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Transposition

Two ways to change a song's key

Transpositions

Transposition is the act of moving music from one key to another. This can affect how a song is heard, how chords function, and how melodies relate to the underlying scale. There are two primary kinds of transposition in music: parallel transposition and relative transposition.

Parallel Transposition

A parallel transposition changes the scale being used while keeping the same starting note. For example, C major and C minor are parallel modes—they both start on C but have different notes and a different musical feel.

C minor vs C major scale comparison C minor scale C major scale

You can use the key selector in both Hookpad and the Theorytab database to apply a parallel transposition. This will change the notes of the song to fit the new scale, resulting in a different sound.

Hookpad key selector

Below are two versions of “Let It Be” by The Beatles. The first is in C major. The second is after a parallel transposition to C minor.

Relative Transposition

A relative transposition keeps the same set of notes but changes which chord is treated as the tonal center. For example, C major and A minor use the exact same notes (all the white keys on a piano), but emphasize different home chords—C and A, respectively.

Relative transposition is useful when you want to view a chord progression from a different harmonic perspective, without changing how it actually sounds.

Here’s the intro to “One of Us” by Joan Osborne, shown in the key of A minor. The progression is iVIIIIVII.

If you transpose this song to its relative major (C major), the chords are relabeled but the sound remains unchanged. Now A minor becomes the vi chord in C major, and the progression becomes viIVIV.

This perspective reveals that the song actually shares the same chords as the classic IVviIV progression—just starting on vi instead of I. Relative transposition can thus expose familiar patterns hidden in unfamiliar contexts.

Summary

  • Parallel transposition: same root, different notes → changes the sound of the music.
  • Relative transposition: same notes, different tonal center → changes how the chords are labeled but not how they sound.
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