Musical Keys - Circle of Fifths Chart - Print on Demand
The Circle of Fifths is common in music theory.
What is not so common, is seeing it along side a piano keyboard, and the corresponding Keys and Chords spelled out in pain-staking detail, with a musical staff for scales and chords. This has been a labor of love, taking Italic over 6 years from concept to completion. Please enjoy this and send me any and all feedback about its veracity, accurate, usefulness, or stories that it may contribute to.
I have no idea if/when this tool+chart may be useful, but I hope it helps you start playing the piano, even just once.
If you need a primer for how to use it, email me, or read below; or both!
Museum-quality posters made on thick matte paper. Add a wonderful accent to your room and office with these posters that are sure to brighten any environment.
• Paper thickness: 10.3 mil
• Paper weight: 189 g/m²
• Opacity: 94%
• ISO brightness: 104%
• Paper is sourced from Japan
This product is made especially for you as soon as you place an order, which is why it takes us a bit longer to deliver it to you. Making products on demand instead of in bulk helps reduce overproduction, so thank you for making thoughtful purchasing decisions!
HOW TO GUIDE
This chart is intended to be a quick reference guide for all people learning the arts within music!
It may make other reference material more helpful, or assist groups to effortlessly play in harmony.
Each “SLICE” of the circle is a grouping of TWO KEYS
You can play the shaded white & black keys around the outside ring together, along with both chords shown where the three-keys extend beyond the others (a triad chord).
The inner ring of letters represents the Minor Keys (sad-ish), the outer ring of letter represents the Major Keys (happy-ish).
You can play the Minor and Major chords over the top of each other, and alongside each note of their scale - staying within the slice.
All or most-all chords are shown here - remember that some are called different but are functionally the same like C-flat and B-sharp.
The Circle of Fifths is common in music theory.
What is not so common, is seeing it along side a piano keyboard, and the corresponding Keys and Chords spelled out in pain-staking detail, with a musical staff for scales and chords. This has been a labor of love, taking Italic over 6 years from concept to completion. Please enjoy this and send me any and all feedback about its veracity, accurate, usefulness, or stories that it may contribute to.
I have no idea if/when this tool+chart may be useful, but I hope it helps you start playing the piano, even just once.
If you need a primer for how to use it, email me, or read below; or both!
Museum-quality posters made on thick matte paper. Add a wonderful accent to your room and office with these posters that are sure to brighten any environment.
• Paper thickness: 10.3 mil
• Paper weight: 189 g/m²
• Opacity: 94%
• ISO brightness: 104%
• Paper is sourced from Japan
This product is made especially for you as soon as you place an order, which is why it takes us a bit longer to deliver it to you. Making products on demand instead of in bulk helps reduce overproduction, so thank you for making thoughtful purchasing decisions!
HOW TO GUIDE
This chart is intended to be a quick reference guide for all people learning the arts within music!
It may make other reference material more helpful, or assist groups to effortlessly play in harmony.
Each “SLICE” of the circle is a grouping of TWO KEYS
You can play the shaded white & black keys around the outside ring together, along with both chords shown where the three-keys extend beyond the others (a triad chord).
The inner ring of letters represents the Minor Keys (sad-ish), the outer ring of letter represents the Major Keys (happy-ish).
You can play the Minor and Major chords over the top of each other, and alongside each note of their scale - staying within the slice.
All or most-all chords are shown here - remember that some are called different but are functionally the same like C-flat and B-sharp.
The Circle of Fifths is common in music theory.
What is not so common, is seeing it along side a piano keyboard, and the corresponding Keys and Chords spelled out in pain-staking detail, with a musical staff for scales and chords. This has been a labor of love, taking Italic over 6 years from concept to completion. Please enjoy this and send me any and all feedback about its veracity, accurate, usefulness, or stories that it may contribute to.
I have no idea if/when this tool+chart may be useful, but I hope it helps you start playing the piano, even just once.
If you need a primer for how to use it, email me, or read below; or both!
Museum-quality posters made on thick matte paper. Add a wonderful accent to your room and office with these posters that are sure to brighten any environment.
• Paper thickness: 10.3 mil
• Paper weight: 189 g/m²
• Opacity: 94%
• ISO brightness: 104%
• Paper is sourced from Japan
This product is made especially for you as soon as you place an order, which is why it takes us a bit longer to deliver it to you. Making products on demand instead of in bulk helps reduce overproduction, so thank you for making thoughtful purchasing decisions!
HOW TO GUIDE
This chart is intended to be a quick reference guide for all people learning the arts within music!
It may make other reference material more helpful, or assist groups to effortlessly play in harmony.
Each “SLICE” of the circle is a grouping of TWO KEYS
You can play the shaded white & black keys around the outside ring together, along with both chords shown where the three-keys extend beyond the others (a triad chord).
The inner ring of letters represents the Minor Keys (sad-ish), the outer ring of letter represents the Major Keys (happy-ish).
You can play the Minor and Major chords over the top of each other, and alongside each note of their scale - staying within the slice.
All or most-all chords are shown here - remember that some are called different but are functionally the same like C-flat and B-sharp.