Closely related keys are the keys whose signatures differ from the home key by no more than one sharp or flat: the relative key, the dominant and its relative, and the subdominant and its relative. They share most of their pitches, which makes modulating between them smooth and common in tonal music.
Closely related keys are the keys that sit right next door to your home key. Formally, a key is closely related if its key signature differs from the home key's by one accidental or fewer. Every key has exactly five closely related keys: its relative key, its dominant key, the dominant's relative, its subdominant key, and the subdominant's relative.
Here's the fast way to find them. On the circle of fifths, take your home key plus its two immediate neighbors, then grab the relative major or minor of all three. For C major, that gives you A minor (relative), G major and E minor (one sharp), and F major and D minor (one flat). Notice what those keys have in common with C major: almost every note. That huge overlap of shared pitches is exactly why composers modulate to closely related keys constantly. The music can slide into the new key through chords both keys share (called pivot chords) without anything sounding jarring.
Key relationships run through the entire AP Music Theory course. You build the raw materials in Units 1 and 2 with major and minor key signatures and the circle of fifths, and closely related keys are the payoff for knowing that material cold. Once you hit Unit 7, secondary dominants tonicize chords that are, not coincidentally, the chords whose keys are closely related to the home key. V/V points toward the dominant key, V/vi points toward the relative minor, and so on. When tonal music in this course actually changes key, it almost always moves to a closely related one, most often the dominant (in major) or the relative major (in minor). If you can rattle off the five closely related keys for any tonic, you can predict where a piece is headed before the analysis question even asks.
Keep studying AP Music Theory Unit 7
Visual cheatsheet
view galleryRelative Minor (Unit 2)
The relative key is the closest of the closely related keys because it shares the exact same key signature, zero accidentals of difference. A minor key modulating to its relative major is one of the most common moves in tonal music, so spot it first.
Circle of Fifths (Units 1-2)
The circle of fifths is basically a map of key closeness. Your home key, the key one step clockwise, the key one step counterclockwise, and all three of their relatives are your five closely related keys. Anything farther around the circle is distantly related.
Secondary Dominants and Tonicization (Unit 7)
Secondary dominants like V/V and V/vi briefly treat another chord as a temporary tonic, and the chords that get tonicized are the ones whose keys are closely related to home. Tonicization is a quick visit to a closely related key; modulation is moving in.
Distantly Related Keys (Units 1-2)
Distantly related keys differ by two or more accidentals, so they share fewer pitches and fewer pivot chords. That makes modulating to them more dramatic and less common in the music AP Music Theory asks you to analyze.
No released FRQ asks you to define closely related keys outright, but the concept is baked into how the exam tests harmony. Score-analysis multiple-choice questions can present a passage that modulates and ask you to name the new key. The answer is almost always a closely related key, so generating the five candidates first turns a hard question into a process of elimination. In harmonic analysis, you also need closely related keys to tell tonicization apart from true modulation and to label pivot chords correctly in both keys. On the aural side, recognizing that a melody has shifted to the dominant or the relative major helps you hear where the new tonic sits before you write anything down.
Parallel keys share the same tonic but different key signatures, like C major and C minor. They sound related because they start on the same note, but their signatures differ by three accidentals, so parallel keys are NOT closely related. Closely related keys usually have different tonics but nearly identical key signatures. The test is the signature, not the tonic.
A key is closely related to the home key if its key signature differs by no more than one accidental.
Every key has exactly five closely related keys: the relative key, the dominant and its relative, and the subdominant and its relative.
On the circle of fifths, the closely related keys are your home key's two immediate neighbors plus the relatives of all three keys.
Most modulations in tonal music go to a closely related key, especially the dominant from a major key and the relative major from a minor key.
Parallel keys (same tonic, like C major and C minor) are not closely related because their signatures differ by three accidentals.
Secondary dominants in Unit 7 tonicize chords whose keys are closely related to the home key, which is why V/V, V/vi, and V/IV come up so often.
They are the keys whose signatures differ from the home key by one accidental or fewer. For C major, that means A minor, G major, E minor, F major, and D minor, which are the relative, dominant, subdominant, and the relatives of those two keys.
Exactly five. Take the home key's two neighbors on the circle of fifths, then add the relative major or minor of the home key and both neighbors.
No. C major and C minor share a tonic, but their key signatures differ by three accidentals (C minor has three flats), which puts parallel keys outside the closely related family.
Relative keys share the exact same key signature, like G major and E minor. Every relative key is closely related, but closely related keys also include keys one accidental away, like the dominant and subdominant. Relative is one specific relationship; closely related is the whole five-key set.
Because the two keys share most of their pitches and several chords, the music can pass through a pivot chord that belongs to both keys and arrive in the new key smoothly. That's why the most common modulations are to the dominant in major and the relative major in minor.
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