The 9EDO scale, which divides the octave into nine equal parts each of 133+1/3 cents precisely, has the peculiar property of representing certain [[Harmonic Limit|7-limit]] intervals almost exactly. A 7-limit version of 9EDO goes
1: 27/25 133.238 large limma, BP small semitone
== Theory ==
2: 7/6 266.871 septimal minor third
[[File:9edo scale.mp3|thumb|A chromatic 9edo scale on C.]]
3: 63/50 400.108 quasi-equal major third
4: 49/36 533.742 Arabic lute acute fourth
5: 72/49 666.258 Arabic lute grave fifth
6: 100/63 799.892 quasi-equal minor sixth
7: 12/7 933.129 septimal major sixth
8: 50/27 1066.762 grave major seventh
9: 2/1 1200.000 octave
Here the characterizations are taken from [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scala_%28program%29|Scala]], which also describes the scale itself as "Pelog Nawanada: Sunda". Chords such as 1/1 - 7/6 - 49/36 - 12/7/1 are therefore natural ones for 9EDO. The above scale generates the [[Just intonation subgroups|just intonation subgroup]] 2.27/25.7/3, which is closely related to 9EDO.
9edo is the most basic tuning which supports an [[antidiatonic]] scale. Its fifth is considerably flatter than just, but still falls into the category of "fifth" despite this. 9edo is also the first edo to have distinct major and minor chords (if 5edo's tendo and arto chords are ignored).
=Notation=
9edo splits the octave into three parts, each representing the major third 5/4, similarly to 12edo, which is of moderate accuracy. A similarly crude approximation of 11/8 (a sharp fourth) is available at the perfect fourth of 4 steps, which means 9edo can be seen as a simple 2.5.11 system. Looking at the intervals in this subgroup, the submajor second 11/10 is tuned to 133 cents (extremely flat) and 25/22 is even worse (but still consistent); the supermajor sixth 55/32 is tuned very accurately at 933 cents (only slightly flat). Overall, 9edo is not a great system for approximating low-complexity JI intervals consistently. However, if we turn to inconsistent representations, we see quite a few options before us. In particular, the 9edo scale has the peculiar property of representing certain [[7-limit]] intervals almost exactly, but not the harmonic 7/4 (a subminor seventh) itself (unless [[semaphore]], which equates it with the supermajor sixth 12/7, is taken as an acceptable temperament in this tuning). A 7-limit version of 9edo goes
9edo can be notated with conventional notation, including the staff, note names, relative notation, etc. in two ways. The first preserves the __melodic__ meaning of sharp/flat, major/minor and aug/dim, in that sharp is higher pitched than flat, and major/aug is wider than minor/dim. The disadvantage to this approach is that conventional interval arithmetic no longer works. e.g. M2 + M2 isn't M3, and D + M2 isn't E. Chord names are different because C - E - G isn't P1 - M3 - P5.
1: [[27/25]] 133.238 large limma, BP small semitone
The second approach preserves the __harmonic__ meaning of sharp/flat, major/minor and aug/dim, in that the former is always further fifthwards on the chain of fifths than the latter. Sharp is lower in pitch than flat, and major/aug is narrower than minor/dim. While this approach may seem bizarre at first, interval arithmetic and chord names work as usual. Furthermore, conventional 12edo music can be directly translated to 9edo "on the fly".
