[YOUTUBE]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p_iPn1GbUUU[/YOUTUBE]
If you look at 27:14 (violins, sempre con sordini) you'll see the tonic is C here (tonality= C). But he is making consistent use of D flat. The question is this: is D flat the lowered second degree or is it the second degree itself? If the latter then the scale here begins C-D flat-other notes and we are having one of the famous eight modes (don't remember which).
The passage is magical and it may be the employment of modal writing makes it so. Or perhaps some oriental scale.
NOTE: Something went wrong. See post #4 for the score.
If you look at 27:14 (violins, sempre con sordini) you'll see the tonic is C here (tonality= C). But he is making consistent use of D flat. The question is this: is D flat the lowered second degree or is it the second degree itself? If the latter then the scale here begins C-D flat-other notes and we are having one of the famous eight modes (don't remember which).
The passage is magical and it may be the employment of modal writing makes it so. Or perhaps some oriental scale.
NOTE: Something went wrong. See post #4 for the score.
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