Question of putting Roman Numerals on a chord sequence I have











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I only have a little knowledge of music theory and was unable to work out how to use roman numerals to denote a chord sequence of one of my old tunes which starts in Fm. I have listed the chord sequence a follows:



Fm Ebm F#m Bbm played twice, then, Fm Ebm Em Dm Bdim A



I know this has a modulation at the end but I don't know how to set Roman Numerals to the chords.










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  • 3




    Can I ask what "pluutin" is?
    – Richard
    Nov 22 at 14:49






  • 2




    @Richard "Question of putting Roman Numerals on a chord sequence [he has]."
    – user57423
    Nov 22 at 18:59

















up vote
1
down vote

favorite












I only have a little knowledge of music theory and was unable to work out how to use roman numerals to denote a chord sequence of one of my old tunes which starts in Fm. I have listed the chord sequence a follows:



Fm Ebm F#m Bbm played twice, then, Fm Ebm Em Dm Bdim A



I know this has a modulation at the end but I don't know how to set Roman Numerals to the chords.










share|improve this question









New contributor




Matt Brown is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
















  • 3




    Can I ask what "pluutin" is?
    – Richard
    Nov 22 at 14:49






  • 2




    @Richard "Question of putting Roman Numerals on a chord sequence [he has]."
    – user57423
    Nov 22 at 18:59















up vote
1
down vote

favorite









up vote
1
down vote

favorite











I only have a little knowledge of music theory and was unable to work out how to use roman numerals to denote a chord sequence of one of my old tunes which starts in Fm. I have listed the chord sequence a follows:



Fm Ebm F#m Bbm played twice, then, Fm Ebm Em Dm Bdim A



I know this has a modulation at the end but I don't know how to set Roman Numerals to the chords.










share|improve this question









New contributor




Matt Brown is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











I only have a little knowledge of music theory and was unable to work out how to use roman numerals to denote a chord sequence of one of my old tunes which starts in Fm. I have listed the chord sequence a follows:



Fm Ebm F#m Bbm played twice, then, Fm Ebm Em Dm Bdim A



I know this has a modulation at the end but I don't know how to set Roman Numerals to the chords.







theory chord-progressions roman-numerals






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New contributor




Matt Brown is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









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Matt Brown is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Nov 22 at 19:32









Richard

35.5k677151




35.5k677151






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asked Nov 22 at 13:39









Matt Brown

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61




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New contributor





Matt Brown is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






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Check out our Code of Conduct.








  • 3




    Can I ask what "pluutin" is?
    – Richard
    Nov 22 at 14:49






  • 2




    @Richard "Question of putting Roman Numerals on a chord sequence [he has]."
    – user57423
    Nov 22 at 18:59
















  • 3




    Can I ask what "pluutin" is?
    – Richard
    Nov 22 at 14:49






  • 2




    @Richard "Question of putting Roman Numerals on a chord sequence [he has]."
    – user57423
    Nov 22 at 18:59










3




3




Can I ask what "pluutin" is?
– Richard
Nov 22 at 14:49




Can I ask what "pluutin" is?
– Richard
Nov 22 at 14:49




2




2




@Richard "Question of putting Roman Numerals on a chord sequence [he has]."
– user57423
Nov 22 at 18:59






@Richard "Question of putting Roman Numerals on a chord sequence [he has]."
– user57423
Nov 22 at 18:59












2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
4
down vote













Roman numerals can be really helpful for music the follows traditional harmonic syntax. But if music is really chromatic, sometimes Roman numerals really aren't helpful at all. Unfortunately, I think your progression is one such case: we can stick Roman numerals to the chords, but it won't tell us much (if anything) that's helpful.




Fm E♭m F♯m Bbm Fm E♭m Em Dm B° A
i vii ♭ii iv i vii v iv ii° I
*** ###


Two caveats of the above progression:




  • The chord marked *** I have interpreted enharmonically as G♭ minor so as to understand it as ♭II (a modified Neapolitan chord).

  • The chords beginning at ### are no longer understood in F minor, but in A.


