Today I tried to analyze a song which is in the key of C.
Over/During the F Minor chord (before it goes to the G Major chord) :
A melody with these notes were played :
E-flat, D, C, B-flat, A-flat, G and F.
I realized that those are the notes from F Dorian.
It sounded so great.
I wonder what the composer was thinking.
Why could : E-flat, B-flat and A-flat (notes that are not in the key of C)
appear in a song in C? :question:
The A-flat/G# is from the A harmonic minor (6.th degree of C) :
That's why E Major, F Minor could be used in C.
The E-flat is from the A minor blues pentatonic,
since A minor is related to the key of C,
that note could be used?
Thank you.
(My main question is still there with the "question icon")
Over/During the F Minor chord (before it goes to the G Major chord) :
A melody with these notes were played :
E-flat, D, C, B-flat, A-flat, G and F.
I realized that those are the notes from F Dorian.
It sounded so great.
I wonder what the composer was thinking.
Why could : E-flat, B-flat and A-flat (notes that are not in the key of C)
appear in a song in C? :question:
The A-flat/G# is from the A harmonic minor (6.th degree of C) :
That's why E Major, F Minor could be used in C.
The E-flat is from the A minor blues pentatonic,
since A minor is related to the key of C,
that note could be used?
Thank you.
(My main question is still there with the "question icon")