I. Fundamentals

8. Major Keys and Key Signatures


8.1 Introduction

In tonal Western art music, when a piece tends primarily to use the pitches of a single major or minor scale, it is said to be in that major or minor key. Such pieces typically have groups of sharps or flats called key signatures. The following example has a Db-major key signature (five flats). It appears just after each clef on each staff:

Example 8–1. Amalia Hjelm, 5 Songs, 5. “Sång till qvällens stjerna,” mm. 1–5.

example_8-1

These key signatures provide a convenient alternative to writing out all of the necessary accidentals for a given key. Instead of writing a b before every B, E, A, D, and G (as necessitated by the Db-major scale), the key signature instructs the performer that every B, E, A, D, and G on the staff are to be lowered a semitone unless otherwise noted. Compare Example 8–1 with the following, which writes out the required accidentals instead of using a key signature. Notice how much more cluttered the score appears:

Example 8–2. Amalia Hjelm, 5 Songs, 5. “Sång till qvällens stjerna,” mm. 1–5, no key signature.

example_8-2

In this chapter, we will discuss how a key is established using the pitches of a major scale, how to determine a major key from a given key signature, and how to write key signatures on bass and treble clefs. We will also look at relationships between major scales and how to organize them with regards to one another.

8.2 Major keys

Chapter 6 discusses the role of the tonic (the keynote) as the most prominent note of a major scale. When a piece is in a major key it takes the pitches from that major scale and gives the tonic a position of primary importance. The remaining scale degrees are treated according to a hierarchy relative to the tonic.

Consider the following melody:

Example 8–3. “Ah! vous dirai-je, maman” (“Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star”) in C major.

example_8-3

As you can see, this melody uses the pitches C, D, E, F, G, and A. All of these pitches belong to the C major scale (C, D, E, F, G, A, and B). This is a very good indication that this melody is in the key of C major. But all of these pitches also belong to the F major scale (F, G, A , Bb, C, D, and E). To determine the key of this melody—C major or F major—we need to decide which note sounds most like the tonic. Listen to the melody again and consider which pitch, C or F, sounds more stable—in other words, which pitch sounds more restful, more like a musical destination and less like an attraction along the way.

It is likely that you heard the pitch C as having greater stability. Simply looking at the melody, we can see that C occupies a more stable position than the pitch class F. The excerpt begins and ends on C, and C holds a prominent position at the end of m. 2 and the beginning of m. 5. Whenever F appears, on the other hand, it is given a shorter note-value, and is always within a descending stepwise passage toward C. Because the pitch class C is the most stable-sounding pitch in the melody, Example 8–3 is in the key of C major.

The melody from Example 8–3 can be written in any major key. The following example transposes it (rewrites it at a different pitch level) to E major by raising each note up two whole steps, putting E in the most stable position. The melody sounds the same, only higher:

Example 8–4. “Ah! vous dirai-je, maman” (“Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star”)in E major.

example_8-4

Activity 8-1

Activity 8–1

Identify the key of each of the following melodies by considering which scale is represented by the present pitches and by looking for points of stability that might be the tonic note.


Exercise 8–1a:

Question

In what key is the following melody?

“Ah! vous dirai-je, maman” (“Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star”).

activity_8-1a

Hint

Look for stable pitches that might be the tonic.

Answer

Bb major


Exercise 8–1b:

Question

In what key is the following melody?

Johann Sebastian Bach, “Aus meines Herzens Grunde” (BWV 269), mm. 1–7.

activity_8-1b

Hint

Look for stable pitches that might be the tonic.

Answer

A major

Exercise 8–1c:

Question

In what key is the following melody?

Louise Farrenc, Les Italiennes (Op. 14), 3. “Cavatine de Carafa’s Berenice,” mm. 1-8.

activity_8-1c

Hint

Look for stable pitches that might be the tonic. (Note that the melody might not begin on the tonic!)

Answer

F major

Exercise 8–1d:

Question

In what key is the following melody?

Joseph Bologne Saint-Georges, Amant anonime, Act II, Scene III, Ariette, mm. 20-27.

activity_8-1d

Hint

Look for stable pitches that might be the tonic. (Note that the melody might not begin on the tonic!)

Answer

Bb major

Exercise 8–1e:

Question

In what key is the following melody?

Fanny Hensel, Gartenlieder (Op. 3), 1. “Hörst du nicht die Bäume rauschen,” mm. 1-8.

activity_8-1e

Hint

Look for stable pitches that might be the tonic. (Note that the melody might not begin on the tonic!)

Answer

B major

Exercise 8–1f:

Question

In what key is the following melody?

Samuel Coleridge-Taylor, “The Lord is My Strength,” mm. 5-20.

activity_8-1f

Hint

Look for stable pitches that might be the tonic. (Note that the melody might not begin on the tonic!)

