The musical keys of M, R and X.
I bought my electric piano from a piano teacher. I noticed there is writing on some of the keys. Easy enough to wash off, but what the hell was she teaching her students? It's faint, but you can see the D key (next to middle C) is marked with an R. The E key is marked with an M. The B (not pictured) is marked with an X.
The keys of M, R and X? Okay!
Is this some kind of riddle or mystery to be solved? Maybe it means something in Vietnam (where I live). I just emailed the teacher's sister to try and explain. Will report back what I find out.
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The keys of M, R and X? Okay!
Is this some kind of riddle or mystery to be solved? Maybe it means something in Vietnam (where I live). I just emailed the teacher's sister to try and explain. Will report back what I find out.
.
Do Re Mi Fa So La Si
C . D . E . F . G . A . B
Maybe the B is marked with an X to distinct it from G.
see also https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solfège
C . D . E . F . G . A . B
Maybe the B is marked with an X to distinct it from G.
see also https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solfège
I have often wondered what musicians in Vietnam do about the F, because the Vietnamese alphabet doesn't have an F (also missing J, W and Z).
Well, the mystery is solved. I learned something today.
EDIT: DERP! I see what you were saying. I was being a dolt. And you are correct!
Well, the mystery is solved. I learned something today.
I know and am aware of the chromatic scale. That wasn't the point of my post. The post was pointing out the wrong letters written on the piano keys. But I contacted the seller and she cleared it up for me. But thanks for the free lesson on Do Re Mi! ha ha ha
EDIT: DERP! I see what you were saying. I was being a dolt. And you are correct!
Wouldn't B need to be made distinct from E, not G? The same way C might be confused with F, by a novice player. I could also see novices confusing D, G and A, as they are in the middle of the clusters.
To clear things up:
- C, D, E, F, G, A, B is not the chomatic scale, it is the C-major diatonic scale.
- The chromatic scale is C, C#, D, D#, E, F, F#, G, G#, A, A#, B.
- There are 2 groups of black keys - one of 2 black keys and one of 3 black keys.
- The D lies between the 2 black keys.
- G and A lie (G is left, A is right) inside the 3 black keys.
- All other white keys can easily be identified by knowing D, G and A.
Meaning, to distinguish Si(B) from Sol(G), which start with the same letter S.
Could you post a photo of that "X"?
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Let's hear it! Break out the tape echo and the minor chords.
It just hit me what you were saying.... derp! Sorry, I missed YOUR point.Ahornberg wrote: ↑30 May 2021Do Re Mi Fa So La Si
C . D . E . F . G . A . B
Maybe the B is marked with an X to distinct it from G.
see also https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solfège
Yes, it seems to be a Do Re Mi thing going on.
The C has a D (Do) on it, the D has an R (Re), the E has an M (Mi)... I thought you were trying to teach me the chromatic scale. ha ha ha,
Yes these are abbreviations for the Do Re Mi note names. You were the first to crack the code! My apologies for missing what you were saying.
Your answer is exactly what the seller went on to say.
When I "play" the piano, it sounds NOTHING like this!
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The X is very faint and doesn't show up in the picture very well, but you can kind of see it.
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I wouldn't either, and I'm happy that they will easily wash off.
Get a book on music theory written in french language and you will find Do, Re, Mi exclusively and no C, D, E. So I wasn't suprised to find Do, Re, Mi on keyboard in Vietnam due to history.
The interesting thing here, to me, is that the Vietnamese alphabet doesn't have the letter F, but they still use F for F. But it doesn't stand for F, it coincidentally stands for Fa.
Sorry to disappoint, though. Maybe I can find another unsolved mystery.
What do you thin happened to Elisa Lam?
Good point! Lots of French influence here, in Indo-China. And good for you for knowing some history of this part of the world. Many people are completely ignorant of it.
Where I come from, the B is called Ti (not Si). So maybe Viets use X for Xi. That would make sense why there is an X, and I could easily see them calling it Xi, instead of Si. Depending on the dialect, the X and S can sound the same in Vietnamese (common in northern accents).Ahornberg wrote: ↑30 May 2021Do Re Mi Fa So La Si
C . D . E . F . G . A . B
Maybe the B is marked with an X to distinct it from G.
see also https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solfège
Well, Ahornberg cracked the case immediately. Nicely done!
Sorry to disappoint, though. Maybe I can find another unsolved mystery.
What do you thin happened to Elisa Lam?
So I have given this a bit of thought and am wondering what the French do with sharps and flats? Are they really Do#/Reb, R#/Mib... etc? Seems way more complicated than just using C thru B.
Now, I'm to go drink some Xi "with jam and bread"
Now, I'm to go drink some Xi "with jam and bread"
I was taught in that tradition, to me, CDEFGAB seem cryptic. We say dièse, bémol, bécarre. What's so complicated in that?
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Yes, it's "Do dièse" for "C sharp" and "Ré bémol" for "D flat" (pronounced roughly "doh diayz" and "ray bay mall"). Or Do# and Réb in notation. "bémol" has the same origin as "moll" in German (like "Sonata D-Moll" for instance).
Yes, but in German it means "minor". It all started with two variants of B in G-major and G-minor in Italian. The major one was referred to as "duro" (hard), the minor one was "molle" (soft). So now major and minor are called "Dur" and "Moll" in German.WongoTheSane wrote: ↑30 May 2021"bémol" has the same origin as "moll" in German (like "Sonata D-Moll" for instance).
Thank you for that amazing video and to learn about her.challism wrote: ↑30 May 2021It just hit me what you were saying.... derp! Sorry, I missed YOUR point.Ahornberg wrote: ↑30 May 2021Do Re Mi Fa So La Si
C . D . E . F . G . A . B
Maybe the B is marked with an X to distinct it from G.
see also https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solfège
Yes, it seems to be a Do Re Mi thing going on.
The C has a D (Do) on it, the D has an R (Re), the E has an M (Mi)... I thought you were trying to teach me the chromatic scale. ha ha ha,
Yes these are abbreviations for the Do Re Mi note names. You were the first to crack the code! My apologies for missing what you were saying.
Your answer is exactly what the seller went on to say.
When I "play" the piano, it sounds NOTHING like this!
.
The X is very faint and doesn't show up in the picture very well, but you can kind of see it.
.
0.jpg
I wouldn't either, and I'm happy that they will easily wash off.
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