#Solfege with seven flats or sharps
1 messages · Page 1 of 1 (latest)
all 7 flats/sharps?
no
pretty much everything necessary?
yes
1 - Do
#1 - Di
b2 - Ra
2 - Re
#2 - Ri
b3 - Me
3 - Mi
4 - Fa
#4 - Fi
b5 - Se
5 - Sol
#5 - Si
b6 - Le
6 - La
#6 - Li
b7 - Te
7 - Ti
8 - Do```
so an ascending chromatic scale is do di re ri me fa fi sol si la li ti do
and descending would be do, ti, te, la, le, sol, se, fa, mi, me, re, ra, do
and then that time I did a thing as a shitpost #programming-and-game-design message
Chromatic solfege
How do I sing F# major or Gb major in fixed do with this system?
C♭♭ du
C♭ de
C do
C♯ di
Cx dai
D♭♭ ru
D♭ ra
D re
D♯ ri
Dx rai
E♭♭ mu
E♭ me
E mi
E♯ mai
Ex mau
F♭♭ fu
F♭ fe
F fa
F♯ fi
Fx fai
G♭♭ su
G♭ se
G sol
G♯ si
Gx sai
A♭♭ lu
A♭ le
A la
A♯ li
Ax lai
B♭♭ tu
B♭ te
B ti
B♯ tai
Bx tau
Fi Si Li Ti Di Ri Mai Fi
or
Se Le Te De Ra Me Fa Se
But also fixed do is so cursed, never use it
I am cross referencing and Cb appears listed as 'de' while E# appears as 'ma'
Yes it's close enough
I was asking just in case, I still don't know if I am going to use it
Maybe just dont use it
you don't
because that's not for fixed do
s hi t p o s t
(Having googled) It appears that musicians online compromise by spelling the english note names + accidentals, instead of using monosyllabic names, for ease of understanding and promotion of mental agility, I am okay with that
latin American Spanish but we spell accidentals like #=sostenido and b=bemol
So for example we have Mi sostenido which is E# and Do bemol which is Cb
Anyways I don't use that system, instead I use c d e f g a b
Yes , that is fixed do
... Thank you for warning me about that rabbit hole
bringing this up again, but how do I pronounce "Mai"? Is it as in "my"?