||= 0 ||= 0 ||= 1/1 ||= perfect unison ||= D ||= perfect unison ||= D ||
||= 1 ||= 133 ||= 13/12, 12/11 ||= minor 2nd ||= E ||= major 2nd ||= E ||
||= 2 ||= 267 ||= 7/6 ||= major 2nd, minor 3rd ||= E#, Fb ||= minor 2nd, major 3rd ||= Eb, F# ||
||= 3 ||= 400 ||= 5/4, 9/7 ||= major 3rd ||= F ||= minor 3rd ||= F ||
||= 4 ||= 533 ||= 4/3, 11/8 ||= perfect 4th ||= G ||= perfect 4th ||= G ||
||= 5 ||= 667 ||= 16/11, 3/2 ||= perfect 5th ||= A ||= perfect 5th ||= A ||
||= 6 ||= 800 ||= 14/9, 8/5 ||= minor 6th ||= B ||= major 6th ||= B ||
||= 7 ||= 933 ||= 12/7 ||= major 6th, minor 7th ||= B#, Cb ||= minor 6th, major 7th ||= Bb, C# ||
||= 8 ||= 1067 ||= 11/6, 24/13 ||= major 7th ||= C ||= minor 7th ||= C ||
||= 9 ||= 1200 ||= 2/1 ||= octave ||= D ||= octave ||= D ||
4: [[49/36]] 533.742 Arabic lute acute fourth
9EDO contains a pentatonic [[MOSScales|MOS scale]] -- 2L 3s (1 3 1 3 1) -- with a heptatonic extension -- 2L 5s (1 1 2 1 1 2 1, sometimes called "mavila" or "antidiatonic"). Indonesian pelog scales sometimes use five-tone subsets of a seven-tone superset in a similar way, and it has been suggested that Indonesian gamelan music stems from a [[http://www.neuroscience-of-music.se/pelog%20historical.htm|9EDO tradition]].
5: [[72/49]] 666.258 Arabic lute grave fifth
[[media type="custom" key="24802430"]]
6: [[100/63]] 799.892 quasi-equal minor sixth
[[file:9ed2-001.svg]]
7: [[12/7]] 933.129 septimal major sixth
=Images=
8: [[50/27]] 1066.762 grave major seventh
[[image:9edo wheel.png width="385" height="385"]]
9: [[2/1]] 1200.000 octave
==Commas==
Chords such as {{dash|1/1, 7/6, 49/36, 12/7|med}} are therefore natural ones for 9edo. The above scale generates the [[just intonation subgroup]] 2.27/25.7/3, which is closely related to 9edo.
9 EDO tempers out the following commas. (Note: This assumes val < 9 14 21 25 31 33 |.)
||~ Comma ||~ Monzo ||~ Value (Cents) ||~ Name 1 ||~ Name 2 ||~ Name 3 ||
=== Odd harmonics ===
||= 135/128 || | -7 3 1 > ||> 92.18 ||= Major Chroma ||= Major Limma || Pelogic Comma ||
9edo is the first odd composite edo, containing [[3edo]] as a subset.
* [[https://soundcloud.com/overtoneshock/tencaious-chorale-9-edo-studio-version|Tenacious Chorale (only movement I is in 9-EDO)]] by Stephen Weigel
The [[ennealimmal]] temperament contains 9edo as a subset (splitting 2/1 into 9 equal parts) and is excellent in the 7-limit. However, 9edo by itself tempers out 27/25 by [[Val|patent val]], rather than representing it as 1\9 like in ennealimmal, although the 9bccd val contains both the 27/25 and 7/6 representations above and therefore supports ennealimmal.
* [[https://soundcloud.com/overtoneshock/in-our-own-little-worlds-9-edo|In Our Own Lonely Worlds]] by Stephen Weigel
* Nocturne in 9tet by [[http://home.snafu.de/djwolf/WorksDescriptive.htm|Daniel Wolf]]
* //[[http://www.h-pi.com/mp3/Prelude9ET.mp3|Prelude in 9ET]]// by [[Aaron Andrew Hunt]]
* //[[http://micro.soonlabel.com/9-edo/daily20110629_fts_e_guit_9et.mp3|Improvisation for Electric Guitar in 9 edo]]// by [[http://www.chrisvaisvil.com|Chris Vaisvil]][[media type="custom" key="10221463"]]
* [[http://micro.soonlabel.com/gene_ward_smith/Others/Winchester/08%20-%208.%209%20octave.mp3|Comets Over Flatland 8]] by [[Randy Winchester]]
* [[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bDFCsCoaUO4|Nine tones per Octave (9-EDO / 9-TET)]] by [[Ivor Darreg]]
* [[http://micro.soonlabel.com/9-edo/daily20111008b_gerbils_at_the_wheel_of_government.mp3|Gerbils at the Wheel of Government]] by [[@http://chrisvaisvil.com/?p=1402|Chris Vaisvil]] (in 9 and 18 edo simultaneously)
* [[http://www.seraph.it/dep/det/NewWorld.mp3|New World]] by [[Carlo Serafini]] ([[http://www.seraph.it/blog_files/f533be803cb9ed1efc23fc9e2db10c6f-167.html|blog entry]])
* [[https://soundcloud.com/santiagocosentino/interdimensional-train-ride|Interdimensional Train Ride by Santiago Cosentino]]
=Ear Training=
== Notation ==
9 EDO ear-training exercises by Alex Ness available [[@https://drive.google.com/a/playgroundsessions.com/folderview?id=0BwsXD8q2VCYUamtVWEgyRFA5alU&usp=sharing#list|here]].