Answer

Bb major

8.3 Key signatures

Each major scale contains a distinct set of seven pitch classes. (Again, see Chapter 6 for a lengthier discussion of the major scale.) One major scale may share as many as six pitches with another, as we saw in Example 8–3, but not all. (Two major scales that share seven pitch classes in common are considered to be the same scale.) Since each major scale is unique in this way, a piece in a major key will draw from the same pitches as its corresponding major scale. These sharps and flats used in the corresponding major scale are usually written at the beginning of each line in a key signature.

The key signature is a collection of sharps or flats that indicates which notes should be raised or lowered so that they belong to the key. In C major, there are no sharps or flats in the key signature, just as there are no sharps or flats in the C major scale. In keys other than C major, the key signature is written to the right of the clef, just before the time signature, at the beginning of each line of music. In Example 8–4 we transposed “Ah! vous dirai-je, maman” (“Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star”) to the key of E major. The following example shows the same melody in E major but here makes use of a key signature instead of writing out all the accidentals:

Example 8–5. “Ah! vous dirai-je, maman” (“Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star”) in E major.

a. without key signature

example_8-5a

b. with key signature

example_8-5b

E major has four sharps (F#, C#, G#, and D#), all of which appear in the key signature. (Even though D# is not used in this melody, the accidental is left in the key signature. Doing so makes it clear that this excerpt is in E major.) Sharps or flats in the key signature affect more than just the notes whose line or space they share:

The first sharp of the key signature in Example 8–6 (centered on the top line of the staff) applies to the note on the same line, making it F#. Likewise, the second sharp of the key signature (centered on the third space on the staff) applies to the note on the same space, making it C#. The accidentals appearing in the key signature apply to every instance of that pitch class. The F and C in the second half of Example 8–6 are both sharp even though the key signature does not include an accidental on their respective space and line.

Note: The sharps in the key signature are centered on the line or space of the note to which they apply. As you will see momentarily, the same is true of key signatures using flats. The head of the flat accidental is centered on the line or space of the note it affects.

Activity 8-2

Activity 8–2

Identify the major key represented by each of the following key signatures:


Exercise 8–2a:

Question

Which major key does the following key signature represent?

Hint

Which major scale has two sharps?

Answer

D major


Exercise 8–2b:

Question

Which major key does the following key signature represent?

Hint

Which major scale has two flats?

Answer

Bb major


Exercise 8–2c:

Question

Which major key does the following key signature represent?

Hint

Which major scale has three sharps?

Answer

A major


Exercise 8–2d:

Question

Which major key does the following key signature represent?

Hint

Which major scale has three flats?

Answer

Eb major

Pitches specified by the key signature can be canceled out by an accidental next to a note, as in the following example:

Example 8–7. Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Piano Sonata No. 4 in Eb major (K.282), mm. 1–4.

example_8-7

This piece is in Eb major, which has three flats (Bb, Eb, and Ab) as specified by the key signature. The natural sign (§) next to the A on the last eighth note of the first measure cancels out the Ab of the key signature. This canceling out of Ab lasts only as long as the measure in which the accidental appears. By the second measure, all As should again be flatted according to the key signature.

Note: You will frequently come across accidentals that may seem unnecessary. The flat next to the A on the fourth beat of m. 2, for instance, seems superfluous, given the Ab in the key signature. Such accidentals are referred to as courtesy accidentals. They occur after a previous accidental altered a given pitch (in this case, the A§ at the end of the first measure) to remind the performer that a scale degree has gone back to normal as specified by the key signature. Courtesy accidentals are sometimes placed in parentheses, although you will see that this practice is far from consistent as you go from one score, composer, or publisher to the next.

8.4 Writing key signatures

In Chapter 6 we discussed how one octave of a major scale can be divided into two tetrachords, an upper and a lower, each of which follows the same a W-W-H step pattern. In C major, for example, the lower tetrachord would be (C, D, E, F) and the upper (G, A, B, C). Since the pattern of whole steps and half steps is identical in each major tetrachord, they can both be used interchangeably as either the upper or lower tetrachord of a major scale. The upper tetrachord of a C-major scale (G, A, B, C) could, for example, also serve as the lower tetrachord of a G-major scale:

Notice how similar these two scales are. They have six pitch classes in common (G, A, B, C, D, and E), differing in only one note: C major has F, while G major has F#. Scales like these that share six out of their seven pitch classes are referred to as closely-related. Their key signatures, therefore, will differ by only one accidental. (C major has no sharps, G major has one sharp.)

