Wikispaces>Andrew_Heathwaite |
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| <h2>IMPORTED REVISION FROM WIKISPACES</h2>
| | {{interwiki |
| This is an imported revision from Wikispaces. The revision metadata is included below for reference:<br>
| | | de = |
| : This revision was by author [[User:Andrew_Heathwaite|Andrew_Heathwaite]] and made on <tt>2009-04-29 15:40:45 UTC</tt>.<br>
| | | en = 17edo tetrachords |
| : The original revision id was <tt>70459387</tt>.<br>
| | | es = |
| : The revision comment was: <tt></tt><br>
| | | ja = 17平均律テトラコード |
| The revision contents are below, presented both in the original Wikispaces Wikitext format, and in HTML exactly as Wikispaces rendered it.<br>
| | }} |
| <h4>Original Wikitext content:</h4>
| | Let a "17edo primary [[tetrachord]]" mean a set of four pitches in [[17edo]] that span a [[perfect fourth]] (seven degrees) and include one of each of the following: |
| <div style="width:100%; max-height:400pt; overflow:auto; background-color:#f8f9fa; border: 1px solid #eaecf0; padding:0em"><pre style="margin:0px;border:none;background:none;word-wrap:break-word;white-space: pre-wrap ! important" class="old-revision-html">A "17edo tetrachord," for the purposes of this naming system, will mean a set of four pitches in [[17edo]] that span a perfect fourth (seven degrees) and include one of each of these:
| |
|
| |
|
| # 'The unison' in 17edo means 0 (degrees of 17edo) and has the solfege name 'do'.
| | * the unison - 0 (degrees of 17edo) - solfege name 'do'. |
| # 'Seconds' in 17edo include 1 (ra, a minor second), 2 (ru, a neutral second), and 3 (re, a major second).
| | * a second - includes 1 (ra, a minor second), 2 (ru, a neutral second), and 3 (re, a major second). |
| # 'Thirds' in 17edo include 4 (me, a minor third), 5 (mu, a neutral third), and 6 (mi, a major third).
| | * a third - includes 4 (me, a minor third), 5 (mu, a neutral third), and 6 (mi, a major third). |
| # 'The perfect fourth' in 17edo means 7 (fa).
| | * the perfect fourth - 7 (fa). |
|
| |
|
| ===Correspondance:=== | | ===correspondance:=== |
| || degrees || cents || name || solfege ||
| |
| || 0 || 0 || unison || do ||
| |
| || 1 || 71 || minor second (a.k.a third-tone) || ra ||
| |
| || 2 || 141 || neutral second (a.k.a. two-thirds-tone) || ru ||
| |
| || 3 || 212 || major second (a.k.a. tone) || re ||
| |
| || 4 || 282 || minor third (a.k.a. subminor third) || me ||
| |
| || 5 || 353 || neutral third || mu ||
| |
| || 6 || 424 || major third (a.k.a. supermajor third) || mi ||
| |
| || 7 || 494 || perfect fourth || fa ||
| |
|
| |
|
| ===Tetrachord notation=== | | {| class="wikitable" |
| | |- |
| | ! degrees |
| | ! cents |
| | ! name |
| | ! solfege |
| | |- |
| | | 0 |
| | | 0 |
| | | unison |
| | | do |
| | |- |
| | | 1 |
| | | 71 |
| | | minor second (a.k.a third-tone) |
| | | ra |
| | |- |
| | | 2 |
| | | 141 |
| | | neutral second (a.k.a. two-thirds-tone) |
| | | ru |
| | |- |
| | | 3 |
| | | 212 |
| | | major second (a.k.a. tone) |
| | | re |
| | |- |
| | | 4 |
| | | 282 |
| | | minor third (a.k.a. subminor third) |
| | | me |
| | |- |
| | | 5 |
| | | 353 |
| | | neutral third |
| | | mu |
| | |- |
| | | 6 |
| | | 424 |
| | | major third (a.k.a. supermajor third) |
| | | mi |
| | |- |
| | | 7 |
| | | 494 |
| | | perfect fourth |
| | | fa |
| | |} |
|
| |
|
| Tetrachord notation will show three steps (as degrees of 17edo) separated by hyphens. | | ===tetrachord notation=== |
| | |
| | Tetrachord notation will show three scalar steps (as degrees of 17edo) separated by hyphens. |
|
| |
|
| For instance, tetrachord 3-3-1 consists of | | For instance, tetrachord 3-3-1 consists of |
| 0 (do), the unison, a given; | | |
| 3 (re), a note 3 degrees up from 0 (do), a second; | | 0 (do), the unison; |