{{Mavila}}
In this notation, the [[enharmonic unison]] is the augmented 2nd, e.g. E♭ to F♯.
===**Instruments**===
{| class="wikitable center-all right-1 right-2"
|-
![[degree]]
![[cent]]s
! Approximate<br />Ratios
! colspan="2" | Antidiatonic<br />Major wider than minor
! colspan="2" | Diatonic<br />Major narrower than minor
The 9EDO scale, which divides the octave into nine equal parts each of 133+1/3 cents precisely, has the peculiar property of representing certain <a class="wiki_link" href="/Harmonic%20Limit">7-limit</a> intervals almost exactly. A 7-limit version of 9EDO goes<br />
rect 296 0 456 80 [https://sagittal.org#periodic-table Periodic table of EDOs with sagittal notation]
<br />
rect 20 80 296 106 [[Fractional_3-limit_notation#Bad-fifths_limma-fraction_notation |limma-fraction notation]]
1: 27/25 133.238 large limma, BP small semitone<br />
default [[File:9-EDO_Sagittal.svg]]
2: 7/6 266.871 septimal minor third<br />
</imagemap>
3: 63/50 400.108 quasi-equal major third<br />
6: 100/63 799.892 quasi-equal minor sixth<br />
7: 12/7 933.129 septimal major sixth<br />
8: 50/27 1066.762 grave major seventh<br />
9: 2/1 1200.000 octave<br />
<br />
Here the characterizations are taken from <a class="wiki_link_ext" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scala_%28program%29" rel="nofollow">Scala</a>, which also describes the scale itself as &quot;Pelog Nawanada: Sunda&quot;. Chords such as 1/1 - 7/6 - 49/36 - 12/7/1 are therefore natural ones for 9EDO. The above scale generates the <a class="wiki_link" href="/Just%20intonation%20subgroups">just intonation subgroup</a> 2.27/25.7/3, which is closely related to 9EDO.<br />
9edo can be notated with conventional notation, including the staff, note names, relative notation, etc. in two ways. The first preserves the <u>melodic</u> meaning of sharp/flat, major/minor and aug/dim, in that sharp is higher pitched than flat, and major/aug is wider than minor/dim. The disadvantage to this approach is that conventional interval arithmetic no longer works. e.g. M2 + M2 isn't M3, and D + M2 isn't E. Chord names are different because C - E - G isn't P1 - M3 - P5.<br />
<br />
The second approach preserves the <u>harmonic</u> meaning of sharp/flat, major/minor and aug/dim, in that the former is always further fifthwards on the chain of fifths than the latter. Sharp is lower in pitch than flat, and major/aug is narrower than minor/dim. While this approach may seem bizarre at first, interval arithmetic and chord names work as usual. Furthermore, conventional 12edo music can be directly translated to 9edo &quot;on the fly&quot;.<br />
<br />
== Approximation to JI ==
=== Selected just intervals ===
[[File:9ed2-001.svg|alt=alt : Your browser has no SVG support.]]
