One question I have, which no one will answer probably, is why Debussy wrote in those very complex key signatures such as 6 flats. Then he riddles the score with accidentals, to the point that it soon becomes apparent he is really between keys, or really not honoring the conventions of any key.
Also, I think that a key in sharps is more powerful than an enharmonic key with flats.
Then if there were certain moods to keys as past composers have intended, then we should abandon modern concert pitch to the pitch past composers were using. We are a bit on the bright side. About a semitone on the bright side when compared to baroque music. So transpose all baroque music down a semitone to hear what they heard?
It's probably an association with the word "sharp" that makes things sound like it can hurt you than with the word "flat" which wouldn't be able to cut butter with a butter knife. It's completely mental than anything aurally percieved because there is no difference.Composers will use the enharmonic spelling to avoid too many sharps/flats, double sharps/flats.One well-known example: Beethoven's "Moonlight" sonata, 2nd movement, written in Db major but should be percieved as C#major to contrast the C# minor.
i love anything C major..probably explains why mozart is my favorite composerPS: Save me the BS on how mozart is dull/boring/simple/redundant/repetetive...because he is very sexy...yes..sexy indeed
What about Scriabin? Surely his etudes in C# major and D# minor are not easy to read and use many more accidentals than their enharmonic equivalents would have. Why didn't he use enharmonic spelling?
You have your opinions and I have mine.I prefer to think that there is something aural, something like a vibe for each key that makes it different from the others.