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In a few pieces of music I have read through, I have come across double-sharps and flats.

To my understanding, they are two semitones above/below the note indicated. What is, then, the point of these notations?

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AFAIR its mainly a formal notation issue. You can augment notes in the scale, so if F# is a note in the scale, but G is not (say in the scale of A-major). And you want to emphasize the fact that you are augmenting F# up a half step (say in a triad/chord), you write F## , even though you could have just as easily but a natural in front of the G. But that is just my recollection - which is why this is a comment. – crasic May 13 '11 at 9:14
While the reaons offered here might be valid, I have never once seen double accidentals used in piano music. I agree with the comment of the original poster; they're pointless. – Noldorin May 22 '11 at 16:27
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@Noldorin: You may not (yet) have come across double accidentals in piano music, but I assure you they exist in the piano/keyboard literature. Just off the top of my head, I know that I have encountered them in Bach and Beethoven at the very least. – Alex Basson Jun 4 '11 at 12:34
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@PatrickDaSilva: I already accepted they exist if you read up. :-) Actually, as AlexBasson rightly hinted, I have come across some in my own playing between then and now. Now too many, but from time to time... – Noldorin Mar 30 '12 at 3:22
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@Noldorin : I was just giving you an explicit example ; I came across double sharps and asked a question here myself about them, this is why I found this question. – Patrick Da Silva Mar 30 '12 at 16:22
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4 Answers

up vote 26 down vote accepted

These are also known as augmented and diminished notes, respectively.

Often it has to do with altering notes in a key that are already sharpened or flattened, such as a harmonic minor in a key where the 7th is a sharp. You could write F## (or Fx) as a G, but then your scale would have no F note in it but two different G's. Every time you put down an G note, you'd have to attached a sharp or natural to indicate which note is to be played. It's clearer to have an Fx and a G# than to have a G and a G#. And some will insist that every scale should have one of each letter-note.

I also suspect than in just intonation there's a difference between an augmented note and what would be the equivalent note in equivalent temperament (i.e., Fx is not actually the same sound/frequency as G). This answer to another question does a good job of explaining that.

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For example: In the G# harmonic minor scale, what's the seventh note? G#, A#, B, C#, D#, E, and... well, it's got to be some kind of F, right? And it has to be a half-step below G#. So it must be an F## (does <sup></sup> not work in comments?). – Alex Basson Apr 27 '11 at 0:39
+1, thanks for the example. (<sup> and [tag:tagname] don't work, among others.) – Matthew Read Apr 27 '11 at 1:15
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The G# major scale has this too (6+2#): G# A# B# C# D# E# Fx, enharmonic of Ab major scale (5b) : Ab Bb C Db Eb F Gb. – ogerard May 16 '11 at 14:58

It's spelling. It's like "hear" vs. "here". You wouldn't write "Come over hear so I can here you better" even though it sounds the same.

A major triad is spelled as if the notes are a certain distance apart. On the staff the notes will be on three lines or three spaces. In the key of C sharp minor, the tonic chord is C sharp, E, G sharp. You write it as C E G without the sharps because the sharps are already in the key signature. To turn it into a major chord you write C , E sharp, G -- not C, F natural, G.

Now suppose you're in B major. The third note of the scale is D sharp. To build a minor chord on D sharp you write D, F, A (which you play as D sharp, F sharp, A sharp because of the key signature). Now to make it a major chord you write D, F double-sharp, A.

There are times when you might write D sharp, G natural, A sharp when the chord has a different meaning. It has the same notes but it's functioning as something other than a major triad because of the chords that come before and after it. Again, it's like "here" vs. "hear".

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The flat or sharp symbols (not yet considering double-sharps and double-flats, we'll get to that) are used for two purposes:

  1. to indicate how the diatonic notes of a key different from the notes in the key of C
  2. to indicate how chromatic notes differ from the diatonic notes

It's in the latter case you encounter double-sharps and double-flats.

Consider the case of D major: F♯ and C♯ are notes in the scale (the third degree and seventh degree respectively). This is an example of the first type. But if you augmented the 5th in D major, you'd write it A♯. This is an example of the second type. NOTE that you couldn't write an augmented 5th in D major as B♭ because the fifth is an A and you're raising that one semi-tone.

When you raise or lower a diatonic note, it keeps its letter name. Now say you were augmenting the third. The diatonic note is already marked with a sharp, so you have to use a double-sharp to indicate it's raised a semi-tone. Hence it becomes Double sharp (G would be incorrect as that would be a fourth in D major, not an augmented third; similarly a diminished fourth in D major would be G♭ not F♯)

In B major, with its diatonic notes: B C♯ D♯ E F♯ G♯ A♯, if you needed to augment the 2nd, 3rd, 5th, 6th or 7th degrees, you'd use a double sharp. NOTE if you need to augment the B or E you write them B♯ and E♯ and NOT C or F.

If the diatonic note is already flat; the diminishing by a semi-tone would require a double-flat.

If a diatonically sharp note is to be diminished or a diatonically flat note to be augmented, you typically explicitly use the natural symbol ♮.

For example, a diminished fifth degree in B major would be F♮.

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+1 This explanation is the most explanatory. – luser droog Mar 14 '12 at 17:22

It's all about conventions. It would sound pretty awkward to say that the major key of G sharp has both natural G and G sharp, don't you think?

It's also done to make obvious when there's a foreign note to the current scale (say, a natural B in a C sharp major key).

It's might be used by composers to point out certain tonal (diatonic or chromatic) relationships. For example, C sharp is "closer" to E double-sharp than to F. That way, composers can make any modulation into E double-sharp and then, by enharmony go to the "distant" F.

There's even some documented music theory about how to write the chromatic scale correctly based on the current key signature.

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The G# major example is why most musicians prefer to plan in flat keys. Less to think about even though the notes are enharmonic. – Rein Henrichs Apr 28 '11 at 22:04
I always understood that it was to help wind players cope with key transitions in complex pieces - stay with the flats when the previous section was in a flat key, or stay with the sharps and add one etc. – Michael Hetton May 2 '11 at 0:54

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