The circle of fifths is the map of all 12 keys and their relationships — and it's the most powerful navigation tool in music theory. Understanding it means understanding why certain chord progressions feel natural, why keys are related, and how modes connect across the entire harmonic landscape.
Moving clockwise around the circle, each key is a perfect 5th higher than the previous one: C → G → D → A → E → B → F♯ → D♭ → A♭ → E♭ → B♭ → F → back to C. Each step clockwise adds one sharp to the key signature. Each step counter-clockwise adds one flat.
Every position on the circle has 7 modes built into it. The key of C Major (no sharps or flats) contains: C Ionian, D Dorian, E Phrygian, F Lydian, G Mixolydian, A Aeolian, B Locrian. The modes are embedded in every key on the circle.
If you're in D Dorian, the parent major scale is C Major (D is the 2nd degree of C). On the circle, C is one position counter-clockwise from G. Knowing this, you can instantly find the parent key for any mode by moving counter-clockwise by the mode's position number.
The Dead Sea Scales 5 Missing Notes™ system maps the 5 chromatic notes that fall between the circle-of-fifths keys — the notes that aren't in any diatonic major scale but create the exotic, jazz, and world music sounds when added. Understanding the circle of fifths is the prerequisite for understanding the 5 Missing Notes system.
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