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{{breadcrumb|Beyond the Xenverse}}
{{Worldbuilding}}


{{Worldbuilding}}
'''Note: the project to which this page pertains has been updated drastically; this page has not been updated to match, and as such represents an outdated draft of the setting in question.'''


Gense /ʒense/ Theory is a fictitious alternative music theory popularized in the fictional nation of Córdua.  As such, the concepts discussed here, and the history thereof, should be understood to be fictitious, and therefore not necessarily applicable to the real world.
Gense /ʒense/ Theory is a fictitious alternative music theory popularized in the fictional nation of Córdua.  As such, the concepts discussed here, and the history thereof, should be understood to be fictitious, and therefore not necessarily applicable to the real world.
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Nearly all concepts present in Gense Theory are derived from or heavily influenced by real-world maqam traditions, Ancient Greek tetrachord genera, and the music theory of the European Renaissance.
Nearly all concepts present in Gense Theory are derived from or heavily influenced by real-world maqam traditions, Ancient Greek tetrachord genera, and the music theory of the European Renaissance.


==Tone System and Tuning Theory==
== Tone system and tuning theory ==
While in theory, the Genses are said to represent certain underlying [[Just intonation|Just Intonation]] intervals, in practice the actual realizations thereof differed from place to place, and from person to person.  Theorists and practitioners throughout the Renaissance made various claims on the fewest number of intervals necessary to accurately represent all nine Genses (see below); these numbers ranged from as few as 9 to as many as 20 unique notes between the root and the Perfect Fifth.
While in theory, the Genses are said to represent certain underlying [[Just intonation|Just Intonation]] intervals, in practice the actual realizations thereof differed from place to place, and from person to person.  Theorists and practitioners throughout the Renaissance made various claims on the fewest number of intervals necessary to accurately represent all nine Genses (see below); these numbers ranged from as few as 9 to as many as 20 unique notes between the root and the Perfect Fifth.


During the Romantic period, fixed-pitch instruments such as keyboards and fretted strings became some of the most popular styles of instrumentation, which led equal-step tunings to be more desirable for the purposes of transpositional invariance.  While equal temperament systems of [[12edo|12]], [[19edo|19]], [[29edo|29]], [[31edo|31]], [[41edo|41]], and more were all suggested and experimented with from the Renaissance onwards, [[17edo|17 Equal Divisions of the Octave]] ended up dominating by the modern era; this system was able to represent the Genses accurately enough to be recognizable to nearly all musicians and listeners, while also being small enough to be consistently manageable on instruments such as guitars and claviers.
During the Romantic period, fixed-pitch instruments such as keyboards and fretted strings became some of the most popular styles of instrumentation, which led equal-step tunings to be more desirable for the purposes of transpositional invariance.  While equal temperament systems of [[12edo|12]], [[19edo|19]], [[29edo|29]], [[31edo|31]], [[41edo|41]], and more were all suggested and experimented with from the Renaissance onwards, [[17edo|17 Equal Divisions of the Octave]] ended up dominating by the modern era; this system was able to represent the Genses accurately enough to be recognizable to nearly all musicians and listeners, while also being small enough to be consistently manageable on instruments such as guitars and claviers.


