

I voted no but I have a synesthetic friend who would disagree. I realize that different instruments playing in the same key can sound completely different in terms of emotion, even if the music that is played is exactly the same. Now all these emotional associations are just from my experience as a pianist. The fact that C major sounds to me like happy boredom, along with the fact that a small bit of chromaticism makes me question whether or not it actually is in C major, and that C major is the most common key in all of music, is why I have it as my one and only avoid key. G minor - If it comes after a dramatic passage, Calming down, Otherwise, variable.


I can evoke any feeling or emotion using any key, so I don't buy into the key psychology stuff. Fun to think about but not practically useful at all.Ĭhoosing the home key (for me) depends largely on the instruments and their ranges. I think the colors have come about because of a visual association with a sentinel piece in that particular key. I don't, however, see these colors as I'm listening to pieces as they play-even "simple" pieces use so many chords that it would look like fireworks in my head. D-flat major is sea green, F major is sky blue, D is bright red, for example. In a sense, the keys have different "colors" to me.