9EDO contains a pentatonic <a class="wiki_link" href="/MOSScales">MOS scale</a> -- 2L 3s (1 3 1 3 1) -- with a heptatonic extension -- 2L 5s (1 1 2 1 1 2 1, sometimes called &quot;mavila&quot; or &quot;antidiatonic&quot;). Indonesian pelog scales sometimes use five-tone subsets of a seven-tone superset in a similar way, and it has been suggested that Indonesian gamelan music stems from a <a class="wiki_link_ext" href="http://www.neuroscience-of-music.se/pelog%20historical.htm" rel="nofollow">9EDO tradition</a>.<br />
<br />
<!-- ws:start:WikiTextMediaRule:0:&lt;img src=&quot;http://www.wikispaces.com/site/embedthumbnail/custom/24802430?h=0&amp;w=0&quot; class=&quot;WikiMedia WikiMediaCustom&quot; id=&quot;wikitext@@media@@type=&amp;quot;custom&amp;quot; key=&amp;quot;24802430&amp;quot;&quot; title=&quot;Custom Media&quot;/&gt; --><object id="example" type="image/svg+xml" data="http://xenharmonic.wikispaces.com/file/view/9ed2-001.svg">alt : Your browser has no SVG support.</object><!-- ws:end:WikiTextMediaRule:0 --><br />
9edo contains a pentatonic [[mos scale]] produced by stacking 4\9 of [[2L 3s]] (1 3 1 3 1), which has a heptatonic extension, [[2L 5s]] (1 1 2 1 1 2 1, sometimes called "mavila" or "antidiatonic").
<br />
<ul><li><a class="wiki_link_ext" href="https://soundcloud.com/overtoneshock/tencaious-chorale-9-edo-studio-version" rel="nofollow">Tenacious Chorale (only movement I is in 9-EDO)</a> by Stephen Weigel</li><li><a class="wiki_link_ext" href="https://soundcloud.com/overtoneshock/in-our-own-little-worlds-9-edo" rel="nofollow">In Our Own Lonely Worlds</a> by Stephen Weigel</li><li>Nocturne in 9tet by <a class="wiki_link_ext" href="http://home.snafu.de/djwolf/WorksDescriptive.htm" rel="nofollow">Daniel Wolf</a></li><li><em><a class="wiki_link_ext" href="http://www.h-pi.com/mp3/Prelude9ET.mp3" rel="nofollow">Prelude in 9ET</a></em> by <a class="wiki_link" href="/Aaron%20Andrew%20Hunt">Aaron Andrew Hunt</a></li><li><em><a class="wiki_link_ext" href="http://micro.soonlabel.com/9-edo/daily20110629_fts_e_guit_9et.mp3" rel="nofollow">Improvisation for Electric Guitar in 9 edo</a></em> by <a class="wiki_link_ext" href="http://www.chrisvaisvil.com" rel="nofollow">Chris Vaisvil</a><!-- ws:start:WikiTextMediaRule:1:&lt;img src=&quot;http://www.wikispaces.com/site/embedthumbnail/custom/10221463?h=0&amp;w=0&quot; class=&quot;WikiMedia WikiMediaCustom&quot; id=&quot;wikitext@@media@@type=&amp;quot;custom&amp;quot; key=&amp;quot;10221463&amp;quot;&quot; title=&quot;Custom Media&quot;/&gt; --><script type="text/javascript" src="http://mediaplayer.yahoo.com/js">
You can also use 2\9, which generates mos scales of [[1L 3s]] (3 2 2 2) and [[4L 1s]] (2 2 2 2 1) and can be interpreted as either an extremely sharp [[bug]] scale or an extremely flat [[orwell]] one.
