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Sorry, not time at hand right now to listen through the old Beatles catalog. But I estimate, from memory, that you hear that thing in around every third or fourth Beatles song from the early days. Probably on the Help album I think. Sometimes I've also heard the Beatles change a typical major subdominant into a minor for a stick. That would hint at an augmented fifth from the main key's perspective and as such not as much "breaking rules" as the key change (major/minor). per On Sun, Jul 17, 2011 at 3:24 PM, Bill Fox <billyfox@soundscapes.us> wrote: > On 7/17/11 8:02 AM, Per Boysen wrote: >> >> Step 3. Analyze "breaking the rules". >> One early famous example is how Lennon/McCartney used to suddenly >> throw in a minor chord where classic music theory would predict a >> major chord (and this of cause implying different song harmony and >> melody playing at that particular part of the song). > > Hi Per, > > Can you cite a specific example and name a song and where the minor > chord is > located in that song? > > Cheers, > > Bill > >