Comment on [Music Notation] What does "D M F# m/5+" mean?
spacemanspiffy@lemmy.world 11 months ago
I am guessing, and not an expert here. This may not be a definitive answer, it is just my thought process.
I guess its the first inversion of D major?
D F# A - D Major F# A D - D Major, first inversion
Since F# to A is a minor third, that to me explains the F# minor. F# to D is a a raised 5th, aka augmented 5th, and I am pretty sure + is the symbol for augmented.
Ok after writing this out, I think I am correct, but please, anyone else, correct me if not.
Seems that the software is thinking of the first inversion of D major as F# minor with an augmented 5th. Weird but I guess not technically wrong.