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What does all this have to do with Slash's preferred choice in Top Hot :) -----Original Message----- From: Douglas Baldwin [mailto:coyotelk@optonline.net] Sent: Sunday, February 08, 2004 1:36 PM To: asterion@hell.com; db@biink.com Cc: Loopers-Delight@loopers-delight.com Subject: Re: Even More out of tune It's a floor wax! It's a dessert topping! Yo, my fellow scholar dudes and dudettes; Diatonic comes from "dia" (across) and "tonic" (tone or note) and refers to all the note combinations in a given group of notes. One may state with assurance that an F9 chord is not diatonic to E harmonic minor; or that D#dim7 IS diatonic to E harmonic minor. If you were Dicky Betts, soloing in your classic Dicky Betts hexatonic major scale, the major seventh would be non-diatonic. The equation of "diatonic" with "major" (and all of its modes) has come about because so many people use the term to refer ONLY to the major tonality. If this exclusive use continues, I will bow to popular pressure, but until then you're gonna have to pry the broader use of "diatonic" from my stiff, dead fingers. Douglas Baldwin, coyote-at-large coyotelk@optonline.net