Tenney norm: Difference between revisions
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The '''Tenney norm''', otherwise known as '''harmonic distance''' ('''HD''') or '''Tenney height''', is commonly used as a measure of [[complexity]] for [[just interval]]s. If ''n''/''d'' is a positive rational number reduced to its lowest terms, then the [[Benedetti height]] is the integer ''nd''. Often it is more convenient instead to take the logarithm, usually base 2 ([[log2]]), of the Benedetti height, leading to the Tenney norm. | |||
If ''n''/''d'' is a positive rational number reduced to its lowest terms, then the [[Benedetti height]] is the integer ''nd''. Often it is more convenient instead to take the logarithm, usually base 2 ([[log2]]), of the | |||
== Computation == | == Computation == | ||
=== Ratio form === | === Ratio form === | ||
The Tenney | The Tenney norm of a ratio ''n''/''d'' is given by | ||
$$\log_2 (nd) $$ | |||
=== Vector form === | === Vector form === | ||
The Tenney | The Tenney norm of a [[harmonic limit|''p''-limit]] [[monzo]] {{nowrap|'''m''' {{=}} {{monzo| ''m''<sub>1</sub> ''m''<sub>2</sub> … ''m''<sub>π (''p'')</sub> }}}} (π being the {{w|prime-counting function}}) is given by | ||
$$ | |||
= \ | \begin{align} | ||
= \log_2 (2^{ | \norm{H \vec m}_1 &= \abs{m_1} + \abs{m_2} \log_2 (3) + \ldots + \abs{m_{\pi (p)}} \log_2 (p) \\ | ||
&= \log_2\left(2^{\abs{m_1}} \cdot 3^{\abs{m_2}} \cdot \ldots \cdot p^{\abs{m_{\pi (p)}}}\right) | |||
\end{align} | |||
$$ | |||
where H is the transformation matrix such that, for the prime basis Q = {{val| 2 3 5 … ''p'' }}, | where ''H'' is the transformation matrix such that, for the prime basis {{nowrap| ''Q'' {{=}} {{val| 2 3 5 … ''p'' }} }}, | ||
$$ H = \operatorname {diag} (\log_2 (Q)) $$ | |||
== Examples == | == Examples == | ||
{| class="wikitable" | {| class="wikitable center-2" | ||
|- | |||
! Interval name | ! Interval name | ||
! Ratio (''n''/''d'') | ! Ratio (''n''/''d'') | ||
! Monzo | ! Monzo | ||
! Tenney | ! Tenney norm | ||
|- | |- | ||
| Unison | | Unison | ||
| Line 55: | Line 55: | ||
| 4.807 | | 4.807 | ||
|} | |} | ||
== History and terminology == | |||
In general mathematics, this measurement is known as ''log-product complexity''. With respect to microtonal tuning, this measurement was first described by [[James Tenney]], who himself called it ''harmonic distance''.<ref>[https://www.plainsound.org/pdfs/JC&ToH.pdf ''John Cage and the Theory of Harmony'']. James Tenney. </ref><ref>[https://zh.booksc.eu/book/68954431/f87a1d ''On the Conception and Measure of Consonance'']. Alex Wand. </ref><ref>[https://scholar.sun.ac.za/bitstream/handle/10019.1/98644/brand_signal_2016.pdf?sequence=2&isAllowed=y ''A Signal-Based Model of Teleology in Tonal Music'']. Mark André Brand. p. 28. "Tenney's measure of ''harmonic distance'' (Hd) is thus singled out as perhaps his most 'crucial development', affording him the means towards 'compactness'. His is a Manhattan, rather than Euclidean metric, defined as {{nowrap|Hd(''a''/''b'') {{=}} ''k'' log(''ab'')}}, with ''a''/''b'' the maximally reduced ratio representing the frequency difference, and {{nowrap|''k'' {{=}} 1}} indicating measure in octaves."</ref> This terminology was also used in [[Paul Erlich]]'s paper [[A Middle Path]]<ref>Wherein Erlich writes: "This is why, in Tenney’s terminology, the taxicab distance an interval traverses in his lattice is the 'Harmonic Distance' of that interval."</ref>. | |||
== See also == | == See also == | ||
* [[Generalized Tenney norms and Tp interval space|Generalized Tenney norms and T<sub>''p''</sub> interval space]] | |||
== References == | |||
<references /> | |||
[[Category:Consonance and dissonance]] | |||
[[Category: | |||
[[Category:Harmonic entropy]] | [[Category:Harmonic entropy]] | ||
[[Category: | [[Category:Interval complexity measures]] | ||
[[Category: | [[Category:Tenney-weighted measures]] | ||
Latest revision as of 02:17, 3 September 2025
The Tenney norm, otherwise known as harmonic distance (HD) or Tenney height, is commonly used as a measure of complexity for just intervals. If n/d is a positive rational number reduced to its lowest terms, then the Benedetti height is the integer nd. Often it is more convenient instead to take the logarithm, usually base 2 (log2), of the Benedetti height, leading to the Tenney norm.
Computation
Ratio form
The Tenney norm of a ratio n/d is given by
$$\log_2 (nd) $$
Vector form
The Tenney norm of a p-limit monzo m = [m1 m2 … mπ (p)⟩ (π being the prime-counting function) is given by
$$ \begin{align} \norm{H \vec m}_1 &= \abs{m_1} + \abs{m_2} \log_2 (3) + \ldots + \abs{m_{\pi (p)}} \log_2 (p) \\ &= \log_2\left(2^{\abs{m_1}} \cdot 3^{\abs{m_2}} \cdot \ldots \cdot p^{\abs{m_{\pi (p)}}}\right) \end{align} $$
where H is the transformation matrix such that, for the prime basis Q = ⟨2 3 5 … p],
$$ H = \operatorname {diag} (\log_2 (Q)) $$
Examples
| Interval name | Ratio (n/d) | Monzo | Tenney norm |
|---|---|---|---|
| Unison | 1/1 | [0⟩ | 0 |
| Octave | 2/1 | [1⟩ | 1 |
| Just perfect fifth | 3/2 | [-1 1⟩ | 2.585 |
| Just major third | 5/4 | [-2 0 1⟩ | 4.322 |
| Harmonic seventh | 7/4 | [-2 0 0 1⟩ | 4.807 |
History and terminology
In general mathematics, this measurement is known as log-product complexity. With respect to microtonal tuning, this measurement was first described by James Tenney, who himself called it harmonic distance.[1][2][3] This terminology was also used in Paul Erlich's paper A Middle Path[4].
See also
References
- ↑ John Cage and the Theory of Harmony. James Tenney.
- ↑ On the Conception and Measure of Consonance. Alex Wand.
- ↑ A Signal-Based Model of Teleology in Tonal Music. Mark André Brand. p. 28. "Tenney's measure of harmonic distance (Hd) is thus singled out as perhaps his most 'crucial development', affording him the means towards 'compactness'. His is a Manhattan, rather than Euclidean metric, defined as Hd(a/b) = k log(ab), with a/b the maximally reduced ratio representing the frequency difference, and k = 1 indicating measure in octaves."
- ↑ Wherein Erlich writes: "This is why, in Tenney’s terminology, the taxicab distance an interval traverses in his lattice is the 'Harmonic Distance' of that interval."