</script><!-- ws:end:WikiTextMediaRule:1 --></li><li><a class="wiki_link_ext" href="http://micro.soonlabel.com/gene_ward_smith/Others/Winchester/08%20-%208.%209%20octave.mp3" rel="nofollow">Comets Over Flatland 8</a> by <a class="wiki_link" href="/Randy%20Winchester">Randy Winchester</a></li><li><a class="wiki_link_ext" href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bDFCsCoaUO4" rel="nofollow">Nine tones per Octave (9-EDO / 9-TET)</a> by <a class="wiki_link" href="/Ivor%20Darreg">Ivor Darreg</a></li><li><a class="wiki_link_ext" href="http://micro.soonlabel.com/9-edo/daily20111008b_gerbils_at_the_wheel_of_government.mp3" rel="nofollow">Gerbils at the Wheel of Government</a> by <a class="wiki_link_ext" href="http://chrisvaisvil.com/?p=1402" rel="nofollow" target="_blank">Chris Vaisvil</a> (in 9 and 18 edo simultaneously)</li><li><a class="wiki_link_ext" href="http://www.seraph.it/dep/det/NewWorld.mp3" rel="nofollow">New World</a> by <a class="wiki_link" href="/Carlo%20Serafini">Carlo Serafini</a> (<a class="wiki_link_ext" href="http://www.seraph.it/blog_files/f533be803cb9ed1efc23fc9e2db10c6f-167.html" rel="nofollow">blog entry</a>)</li><li><a class="wiki_link_ext" href="https://soundcloud.com/santiagocosentino/interdimensional-train-ride" rel="nofollow">Interdimensional Train Ride by Santiago Cosentino</a></li></ul><br />
9 EDO ear-training exercises by Alex Ness available <a class="wiki_link_ext" href="https://drive.google.com/a/playgroundsessions.com/folderview?id=0BwsXD8q2VCYUamtVWEgyRFA5alU&amp;usp=sharing#list" rel="nofollow" target="_blank">here</a>.<br />
<br />
[[Indonesian]] pelog scales sometimes use five-tone subsets of a seven-tone superset in a similar way as the 5-tone and 7-tone mavila scale (see [[#Rank-2 temperaments|Rank-2 temperaments]]), and it has been suggested that Indonesian gamelan music stems from a [http://www.neuroscience-of-music.se/pelog%20historical.htm 9edo tradition].
As a division of the octave into 3<sup>2</sup> parts, i. e. a dominant position of the number 3, 9edo also has some suitability as base tuning for [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Klingon Klingon] music (since the tradtional Klingon number system is also based on 3). See, for this:
[http://%5B%5Bhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1LjcBv-OWtQ%5D%5D Levi McClain, Klingon music theory is weird]
Ukulele (MicroUke 1.2) set to 9 EDO with 40 lb. test fishing line (by cenobyte)</body></html></pre></div>
== Octave stretch or compression ==
9edo's [[prime]]s 3, 7, 11 and 13 are all tuned flat, so it can benefit from [[octave stretching]].
Pure-octaves 9edo makes a decent 2.5.11 tuning, approximating all those three primes within 18{{c}}.
9edo with octaves stretched about 5{{c}}, as in [[zpi|22zpi]], makes a decent 2.7.11.13 tuning, approximating all those four primes within 17{{c}}.
9edo with octaves stretched about 10{{c}}, as in [[ed12|32ed12]], makes a decent 2.3.7.11.13 tuning, approximating all those five primes within 20{{c}}.
9 equal divisions of the octave (abbreviated 9edo or 9ed2), also called 9-tone equal temperament (9tet) or 9 equal temperament (9et) when viewed under a regular temperament perspective, is the tuning system that divides the octave into 9 equal parts of about 133 ¢ each. Each step represents a frequency ratio of 21/9, or the 9th root of 2.
9edo is the most basic tuning which supports an antidiatonic scale. Its fifth is considerably flatter than just, but still falls into the category of "fifth" despite this. 9edo is also the first edo to have distinct major and minor chords (if 5edo's tendo and arto chords are ignored).
