looked at minor keys in there relative major key...How do you all approach minor keys?
Clete
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i can dig relatin' to minor chords as relatives
some tunes are using them as such (relatives) so the I (root) might be elsewhere
in my case, if the tune is in Am then it's the I (root)
if it goes to C, i'll write bIII
if it goes to F, i'll write #V
if it goes to Dm, : IVm
if it goes to E7+ : V7+
& so on
(i don't use the nashV numbers cause i'm not used to them & find them confusing w: the numbers of the chords
that's why i prefer the roman numerals)
some tunes are using them as such (relatives) so the I (root) might be elsewhere
in my case, if the tune is in Am then it's the I (root)
if it goes to C, i'll write bIII
if it goes to F, i'll write #V
if it goes to Dm, : IVm
if it goes to E7+ : V7+
& so on
(i don't use the nashV numbers cause i'm not used to them & find them confusing w: the numbers of the chords
that's why i prefer the roman numerals)
Last edited by CrowBear Schmitt on 21 Sep 2011 12:57 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Political correctness aside I've seen a lot of charts and they seem to vary in symbolism and a lot of liberties are taken with the Nss'veel' numbers.
I personal would write a Am - G - Dm - Am if it is in the key of Am as 1m-b7-4m-1m which clearly defines the the key and doesn't force me to think in terms of the Cmajor scale.
A player might want to mix scales and play an Am Dorian which is a Gmaj scale over the Am and G then the Cmaj scale over the Dm to th Am.
I personal would write a Am - G - Dm - Am if it is in the key of Am as 1m-b7-4m-1m which clearly defines the the key and doesn't force me to think in terms of the Cmajor scale.
A player might want to mix scales and play an Am Dorian which is a Gmaj scale over the Am and G then the Cmaj scale over the Dm to th Am.
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Great responses!! Thank you gents. It's very interesting to hear the different approaches. I'm not really concerned with whether or not the changes are correct for that specific song. I shouldn't have even listed a song title because the concept is all I was interested in. That song was being discussed on the Gear Page in the same context so I just pulled it from there. Thanks again!
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I agree completely...Key of C...AM-6, G-5. Dm-2...etc..
Using a tonic Minor you'll run in to numerous "accidental majors", as well as other chord forms...
Say Am is tonic....Whats the 2 chord???...Bm?..BM?...
Personally I think the majority of people that THINK they know the number system...Don't at all...
Using a tonic Minor you'll run in to numerous "accidental majors", as well as other chord forms...
Say Am is tonic....Whats the 2 chord???...Bm?..BM?...
Personally I think the majority of people that THINK they know the number system...Don't at all...
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Isn't that a theory question, rather than a "Nashville numbers" question?Mickey Adams wrote:Say Am is tonic....Whats the 2 chord???...Bm?..BM?...
In a Nashville numbers chart, if Am is the tonic, if the chart says "2" that's B major. If the chart says "2m" it's B minor.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but my impression is that in the "Nashville number system" chords are simply named individually by their position in the scale of the key* and their chord type, regardless of their theoretical function in the progression, and each (Arabic) number is assumed to be a major chord unless it has a suffix, such as m for minor, 7 for seventh, + for augmented, M7 for major seventh, etc.
Number charts using Roman numerals and/or basing chord designations on systematic application of diatonic theory are a different beast from Nashville number charts, which simply provide easy-to-read "play this chord now" information that can be used in any key.
*(Scale position taking the major scale as basis--that is, counting from the root of the tonic, regardless of which chord quality the tonic is,
1, b2, 2, b3, 3, 4, b5, 5, b6, 6, b7, 7 )
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Not knocking anyone's method at all..if it works for a person then cool, it's serves the purpose. I find using the relative major as the I works for me. What one may get confused on if, say Am is just written as "I", then would you use the minor or major scale to determine the other numbers? Say if it went to a C...that would have to be determined in order to know if it's a III (using the minor scale or a bIII (if you go with the major). Just a thought...
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I been wondering about that .Thanks for clearing it up for me.Seems everyone has thier own approch.We do it what ever the key of the song is in ,is the 1 then 4, 5 ,5m. or so on.Is that right on the nns?Starting with the scale of the key.
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