3/1: Difference between revisions
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== As an interval of equivalence == | == As an interval of equivalence == | ||
When used as an [[interval of equivalence]], 3/1 can be called the ''tritave''. This is very xenharmonic since it assumes tritave equivalence instead of octave equivalence, so that [[1/1]], 3/1, and [[9/1]] are considered the same pitch class. Typically tritave-equivalent systems base harmony off of only [[odd harmonic]]s, for example with the [[3:5:7]] triad as analogous to 4:5:6. | |||
When used as an interval of equivalence, 3/1 can be called the | |||
An example of a tritave-based | An example of a system that is typically treated as tritave-based is the [[Bohlen–Pierce scale]]. The [[equal temperament|equal-tempered]] version of the Bohlen–Pierce scale is [[13edt]], or 13 equal divisions of the tritave. Systems can be constructed analogously to octave-equivalent harmony, for example the 9-note [[lambda]] scale, which can be considered analogous to [[diatonic]]. | ||
== Etymology == | == Etymology == | ||
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* [[EDT]] (equal divisions of the tritave/twelfth) | * [[EDT]] (equal divisions of the tritave/twelfth) | ||
* [[3/2]] – its [[octave reduced]] form | * [[3/2]] – its [[octave reduced]] form | ||
* [[ | * [[Twelfth complement]] – the analogue for [[octave complement]] | ||
== References == | == References == | ||