The following example shows the key signatures for C and G major, and takes the process one step further, using the upper tetrachord of G major (D, E, F#, G) as the lower tetrachord of D-major. Each subsequent scale, in other words, begins on the fifth degree of the scale before it (as shown by the arrows):

We can see a pattern beginning to emerge. G major is built on scale degree [latex]\hat5[/latex] of C major and has one sharp (F#). D major is built on scale degree [latex]\hat5[/latex] of G major and has two sharps (F# and C#). We could continue the pattern by building a major scale on scale degree [latex]\hat5[/latex] of D major (A) and would arrive at A major, which has three sharps (F#, C#, and G#). And so on…

The following example shows all of the sharp key signatures up through seven sharps—from C major, in which none of the notes require an accidental, to C# major, in which every note is sharped:

The sharps or flats in a key signature must be written in a particular order and position on the staff. Notice how none of the sharps are written on ledger lines and that the key signatures are adjusted depending on which clef is assigned to the staff. It is important that you memorize not only the order in which particular sharps are added to the key signature (F#, C#, G#, D#, A#, E#, B#), but also the pattern in which they are added on the staff.

Note: You may find it helpful to come up with mnemonic devices to help remember these patterns. The order of sharps as they are added to a key signature, for example, can be remembered by the sentence: “Fat Cats Go Down Alleys Eating Birds.”

There is also a useful, quite easy trick for determining the tonic of a sharp key. In every sharp key, the right-most accidental of the key signature is the leading tone of the key. Say the key signature has five sharps: F#, C#, G#, D#, A#. A# is the leading tone for the B major scale. Therefore, the key is B major.

Activity 8-3

Activity 8–3

Write out each of the following sharp key signatures on the staff provided. Be sure to write each sharp on the appropriate line and in the correct order.





Flat key signatures can be determined similarly, though here, the lower tetrachord of each scale becomes the upper tetrachord of the next closely-related key. Instead of going up four steps from the tonic to begin each subsequent key on scale degree [latex]\hat5[/latex], we must go down four steps from the tonic and start on scale degree [latex]\hat4[/latex]. F major, for example, begins on scale degree [latex]\hat4[/latex] of C major and has one flat (Bb). Bb major begins on scale degree [latex]\hat4[/latex] of F major and has two flats (Bb and Eb). If we were to continue, the next key would be Eb major which would have three flats (Bb, Eb, and Ab). And so on…

The following example shows all of the flat key signatures up to seven flats:

Again, it is essential that you remember the order in which flats are added to key signatures and the pattern in which they are notated on the staff.

Note: The order of flats as they are added to a key signature can be reversing the mnemonic for sharp keys: “Before Eating A Donut, Get Coffee First.”

The second to last accidental in a flat key signature will tell you the key. Eb major, for example, has three flats: Bb, Eb, and Ab. The second to last (Eb) is the tonic of the key!

Activity 8-4

Activity 8–4

Write out each of the following flat key signatures. Be sure to write each flat on the appropriate line and in the correct order.





Although treble and bass clefs are the most commonly encountered, it is also helpful to be able to write and recognize key signatures written next to other clefs. The following example shows where each sharp and flat would be written in a key signature next to treble, bass, alto, and tenor clefs. For key signatures requiring less than seven sharps or flats, simply follow the pattern as far as needed:

Notice that, for the most part, the placement pattern of sharps and flats remains the same, regardless of the clef. The symbols are simply moved up or down to match the arrangement of pitch letter names on the lines and spaces of the staff as indicated by the clef. The only exception is the set of sharp key signatures written beside a tenor clef (the last key signature on the first line). Here a small adjustment is made: the first and third sharps are shifted down an octave to avoid using ledger lines in the key signature.

As we saw in Example 8–10 and Example 8–12, we typically divide keys into two categories: “sharp keys” (those whose key signatures consist of sharps) and “flat keys” (those whose key signatures consist of flats). In tonal music, you will never see a key signature with a mixture of sharps and flats. You may, however, encounter natural signs in a key signature when the accidentals of a previous key signature must be canceled out as in the following excerpt where the key changes to E major in m. 17:

Example 8–14. Frédéric Chopin, Etude No. 10, Op. 10, mm. 16–17.

example_8-14

8.5 Summary

A piece that draws primarily from the pitches of a single major scale is said to be in that major key. Within a key, pitch classes are organized hierarchically—primarily around the tonic which is heard as the most stable and grounding degree of the scale. A piece in G major, for example, will use pitch classes from the G major scale but will treat the pitch class G as the most conclusive sounding resting point. Other scale degrees will be treated accordingly, relative to the tonic.

A key signature is a symbol—a collection of sharps or flats—that indicates the key of a particular piece or passage. Key signatures are written just to the right of the clef and appear at the beginning of each line of music. A sharp or flat indicated by the key signature applies to every instance of that pitch-letter name, not just those on the line or space on which it is written. They remain in effect throughout the entire piece unless they are canceled out by an accidental or a new key signature. Key signatures are always written in a particular pattern on the staff and must be adjusted to match the clef.

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Fundamentals, Function, and Form Copyright © by Andre Mount is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

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