9edo splits the octave into three parts, each representing the major third 5/4, similarly to 12edo, which is of moderate accuracy. A similarly crude approximation of 11/8 (a sharp fourth) is available at the perfect fourth of 4 steps, which means 9edo can be seen as a simple 2.5.11 system. Looking at the intervals in this subgroup, the submajor second 11/10 is tuned to 133 cents (extremely flat) and 25/22 is even worse (but still consistent); the supermajor sixth 55/32 is tuned very accurately at 933 cents (only slightly flat). Overall, 9edo is not a great system for approximating low-complexity JI intervals consistently. However, if we turn to inconsistent representations, we see quite a few options before us. In particular, the 9edo scale has the peculiar property of representing certain 7-limit intervals almost exactly, but not the harmonic 7/4 (a subminor seventh) itself (unless semaphore, which equates it with the supermajor sixth 12/7, is taken as an acceptable temperament in this tuning). A 7-limit version of 9edo goes
Chords such as 1/1 – 7/6 – 49/36 – 12/7 are therefore natural ones for 9edo. The above scale generates the just intonation subgroup 2.27/25.7/3, which is closely related to 9edo.
9edo is the first odd composite edo, containing 3edo as a subset.
The ennealimmal temperament contains 9edo as a subset (splitting 2/1 into 9 equal parts) and is excellent in the 7-limit. However, 9edo by itself tempers out 27/25 by patent val, rather than representing it as 1\9 like in ennealimmal, although the 9bccd val contains both the 27/25 and 7/6 representations above and therefore supports ennealimmal.
Notation
9edo can be notated with conventional notation, including the staff, note names, relative notation, etc. in two ways.
The first, melodic notation, defines sharp/flat, major/minor, and aug/dim in terms of the antidiatonic scale, such that sharp is higher pitched than flat, and major/aug is wider than minor/dim, as would be expected. Because it does not follow diatonic conventions, conventional interval arithmetic no longer works, e.g. M2 + M2 is not M3, and D + M2 is not E. Because antidiatonic is the sister scale to diatonic, you can solve this by swapping major and minor in interval arithmetic rules. Note that the notes that form chords are different from in diatonic: for example, a major chord, P1–M3–P5, is approximately 4:5:6 as would be expected, but is notated C–E♯–G on C.
Alternatively, one can essentially pretend the antidiatonic scale is a normal diatonic, meaning that sharp is lower in pitch than flat (since the "S" step is larger than the "L" step) and major/aug is narrower than minor/dim, known as harmonic notation. The primary purpose of doing this is to allow music notated in 12edo or another diatonic system to be directly translated on the fly, or to allow support for 9edo in tools that only allow chain-of-fifths notation, and it carries over the way interval arithmetic works from diatonic notation, at the cost of notating the sizes of intervals and the shapes of chords incorrectly: that is, a major chord, P1–M3–P5, is notated C–E–G on C, but is no longer ~4:5:6 (since the third is closer to a minor third).
For the sake of clarity, the first notation is commonly called melodic notation, and the second is called harmonic notation, but this is a bit of a misnomer as both preserve different features of the notation of harmony.
Comparison of notations
Notation
P1–M3–P5 ~ 4:5:6
P1–M3–P5 = C–E–G on C
Diatonic
No
Yes
Antidiatonic
Yes
No
In this notation, the enharmonic unison is the augmented 2nd, e.g. E♭ to F♯.
9edo contains a pentatonic mos scale produced by stacking 4\9 of 2L 3s (1 3 1 3 1), which has a heptatonic extension, 2L 5s (1 1 2 1 1 2 1, sometimes called "mavila" or "antidiatonic").
You can also use 2\9, which generates mos scales of 1L 3s (3 2 2 2) and 4L 1s (2 2 2 2 1) and can be interpreted as either an extremely sharp bug scale or an extremely flat orwell one.
Historical (and other) relevance
Indonesian pelog scales sometimes use five-tone subsets of a seven-tone superset in a similar way as the 5-tone and 7-tone mavila scale (see Rank-2 temperaments), and it has been suggested that Indonesian gamelan music stems from a 9edo tradition.
As a division of the octave into 32 parts, i. e. a dominant position of the number 3, 9edo also has some suitability as base tuning for Klingon music (since the tradtional Klingon number system is also based on 3). See, for this: