33/32: Difference between revisions
ArrowHead294 (talk | contribs) mNo edit summary |
m Links |
||
Line 8: | Line 8: | ||
'''33/32''', the '''al-Farabi quarter tone'''<ref group="note">The name goes back to Abu Nasr Al-Farabi (in Western reception also Alpharabius), see [[Wikipedia: Al-Farabi]].</ref>, '''undecimal quarter tone''', or '''undecimal formal comma''', is a [[superparticular]] [[ratio]] which differs by a [[385/384|keenanisma (385/384)]], from the [[36/35|septimal quarter tone (36/35)]]. Raising a just [[4/3|perfect fourth (4/3)]] by the al-Farabi quarter-tone leads to the [[11/8|undecimal superfourth (11/8)]]. Raising it instead by 36/35 leads to the [[48/35|septimal superfourth (48/35)]] which approximates 11/8. Apart from this, it is also the interval between [[32/27]] and [[11/9]], and between [[9/8]] and [[12/11]]. | '''33/32''', the '''al-Farabi quarter tone'''<ref group="note">The name goes back to Abu Nasr Al-Farabi (in Western reception also Alpharabius), see [[Wikipedia: Al-Farabi]].</ref>, '''undecimal quarter tone''', or '''undecimal formal comma''', is a [[superparticular]] [[ratio]] which differs by a [[385/384|keenanisma (385/384)]], from the [[36/35|septimal quarter tone (36/35)]]. Raising a just [[4/3|perfect fourth (4/3)]] by the al-Farabi quarter-tone leads to the [[11/8|undecimal superfourth (11/8)]]. Raising it instead by 36/35 leads to the [[48/35|septimal superfourth (48/35)]] which approximates 11/8. Apart from this, it is also the interval between [[32/27]] and [[11/9]], and between [[9/8]] and [[12/11]]. | ||
Because of its close proximity to [[28/27]], from which it differs only by [[Pentacircle comma|896/891]], one could reasonably argue that 33/32 is the undecimal counterpart to 28/27 in a way, particularly if treated as an interval in its own right. However, despite this, 33/32 generally has properties more akin to a chromatic interval than to anything resembling a diatonic interval. In addition, 33/32 could arguably have been used as a melodic interval in the Greek Enharmonic Genus, and if so, there are several possibilities for the resulting [[tetrachord]]. The most obvious of these possibilities would be to include 32:33:34 within the interval of a perfect fourth, in which case this ancient Greek scale can be approximated in [[22edo]] and [[24edo]], with the comma 1089/1088 being tempered out so that 33/32 and 34/33 are equated. Another possibility, however, is that the semitone was [[16/15]], which, according to [[Wikipedia: Genus (music)|Wikipedia]], is indirectly attested to in the writings of Ptolemy, and thus, if 33/32 was in fact used, it would have been paired with [[512/495]]. | Because of its close proximity to [[28/27]], from which it differs only by [[Pentacircle comma|896/891]], one could reasonably argue that 33/32 is the [[undecimal]] counterpart to 28/27 in a way, particularly if treated as an interval in its own right. However, despite this, 33/32 generally has properties more akin to a chromatic interval than to anything resembling a diatonic interval. In addition, 33/32 could arguably have been used as a melodic interval in the Greek Enharmonic Genus, and if so, there are several possibilities for the resulting [[tetrachord]]. The most obvious of these possibilities would be to include 32:33:34 within the interval of a perfect fourth, in which case this [[ancient Greek]] scale can be approximated in [[22edo]] and [[24edo]], with the comma 1089/1088 being tempered out so that 33/32 and 34/33 are equated. Another possibility, however, is that the semitone was [[16/15]], which, according to [[Wikipedia: Genus (music)|Wikipedia]], is indirectly attested to in the writings of [[Ptolemy]], and thus, if 33/32 was in fact used, it would have been paired with [[512/495]]. | ||
It should be noted that in some significant respects, treating 33/32 as a comma rather than as an important musical interval in its own right sells it short, and results in the failure to correctly define the properties of certain intervals. Namely, a stack of two 33/32 intervals equals [[1089/1024]], a type of chromatic semitone that has [[128/121]] as its diatonic counterpart. Furthermore, 33/32 is one of two distinct 11-limit quartertone intervals required to add up to a whole tone, with [[4096/3993]] being the other—specifically, adding 4096/3993 to a stack of three 33/32 quartertones yields [[9/8]]. In addition to all this, 33/32 finds a special place in [[Alpharabian tuning]] and it is from this area of microtonal theory, among a select few others, that 33/32 acquires the names "'''Alpharabian parachroma'''" and "'''Alpharabian ultraprime'''", names that at this point are only used in said theoretical contexts. While many may be accustomed to thinking of 33/32 and [[729/704]] as "semiaugmented primes", this analysis is only completely accurate when [[243/242]] is tempered out. | It should be noted that in some significant respects, treating 33/32 as a comma rather than as an important musical interval in its own right sells it short, and results in the failure to correctly define the properties of certain intervals. Namely, a stack of two 33/32 intervals equals [[1089/1024]], a type of chromatic semitone that has [[128/121]] as its diatonic counterpart. Furthermore, 33/32 is one of two distinct 11-limit quartertone intervals required to add up to a whole tone, with [[4096/3993]] being the other—specifically, adding 4096/3993 to a stack of three 33/32 quartertones yields [[9/8]]. In addition to all this, 33/32 finds a special place in [[Alpharabian tuning]] and it is from this area of microtonal theory, among a select few others, that 33/32 acquires the names "'''Alpharabian parachroma'''" and "'''Alpharabian ultraprime'''", names that at this point are only used in said theoretical contexts. While many may be accustomed to thinking of 33/32 and [[729/704]] as "semiaugmented primes", this analysis is only completely accurate when [[243/242]] is tempered out. | ||
== Temperaments == | == Temperaments == | ||
If treated as a comma to be tempered out in the 2.3.11 subgroup, it results in the [[no-fives subgroup temperaments #Io|io]] temperament, giving rise to the name '''io comma'''. The temperament is generated by a flat fifth ([[7edo]] and [[26edo]] being good tunings) which represents both [[3/2]] and [[16/11]]. | If treated as a comma to be tempered out in the 2.3.11 [[subgroup]], it results in the [[no-fives subgroup temperaments #Io|io]] temperament, giving rise to the name '''io comma'''. The temperament is generated by a flat fifth ([[7edo]] and [[26edo]] being good tunings) which represents both [[3/2]] and [[16/11]]. | ||
== Approximation == | == Approximation == |