| 6 (mi), a note 3 degrees up from 3 (mi), a third; and | | |
| 7 (fa), the perfect fourth. | | 3 (re), a major second, 3 degrees up from 0; |
| | |
| | 6 (mi), a major third, 3 degrees up from 3; and |
| | |
| | 7 (fa), the perfect fourth, 1 degree up from 6. |
|
| |
|
| The numbers in a tetrachord name will always add to 7. | | The numbers in a tetrachord name will always add to 7. |
|
| |
|
| ===The tetrachords=== | | ===17edo primary tetrachords=== |
| | |
| | We have 9 primary tetrachords in 17edo. |
| | |
| | {| class="wikitable" |
| | |- |
| | ! tetrachord notation |
| | ! solfege |
| | ! name (suggestions?) |
| | ! used in |
| | |- |
| | | 1-3-3 |
| | | do ra me fa |
| | | phrygian (jins Kurd) |
| | | diatonic (phrygian) |
| | |- |
| | | 1-4-2 |
| | | do ra mu fa |
| | | |
| | | |
| | |- |
| | | 1-5-1 |
| | | do ra mi fa |
| | | balkan, jins Hijaz |
| | | |
| | |- |
| | | 2-2-3 |
| | | do ru me fa |
| | | jins Bayyati |
| | | [[17edo neutral scale]] (led) |
| | |- |
| | | 2-3-2 |
| | | do ru mu fa |
| | | "ʻIraq" tetrachord |
| | | [[17edo neutral scale]] (bish, fish, jwl) |
| | |- |
| | | 2-4-1 |
| | | do ru mi fa |
| | | |
| | | |
| | |- |
| | | 3-1-3 |
| | | do re me fa |
| | | aeolian (jins Nahawand) |
| | | diatonic (aolian, dorian) ; [[scorp]] (mode 3) |
| | |- |
| | | 3-2-2 |
| | | do re mu fa |
| | | jins Rast |
| | | [[17edo neutral scale]] (dril, gil, kleeth) |
| | |- |
| | | 3-3-1 |
| | | do re mi fa |
| | | ionian (jins ʻAjam) |
| | | diatonic (ionian, mixolydian) |
| | |} |
| | |
| | Notes on the above: |
| | * Many references say that the semitones in Hijaz should be greater than 100 cents, but in 17edo they are significantly smaller (about 70 cents). |
| | * The "ʻIraq" tetrachord is similar to the first four notes of Maqam ʻIraq, but those are not usually considered a jins because the fourth note is not a place of rest (in particular it is not the ''ghammaz''). This tetrachord is jins Sikah with an extra note on top making a perfect fourth with the tonic. |
| | |
| | Another way of showing them: |
|
| |
|
| || tetrachord notation || solfege || name (suggestions?) || | | {| class="wikitable" |
| || 1-3-3 || do ra me fa || phrygian || | | |- |
| || 1-4-2 || do ra mu fa || || | | ! |
| || 1-5-1 || do ra mi fa || balkan ||
| | ! ra |
| || 2-2-3 || do ru me fa || ||
| | ! ru |
| || 2-3-2 || do ru mu fa || || | | ! re |
| || 2-4-1 || do ru mi fa || || | | |- |
| || 3-1-3 || do re me fa || aolian || | | | me |
| || 3-2-2 || do re mu fa || ||
| | | 1-3-3 |
| || 3-3-1 || do re mi fa || ionian ||</pre></div> | | | 2-2-3 |
| <h4>Original HTML content:</h4>
| | | 3-1-3 |
| <div style="width:100%; max-height:400pt; overflow:auto; background-color:#f8f9fa; border: 1px solid #eaecf0; padding:0em"><pre style="margin:0px;border:none;background:none;word-wrap:break-word;width:200%;white-space: pre-wrap ! important" class="old-revision-html"><html><head><title>17edo tetrachords</title></head><body>A &quot;17edo tetrachord,&quot; for the purposes of this naming system, will mean a set of four pitches in <a class="wiki_link" href="/17edo">17edo</a> that span a perfect fourth (seven degrees) and include one of each of these:<br />
| | |- |
| <br />
| | | mu |
| <ol><li>'The unison' in 17edo means 0 (degrees of 17edo) and has the solfege name 'do'.</li><li>'Seconds' in 17edo include 1 (ra, a minor second), 2 (ru, a neutral second), and 3 (re, a major second).</li><li>'Thirds' in 17edo include 4 (me, a minor third), 5 (mu, a neutral third), and 6 (mi, a major third).</li><li>'The perfect fourth' in 17edo means 7 (fa).</li></ol><br />
| | | 1-4-2 |
| <!-- ws:start:WikiTextHeadingRule:0:&lt;h3&gt; --><h3 id="toc0"><a name="x--Correspondance:"></a><!-- ws:end:WikiTextHeadingRule:0 -->Correspondance:</h3>
