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Many
traditional tunes are in minor keys, or, more correctly, they are
modal in structure. The four most common modes found in Irish music
are the Ionian mode which we now know as the major scale and, the
Aeolian, Dorian, and Mixolydian modes which are what traditional musicians
are referring to when they talk about minor keys.
The main difference between the Aeolian mode and the Classical minor
key is that the minor key has a sharpened seventh but the Aeolian
doesnt. For now it should suffice to know that when a tune is
said to be in a minor key (usually a, e, g, and d minor) you should
flatten the third and the seventh of the scale.
This is what the minor scale most often used in traditional music
sounds like. Notice the C natural on third fret, and the G natural
on the third fret of the A & E strings respectively.
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