User:Holger Stoltenberg/embed: Difference between revisions
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Link with single brackets: [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Pedal_steel_played_with_reverb.ogv steelguitar] | Link with single brackets: [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Pedal_steel_played_with_reverb.ogv steelguitar] | ||
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==== 7 Levels of Jazz Harmony ==== | ==== 7 Levels of Jazz Harmony ==== | ||
Revision as of 15:11, 4 March 2025
...this page is used to check out embedding of videos.
The fret marks guide the player to 12edo intervals, while the intervals between the strings are often tuned differently (i.e. just intervals, meantone tuning, various best-practice tunings)
Audio only
Link to Wikipedia source
Link with single brackets: steelguitar
- ↑ Video 1 - Webressource and licensing:
DaveB11th, CC BY 4.0 , via Wikimedia Commons
The original video is 3:14 minutes long. For demonstration purposes, an excerpt from 0:01 to 01:55 is shown here.
7 Levels of Jazz Harmony
Neely-intonalism
In 2020 music educator Adam Neely picked up the term intonalism and used it in his Seven Levels of Jazz Harmony, with a somewhat different and rather ambiguous intent, where he seemed to describe the use of a tempered scale (often 12edo) for the lead melody of a piece. The current melody note at any given point in time is then treated as a reference pitch, and the current backing chord uses pure just intonation, tuned relative to the current reference pitch. In a sense this is an inverse form of adaptive just intonation where the bass line adjusts to a tempered scale and the melody and harmony notes tune to it.
To distinguish this form of intonalism from the other, you could call it Neely-intonalism.[idiosyncratic term]