| | | 2-3-2 |
|
| | | 3-2-2 |
| | |- |
| | | mi |
| | | 1-5-1 |
| | | 2-4-1 |
| | | 3-3-1 |
| | |} |
|
| |
|
| <table class="wiki_table">
| | ===17edo tetrachords complete=== |
| <tr>
| | A more generalized tetrachord system would allow multiple seconds or multiple thirds: for instance, 1-1-5 or 5-1-1. Thus, a complete chart of 17edo tetrachords looks like this (with primary tetrachords in bold): |
| <td>degrees<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| <td>cents<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| <td>name<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| <td>solfege<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| </tr>
| |
| <tr>
| |
| <td>0<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| <td>0<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| <td>unison<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| <td>do<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| </tr>
| |
| <tr>
| |
| <td>1<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| <td>71<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| <td>minor second (a.k.a third-tone)<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| <td>ra<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| </tr>
| |
| <tr>
| |
| <td>2<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| <td>141<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| <td>neutral second (a.k.a. two-thirds-tone)<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| <td>ru<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| </tr>
| |
| <tr>
| |
| <td>3<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| <td>212<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| <td>major second (a.k.a. tone)<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| <td>re<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| </tr>
| |
| <tr>
| |
| <td>4<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| <td>282<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| <td>minor third (a.k.a. subminor third)<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| <td>me<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| </tr>
| |
| <tr>
| |
| <td>5<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| <td>353<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| <td>neutral third<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| <td>mu<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| </tr>
| |
| <tr>
| |
| <td>6<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| <td>424<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| <td>major third (a.k.a. supermajor third)<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| <td>mi<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| </tr>
| |
| <tr>
| |
| <td>7<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| <td>494<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| <td>perfect fourth<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| <td>fa<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| </tr>
| |
| </table>
| |
|
| |
|
| <br />
| | {| class="wikitable" |
| <!-- ws:start:WikiTextHeadingRule:2:&lt;h3&gt; --><h3 id="toc1"><a name="x--Tetrachord notation"></a><!-- ws:end:WikiTextHeadingRule:2 -->Tetrachord notation</h3>
| | |- |
| <br />
| | | 1-1-5 |
| Tetrachord notation will show three steps (as degrees of 17edo) separated by hyphens.<br />
| | | 2-1-4 |
| <br />
| | | '''3-1-3''' |
| For instance, tetrachord 3-3-1 consists of<br />
| | | 4-1-2 |
| 0 (do), the unison, a given;<br />
| | | 5-1-1 |
| 3 (re), a note 3 degrees up from 0 (do), a second;<br /> | | |- |
| 6 (mi), a note 3 degrees up from 3 (mi), a third; and<br />
| | | 1-2-4 |
