Blue note


Blue note, Blue, note, Blue note wikipedia: In jazz and blues, blue note(also "worried" note) is a note played or sung at a height slightly lower than the major scale for expressive purposes. Typically, the change is a semitone or less, but this varies by performers and genres. country blues in particular, features wide variations of the diatonic pitches with emotion blue notes. Blue notes are often seen as similar to heights from traditional songs found in working in Africa. The blue notes are usually said to be flattened third, flattened fifth, and flattened seventh scale degrees. Although the scale of blues "inherently a minor key, it is commonly" forced "on the chord changes in the major, which causes a conflict typically dissonant tones and the blue notes. A conflict similar happens between the notes of the minor scale and minor scale blues, as heard in songs like "Why Do not You Do Right?". In the case of the third flattened the root (or flattened During the dominant seventh), the resulting agreement is a mixed agreement neutral third party. Blue notes are used in many twelve bar blues and eight measures, and also in blues ballads, many types of modern jazz, classical and folk songs with a "blue" feeling, like "Stormy Weather" by Harold Arlen. Blue notes are also common in folk music in English. Bent or "blue note", known in Ireland, "said Long "play a vital role in Irish music and can be heard on any instrument capable of producing them.