Since Roman numerals aren't all that helpful, we can perhaps better understand this progression as an example of planing. Planing is when we take a particular chord type and just move it up and down in musical space. In this case, you plane a root-position minor chord and move it up and down through the chromatic universe, and then you use it to reach a pretty clear iv–ii°–I cadence in A major.






share|improve this answer























  • Thank you for explaining this Richard, I shall go on learning music theory as best I can.
    – Matt Brown
    2 days ago


















up vote
1
down vote













Roman Numeral Analysis wouldn't do much good for chord progressions like these because it's not clear what key these progressions belong to, especially the second progression. Something important to note about music theory, compared to other lofty kinds of theory (physics, mathematics, etc) is that music theory does not dictate how one should or shouldn't write. It simply allows us to communicate what's happening in the music in a succinct, formal, and analytic format. What I see in your progression is, instead, a root-movement relationship built on intervals. However just because that's what I see in there does not magically mean that's why you wrote it that way.



The first progression could be said to be "constant structure" minor chords (i.e., entirely minor chords) built upon an increasingly large root movement: Major second/diminished third between Fm/Ebm, minor third between Ebm/F#m, and major third between F#m/Bbm. The second progression looks to me like a chain of seconds of varying sizes: Fm->Ebm = M2, Ebm->Em = m2, Em->Dm = M2, Dm->Bdim = A2(m3), Bdim->A = M2. The diminished and major chords in this progression provide significant color differentiation to break up the monotony of the minor chords.



This is simply how I would explain the construction of these progressions, and I'm sure several other people would have different analyses as well.






share|improve this answer

















  • 3




    Your second and third sentences should be carved into stone!
    – Richard
    Nov 22 at 15:22










  • Your explanation is of great interest to me as I knew that most of the chords were not in the key, but borrowed from other keys and therefore it is not helpful to apply roman numerals to them, I don't think the piece really modulates till the Em but feels like it modulates only at the end Bdim to A when set with the tune (top notes).
    – Matt Brown
    2 days ago











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2 Answers
2






active

oldest

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2 Answers
2






active

oldest

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active

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active

oldest

votes








up vote
4
down vote













Roman numerals can be really helpful for music the follows traditional harmonic syntax. But if music is really chromatic, sometimes Roman numerals really aren't helpful at all. Unfortunately, I think your progression is one such case: we can stick Roman numerals to the chords, but it won't tell us much (if anything) that's helpful.




Fm E♭m F♯m Bbm Fm E♭m Em Dm B° A
i vii ♭ii iv i vii v iv ii° I
*** ###


Two caveats of the above progression:




  • The chord marked *** I have interpreted enharmonically as G♭ minor so as to understand it as ♭II (a modified Neapolitan chord).

  • The chords beginning at ### are no longer understood in F minor, but in A.


Since Roman numerals aren't all that helpful, we can perhaps better understand this progression as an example of planing. Planing is when we take a particular chord type and just move it up and down in musical space. In this case, you plane a root-position minor chord and move it up and down through the chromatic universe, and then you use it to reach a pretty clear iv–ii°–I cadence in A major.






share|improve this answer























  • Thank you for explaining this Richard, I shall go on learning music theory as best I can.
    – Matt Brown
    2 days ago















up vote
4
down vote













Roman numerals can be really helpful for music the follows traditional harmonic syntax. But if music is really chromatic, sometimes Roman numerals really aren't helpful at all. Unfortunately, I think your progression is one such case: we can stick Roman numerals to the chords, but it won't tell us much (if anything) that's helpful.




Fm E♭m F♯m Bbm Fm E♭m Em Dm B° A
i vii ♭ii iv i vii v iv ii° I
*** ###


Two caveats of the above progression:




  • The chord marked *** I have interpreted enharmonically as G♭ minor so as to understand it as ♭II (a modified Neapolitan chord).

  • The chords beginning at ### are no longer understood in F minor, but in A.


Since Roman numerals aren't all that helpful, we can perhaps better understand this progression as an example of planing. Planing is when we take a particular chord type and just move it up and down in musical space. In this case, you plane a root-position minor chord and move it up and down through the chromatic universe, and then you use it to reach a pretty clear iv–ii°–I cadence in A major.






share|improve this answer























  • Thank you for explaining this Richard, I shall go on learning music theory as best I can.
    – Matt Brown
    2 days ago













up vote
4
down vote










up vote
4
down vote









Roman numerals can be really helpful for music the follows traditional harmonic syntax. But if music is really chromatic, sometimes Roman numerals really aren't helpful at all. Unfortunately, I think your progression is one such case: we can stick Roman numerals to the chords, but it won't tell us much (if anything) that's helpful.




Fm E♭m F♯m Bbm Fm E♭m Em Dm B° A
i vii ♭ii iv i vii v iv ii° I
*** ###


Two caveats of the above progression:




  • The chord marked *** I have interpreted enharmonically as G♭ minor so as to understand it as ♭II (a modified Neapolitan chord).