==The Genses==
== The Genses ==
The term "Gense" is derived via Arabic from the Greek "genus," and describes a number of pentachords that are used to build scales.  While this concept dates back several centuries prior, the Nine Genses were not standardized in academia until 1450, near the end of the Renaissance period.  Due to the idiosyncratic nature of Gense tuning variations, the 17-EDO tunings are not always regular or direct approximations of the classic JI Genses.
The term "Gense" is derived via Arabic from the Greek "genus," and describes a number of pentachords that are used to build scales.  While this concept dates back several centuries prior, the Nine Genses were not standardized in academia until 1450, near the end of the Renaissance period.  Due to the idiosyncratic nature of Gense tuning variations, the 17-EDO tunings are not always regular or direct approximations of the classic JI Genses.
{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable"
|+Nine Genses
|+ style="font-size: 105%;" | Nine Genses
!Name
|-
!JI Pentachord
! Name
!JI Step Sizes
! JI Pentachord
!17-EDO Pentachord
! JI Step Sizes
!17-EDO Step Sizes
! 17-EDO Pentachord
! 17-EDO Step Sizes
|-
|-
|Vete /vete/
| Vete /vete/
|12/11 - 6/5 - 4/3 - 3/2
| {{nowrap|{{dash|12/11, 6/5, 4/3, 3/2}}}}
|12/11 - 11/10 - 10/9 - 9/8
| {{nowrap|{{dash|12/11, 11/10, 10/9, 9/8}}}}
|2 - 4 - 7 - 10
| {{nowrap|{{dash|2, 4, 7, 10}}}}
|2 - 2 - 3 - 3
| {{nowrap|{{dash|2, 2, 3, 3}}}}
|-
|-
|Ige /iʒe/
| Ige /iʒe/
|25/24 - 5/4 - 4/3 - 3/2
| {{nowrap|{{dash|25/24, 5/4, 4/3, 3/2}}}}
|25/24 - 6/5 - 16/15 - 9/8
| {{nowrap|{{dash|25/24, 6/5, 16/15, 9/8}}}}
|1 - 6 - 7 - 10
| {{nowrap|{{dash|1, 6, 7, 10}}}}
|1 - 5 - 1 - 3
| {{nowrap|{{dash|1, 5, 1, 3}}}}
|-
|-
|Colço /colθo/
| Colço /colθo/
|21/20 - 6/5 - 4/3 - 3/2
| {{nowrap|{{dash|21/20, 6/5, 4/3, 3/2}}}}
|21/20 - 8/7 - 10/9 - 9/8
| {{nowrap|{{dash|21/20, 8/7, 10/9, 9/8}}}}
|1 - 4 - 7 - 10
| {{nowrap|{{dash|1, 4, 7, 10}}}}
|1 - 3 - 3 - 3
| {{nowrap|{{dash|1, 3, 3, 3}}}}
|-
|-
|Mejro /meʒɾo/
| Mejro /meʒɾo/
|9/8 - 5/4 - 4/3 - 3/2
| {{nowrap|{{dash|9/8, 5/4, 4/3, 3/2}}}}
|9/8 - 10/9 - 16/15 - 9/8
| {{nowrap|{{dash|9/8, 10/9, 16/15, 9/8}}}}
|3 - 6 - 7 - 10
| {{nowrap|{{dash|3, 6, 7, 10}}}}
|3 - 3 - 1 - 3
| {{nowrap|{{dash|3, 3, 1, 3}}}}
|-
|-
|Açre /aθɾe/
| Açre /aθɾe/
|21/20 - 6/5 - 7/5 - 3/2
| {{nowrap|{{dash|21/20, 6/5, 7/5, 3/2}}}}
|21/20 - 8/7 - 7/6 - 15/14
| {{nowrap|{{dash|21/20, 8/7, 7/6, 15/14}}}}
|2 - 4 - 8 - 10
| {{nowrap|{{dash|2, 4, 8, 10}}}}
|2 - 2 - 4 - 2
| {{nowrap|{{dash|2, 2, 4, 2}}}}
|-
|-
|Nonço /nonθo/
| Nonço /nonθo/
|9/8 - 6/5 - 4/3 - 3/2
| {{nowrap|{{dash|9/8, 6/5, 4/3, 3/2}}}}
|9/8 - 16/15 - 5/4 - 9/8
| {{nowrap|{{dash|9/8, 16/15, 5/4, 9/8}}}}
|3 - 4 - 7 - 10
| {{nowrap|{{dash|3, 4, 7, 10}}}}
|3 - 1 - 3 - 3
| {{nowrap|{{dash|3, 1, 3, 3}}}}
|-
|-
|Nifre /nifɾe/
| Nifre /nifɾe/
|9/8 - 6/5 - 7/5 - 3/2
| {{nowrap|{{dash|9/8, 6/5, 7/5, 3/2}}}}
|9/8 - 16/15 - 7/6 - 15/14
| {{nowrap|{{dash|9/8, 16/15, 7/6, 15/14}}}}
|3 - 4 - 8 - 10
| {{nowrap|{{dash|3, 4, 8, 10}}}}
|3 - 1 - 4 - 2
| {{nowrap|{{dash|3, 1, 4, 2}}}}
|-
|-
|Motaqe /motaqe/
| Motaqe /motaqe/
|10/9 - 11/9 - 4/3 - 3/2
| {{nowrap|{{dash|10/9, 11/9, 4/3, 3/2}}}}
|10/9 - 11/10 - 12/11 - 9/8
| {{nowrap|{{dash|10/9, 11/10, 12/11, 9/8}}}}
|3 - 5 - 7 - 10
| {{nowrap|{{dash|3, 5, 7, 10}}}}
|3 - 2 - 2 - 3
| {{nowrap|{{dash|3, 2, 2, 3}}}}
|-
|-
|Sachre /saʃɾe/
| Sachre /saʃɾe/
|7/6 - 11/9 - 4/3 - 3/2
| {{nowrap|{{dash|7/6, 11/9, 4/3, 3/2}}}}
|7/6 - 22/21 - 12/11 - 9/8
| {{nowrap|{{dash|7/6, 22/21, 12/11, 9/8}}}}
|4 - 5 - 7 - 10
| {{nowrap|{{dash|4, 5, 7, 10}}}}
|4 - 1 - 2 - 3
| {{nowrap|{{dash|4, 1, 2, 3}}}}
|}
|}
Notice that each Gense ends on 3/2~10\17; this note is removable, and each Gense thus has two forms.  When disambiguation is necessary, the four-note clipping of a Gense may be indicated as e.g. Mejro[4], whereas the five-note extended Gense may be indicated as e.g. Nonço[5].
Notice that each Gense ends on 3/2~10\17; this note is removable, and each Gense thus has two forms.  When disambiguation is necessary, the four-note clipping of a Gense may be indicated as e.g. Mejro[4], whereas the five-note extended Gense may be indicated as e.g. Nonço[5].


