81/80: Difference between revisions
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81/80 is the smallest [[superparticular]] interval which belongs to the [[5-limit]]. Like [[16/15]], [[625/624]], [[2401/2400]] and [[4096/4095]] it has a fourth power as a numerator. Fourth powers are squares, and any superparticular comma with a square numerator is the ratio between two wider successive superparticular intervals, because {{nowrap|''n''<sup>2</sup>/(''n''<sup>2</sup> − 1) {{=}} ''n''/(''n'' − 1) ÷ (''n'' + 1)/''n''}} (which is to say 81/80 is a [[square superparticular]]). 81/80 is in fact the difference between [[10/9]] and [[9/8]], the product of which is the just major third, [[5/4]]. That the numerator is a fourth power entails that the wider of these two intervals itself has a square numerator; 9/8 is the interval between the successive superparticulars 4/3 and 3/2. | 81/80 is the smallest [[superparticular]] interval which belongs to the [[5-limit]]. Like [[16/15]], [[625/624]], [[2401/2400]] and [[4096/4095]] it has a fourth power as a numerator. Fourth powers are squares, and any superparticular comma with a square numerator is the ratio between two wider successive superparticular intervals, because {{nowrap|''n''<sup>2</sup>/(''n''<sup>2</sup> − 1) {{=}} ''n''/(''n'' − 1) ÷ (''n'' + 1)/''n''}} (which is to say 81/80 is a [[square superparticular]]). 81/80 is in fact the difference between [[10/9]] and [[9/8]], the product of which is the just major third, [[5/4]]. That the numerator is a fourth power entails that the wider of these two intervals itself has a square numerator; 9/8 is the interval between the successive superparticulars 4/3 and 3/2. | ||
== Use in recorded music == | |||
[https://youtu.be/DO7yTiM-YJk?si=e4wVU4IlbITCAaNG&t=325 This passage] from [[Ben Johnston]]'s 9th string quartet, near the end of movement 1, makes a sudden and prominent use of the 81/80 comma, which demonstrates how a simple progression with held common tones can quickly lead to severe interference [[Beat|beating]], rupturing the diatonic collection routinely associated with the [[5-limit]] and exposing "C major" as anything but simple. | |||
[[Monroe Golden]]'s ''Incongruity'' uses just-intonation chord progressions that exploit this comma<ref>[http://untwelve.org/interviews/golden UnTwelve's interview to Monroe Golden]</ref>. | [[Monroe Golden]]'s ''Incongruity'' uses just-intonation chord progressions that exploit this comma<ref>[http://untwelve.org/interviews/golden UnTwelve's interview to Monroe Golden]</ref>. | ||
[https://x.com/its_adamneely/status/1249700624003989508 Adam Neely's harmonization] of ''the licc'' pumps upward by 81/80 every measure. After 9 iterations, D modulates nearly to E. | |||
== Temperaments == | == Temperaments == | ||
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* [[40/27]] – its [[fifth complement]] | * [[40/27]] – its [[fifth complement]] | ||
* [[1ed81/80]] – its equal multiplication | * [[1ed81/80]] – its equal multiplication | ||
* [[ | * [[Syntonoschisma]], the difference by which a stack of seven 81/80s falls short of [[12/11]] | ||
* [[Mercator's comma]] | * [[Mercator's comma]] | ||
* [[Pythagorean comma]] | * [[Pythagorean comma]] |