I don't like the use of modal key signatures.  I feel that most of us are 
conditioned to think in a particular key, in other words, A Major being three 
sharps.  So if you're hearing the key as A Major, but the key signature is four 
sharps, you might miss the D#.  I'd rather have it written in, even if every D 
in the piece is D#.

On Dec 9, 2013, at 2:50 PM, Robert Patterson <[email protected]> 
wrote:

> So I am curious what this list thinks. You are writing a piece in A lydian
> mode. Do you use four sharps in the key sig or do you use three sharps and
> show the raised fourth as a chromatic alteration throughout the piece?
> 
> I recently encountered this situation in some contemporary church music. I
> am a horn player, so key sigs are not my strong suit, but showing 4 sharps
> for a piece in A lydian drove me crazy (and this piece was lydian
> throughout, so the problem manifested over and over in other keys as well.)
> There was one solo where I played g-natural until the after the final
> run-through before I noticed the wrong note and corrected it for the
> performance. (The conductor was gonna let it go!)
> 
> Maybe four sharps makes sense in some contexts (jazz? early music?) but it
> felt really wrong in contemporary church music, esp. consider the minimal
> rehearsal time such music gets.
> 
> Yikes I just looked at Elaine Gould, and she allows any arbitrary key
> signature. I hope I never have to face that, and in any case would end up
> penciling every one of them in.
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**********************************
Lon Price
[email protected]
http://www.txstnr.com/





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