  • The chords beginning at ### are no longer understood in F minor, but in A.


Since Roman numerals aren't all that helpful, we can perhaps better understand this progression as an example of planing. Planing is when we take a particular chord type and just move it up and down in musical space. In this case, you plane a root-position minor chord and move it up and down through the chromatic universe, and then you use it to reach a pretty clear iv–ii°–I cadence in A major.






share|improve this answer














Roman numerals can be really helpful for music the follows traditional harmonic syntax. But if music is really chromatic, sometimes Roman numerals really aren't helpful at all. Unfortunately, I think your progression is one such case: we can stick Roman numerals to the chords, but it won't tell us much (if anything) that's helpful.




Fm E♭m F♯m Bbm Fm E♭m Em Dm B° A
i vii ♭ii iv i vii v iv ii° I
*** ###


Two caveats of the above progression:




  • The chord marked *** I have interpreted enharmonically as G♭ minor so as to understand it as ♭II (a modified Neapolitan chord).

  • The chords beginning at ### are no longer understood in F minor, but in A.


Since Roman numerals aren't all that helpful, we can perhaps better understand this progression as an example of planing. Planing is when we take a particular chord type and just move it up and down in musical space. In this case, you plane a root-position minor chord and move it up and down through the chromatic universe, and then you use it to reach a pretty clear iv–ii°–I cadence in A major.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Nov 22 at 14:50

























answered Nov 22 at 14:39









Richard

35.5k677151




35.5k677151












  • Thank you for explaining this Richard, I shall go on learning music theory as best I can.
    – Matt Brown
    2 days ago


















  • Thank you for explaining this Richard, I shall go on learning music theory as best I can.
    – Matt Brown
    2 days ago
















Thank you for explaining this Richard, I shall go on learning music theory as best I can.
– Matt Brown
2 days ago




Thank you for explaining this Richard, I shall go on learning music theory as best I can.
– Matt Brown
2 days ago










up vote
1
down vote













Roman Numeral Analysis wouldn't do much good for chord progressions like these because it's not clear what key these progressions belong to, especially the second progression. Something important to note about music theory, compared to other lofty kinds of theory (physics, mathematics, etc) is that music theory does not dictate how one should or shouldn't write. It simply allows us to communicate what's happening in the music in a succinct, formal, and analytic format. What I see in your progression is, instead, a root-movement relationship built on intervals. However just because that's what I see in there does not magically mean that's why you wrote it that way.



The first progression could be said to be "constant structure" minor chords (i.e., entirely minor chords) built upon an increasingly large root movement: Major second/diminished third between Fm/Ebm, minor third between Ebm/F#m, and major third between F#m/Bbm. The second progression looks to me like a chain of seconds of varying sizes: Fm->Ebm = M2, Ebm->Em = m2, Em->Dm = M2, Dm->Bdim = A2(m3), Bdim->A = M2. The diminished and major chords in this progression provide significant color differentiation to break up the monotony of the minor chords.



This is simply how I would explain the construction of these progressions, and I'm sure several other people would have different analyses as well.






share|improve this answer

















  • 3




    Your second and third sentences should be carved into stone!
    – Richard
    Nov 22 at 15:22










  • Your explanation is of great interest to me as I knew that most of the chords were not in the key, but borrowed from other keys and therefore it is not helpful to apply roman numerals to them, I don't think the piece really modulates till the Em but feels like it modulates only at the end Bdim to A when set with the tune (top notes).
    – Matt Brown
    2 days ago















up vote
1
down vote













Roman Numeral Analysis wouldn't do much good for chord progressions like these because it's not clear what key these progressions belong to, especially the second progression. Something important to note about music theory, compared to other lofty kinds of theory (physics, mathematics, etc) is that music theory does not dictate how one should or shouldn't write. It simply allows us to communicate what's happening in the music in a succinct, formal, and analytic format. What I see in your progression is, instead, a root-movement relationship built on intervals. However just because that's what I see in there does not magically mean that's why you wrote it that way.



The first progression could be said to be "constant structure" minor chords (i.e., entirely minor chords) built upon an increasingly large root movement: Major second/diminished third between Fm/Ebm, minor third between Ebm/F#m, and major third between F#m/Bbm. The second progression looks to me like a chain of seconds of varying sizes: Fm->Ebm = M2, Ebm->Em = m2, Em->Dm = M2, Dm->Bdim = A2(m3), Bdim->A = M2. The diminished and major chords in this progression provide significant color differentiation to break up the monotony of the minor chords.



This is simply how I would explain the construction of these progressions, and I'm sure several other people would have different analyses as well.






share|improve this answer

















  • 3




    Your second and third sentences should be carved into stone!
    – Richard
    Nov 22 at 15:22










  • Your explanation is of great interest to me as I knew that most of the chords were not in the key, but borrowed from other keys and therefore it is not helpful to apply roman numerals to them, I don't think the piece really modulates till the Em but feels like it modulates only at the end Bdim to A when set with the tune (top notes).
    – Matt Brown
    2 days ago













up vote
1
down vote










up vote
1
down vote









Roman Numeral Analysis wouldn't do much good for chord progressions like these because it's not clear what key these progressions belong to, especially the second progression. Something important to note about music theory, compared to other lofty kinds of theory (physics, mathematics, etc) is that music theory does not dictate how one should or shouldn't write. It simply allows us to communicate what's happening in the music in a succinct, formal, and analytic format. What I see in your progression is, instead, a root-movement relationship built on intervals. However just because that's what I see in there does not magically mean that's why you wrote it that way.



The first progression could be said to be "constant structure" minor chords (i.e., entirely minor chords) built upon an increasingly large root movement: Major second/diminished third between Fm/Ebm, minor third between Ebm/F#m, and major third between F#m/Bbm. The second progression looks to me like a chain of seconds of varying sizes: Fm->Ebm = M2, Ebm->Em = m2, Em->Dm = M2, Dm->Bdim = A2(m3), Bdim->A = M2. The diminished and major chords in this progression provide significant color differentiation to break up the monotony of the minor chords.



This is simply how I would explain the construction of these progressions, and I'm sure several other people would have different analyses as well.






share|improve this answer












Roman Numeral Analysis wouldn't do much good for chord progressions like these because it's not clear what key these progressions belong to, especially the second progression. Something important to note about music theory, compared to other lofty kinds of theory (physics, mathematics, etc) is that music theory does not dictate how one should or shouldn't write. It simply allows us to communicate what's happening in the music in a succinct, formal, and analytic format. What I see in your progression is, instead, a root-movement relationship built on intervals. However just because that's what I see in there does not magically mean that's why you wrote it that way.



The first progression could be said to be "constant structure" minor chords (i.e., entirely minor chords) built upon an increasingly large root movement: Major second/diminished third between Fm/Ebm, minor third between Ebm/F#m, and major third between F#m/Bbm. The second progression looks to me like a chain of seconds of varying sizes: Fm->Ebm = M2, Ebm->Em = m2, Em->Dm = M2, Dm->Bdim = A2(m3), Bdim->A = M2. The diminished and major chords in this progression provide significant color differentiation to break up the monotony of the minor chords.



This is simply how I would explain the construction of these progressions, and I'm sure several other people would have different analyses as well.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Nov 22 at 14:36









LSM07

42817




42817








  • 3




    Your second and third sentences should be carved into stone!
    – Richard
    Nov 22 at 15:22










  • Your explanation is of great interest to me as I knew that most of the chords were not in the key, but borrowed from other keys and therefore it is not helpful to apply roman numerals to them, I don't think the piece really modulates till the Em but feels like it modulates only at the end Bdim to A when set with the tune (top notes).
    – Matt Brown
    2 days ago














  • 3




    Your second and third sentences should be carved into stone!
    – Richard
    Nov 22 at 15:22










  • Your explanation is of great interest to me as I knew that most of the chords were not in the key, but borrowed from other keys and therefore it is not helpful to apply roman numerals to them, I don't think the piece really modulates till the Em but feels like it modulates only at the end Bdim to A when set with the tune (top notes).
    – Matt Brown
    2 days ago








3




3




Your second and third sentences should be carved into stone!
– Richard
Nov 22 at 15:22




Your second and third sentences should be carved into stone!
– Richard
Nov 22 at 15:22












Your explanation is of great interest to me as I knew that most of the chords were not in the key, but borrowed from other keys and therefore it is not helpful to apply roman numerals to them, I don't think the piece really modulates till the Em but feels like it modulates only at the end Bdim to A when set with the tune (top notes).
– Matt Brown
2 days ago




Your explanation is of great interest to me as I knew that most of the chords were not in the key, but borrowed from other keys and therefore it is not helpful to apply roman numerals to them, I don't think the piece really modulates till the Em but feels like it modulates only at the end Bdim to A when set with the tune (top notes).
– Matt Brown
2 days ago










Matt Brown is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.










 

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