==Maqames==
== Maqames ==
In Córduan tradition, a Maqam (plural: Maqames) is a sequence defined by having a specific ''Yeti Gense'', or a Gense on its root note that defines the tone of the Maqam.  Any other Genses used to complete the scale are known as ''Pati Genses'', and always have their roots on the fourth or fifth of the ''Yeti Gense''.  While there exist some conventions concerning which ''Pati Genses'' are more commonly used over which ''Yeti Genses'', there is no official standard that indicates any combination as illegal.
In Córduan tradition, a Maqam (plural: Maqames) is a sequence defined by having a specific ''Yeti Gense'', or a Gense on its root note that defines the tone of the Maqam.  Any other Genses used to complete the scale are known as ''Pati Genses'', and always have their roots on the fourth or fifth of the ''Yeti Gense''.  While there exist some conventions concerning which ''Pati Genses'' are more commonly used over which ''Yeti Genses'', there is no official standard that indicates any combination as illegal.
{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable"
|+Maqames by Yeti Genses
|+ style="font-size: 105%;" | Maqames by Yeti Genses
!Yeti Gense
|-
!4-note Yeti
! Yeti Gense
!5-note Yeti
! 4-note Yeti
! 5-note Yeti
|-
|-
|'''Vete'''
| '''Vete'''
|''Maqam Vete''
| ''Maqam Vete''
|''Maqam Frige*''
| ''Maqam Frige*''
|-
|-
|'''Ige'''
| '''Ige'''
|''Maqam Ige''
| ''Maqam Ige''
|''Maqam Chure*''
| ''Maqam Chure*''
|-
|-
|'''Colço'''
| '''Colço'''
|''Maqam Lofre*''
| ''Maqam Lofre*''
|''Maqam Colço''
| ''Maqam Colço''
|-
|-
|'''Mejro'''
| '''Mejro'''
|''Maqam Mejro''
| ''Maqam Mejro''
|''Maqam Lidie*''
| ''Maqam Lidie*''
|-
|-
|'''Açre'''
| '''Açre'''
|''Maqam Crome*''
| ''Maqam Crome*''
|''Maqam Açre''
| ''Maqam Açre''
|-
|-
|'''Nonço'''
| '''Nonço'''
|''Maqam Ayole*''
| ''Maqam Ayole*''
|''Maqam Nonço''
| ''Maqam Nonço''
|-
|-
|'''Nifre'''
| '''Nifre'''
|''Maqam Sravo*''
| ''Maqam Sravo*''
|''Maqam Nifre''
| ''Maqam Nifre''
|-
|-
|'''Motaqe'''
| '''Motaqe'''
|''Maqam Rete''
| ''Maqam Rete''
|''Maqam Motaqe''
| ''Maqam Motaqe''
|-
|-
|'''Sachre'''
| '''Sachre'''
|''Maqam Sife''
| ''Maqam Sife''
|''Maqam Sachre''
| ''Maqam Sachre''
|}
|}
Maqames noted with an asterisk* were not attested in classical tradition, and have only been given names in the modern era.
<nowiki />* These Maqames were not attested in classical tradition, and have only been given names in the modern era.


[[Category:Worldbuilding]]
[[Category:Worldbuilding]]