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The_Complete_Idiot%27s_Guide_To_Music_Theory

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<strong>The</strong> chord progression transposed to the key of F.<br />

Voilà! You’ve just transposed the entire chord progression—and you didn’t have<br />

to count any half steps to do it.<br />

You can apply this same technique to the notes in the melody. Work through<br />

the original key-of-C melody and put the degree of the scale (1, 2, 3, and so<br />

forth) under each note of the melody, like this:<br />

Marking up the original melody, write the degree of the scale under each note.<br />

Now get a blank sheet of music paper and, in the key of F, write out the scale<br />

degrees below the staff. If you fill in the actual notes for each scale degree, you<br />

end up with the completed melody:<br />

Your transposed melody, by the numbers.<br />

This method is a little more work for melodies than it is for chords, but it definitely<br />

works.<br />

Interval-Based Transposition<br />

In interval-based transposition, you have to transpose the first note from one<br />

key to another, but then you ignore the key change and work completely in the<br />

new key. You do this by noting the intervals between each note in the melody,<br />

and then using those intervals to “compose” the transposed melody on the fly.<br />

Let’s turn again to our original melody, and note the intervals between each<br />

note in the melody, like this:<br />

Chapter 14: Transposing to Other Keys 181<br />

Tip<br />

If you’re not sure<br />

which chords to use,<br />

refer back to the<br />

Scale-Based Chords<br />

table in Chapter 10.

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