| 7 (fa), the perfect fourth.<br />
| | | '''2-2-3''' |
| <br />
| | | '''3-2-2''' |
| The numbers in a tetrachord name will always add to 7.<br />
| | | 4-2-1 |
| <br />
| | | |
| <!-- ws:start:WikiTextHeadingRule:4:&lt;h3&gt; --><h3 id="toc2"><a name="x--The tetrachords"></a><!-- ws:end:WikiTextHeadingRule:4 -->The tetrachords</h3>
| | |- |
| <br />
| | | '''1-3-3''' |
| | | '''2-3-2''' |
| | | '''3-3-1''' |
| | | |
| | | |
| | |- |
| | | '''1-4-2''' |
| | | '''2-4-1''' |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | |- |
| | | '''1-5-1''' |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | |} |
| | Thus, by allowing multiples seconds or multiple thirds, we add 6 new tetrachords to our 9 primary tetrachords, for a total of 15. Our new ones: |
|
| |
|
| | {| class="wikitable" |
| | |- |
| | ! tetrachord notation |
| | ! solfege |
| | ! name (suggestions?) |
| | ! used in |
| | |- |
| | | 1-1-5 |
| | | do ra ru fa |
| | | |
| | | |
| | |- |
| | | 1-2-4 |
| | | do ra re fa |
| | | |
| | | |
| | |- |
| | | 2-1-4 |
| | | do ru re fa |
| | | |
| | | |
| | |- |
| | | 4-1-2 |
| | | do me mu fa |
| | | |
| | | |
| | |- |
| | | 4-2-1 |
| | | do me mi fa |
| | | |
| | | |
| | |- |
| | | 5-1-1 |
| | | do mu mi fa |
| | | |
| | | |
| | |} |
|
| |
|
| <table class="wiki_table">
| | See also: [[tetrachord]], [[22edo tetrachords]], [[Tricesimoprimal Tetrachordal Tesseract]]. |
| <tr>
| |
| <td>tetrachord notation<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| <td>solfege<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| <td>name (suggestions?)<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| </tr>
| |
| <tr>
| |
| <td>1-3-3<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| <td>do ra me fa<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| <td>phrygian<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| </tr>
| |
| <tr>
| |
| <td>1-4-2<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| <td>do ra mu fa<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| <td><br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| </tr>
| |
| <tr>
| |
| <td>1-5-1<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| <td>do ra mi fa<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| <td>balkan<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| </tr>
| |
| <tr>
| |
| <td>2-2-3<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| <td>do ru me fa<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| <td><br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| </tr>
| |
| <tr>
| |
| <td>2-3-2<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| <td>do ru mu fa<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| <td><br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| </tr>
| |
| <tr>
| |
| <td>2-4-1<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| <td>do ru mi fa<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| <td><br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| </tr>
| |
| <tr>
| |
| <td>3-1-3<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| <td>do re me fa<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| <td>aolian<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| </tr>
| |
| <tr>
| |
| <td>3-2-2<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| <td>do re mu fa<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| <td><br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| </tr>
| |
| <tr>
| |
| <td>3-3-1<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| <td>do re mi fa<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| <td>ionian<br />
| |
| </td>
| |
| </tr>
| |
| </table>
| |
|
| |
|
| </body></html></pre></div>
| | [[Category:17edo]] |
| | [[Category:Tetrachords]] |
Let a "17edo primary tetrachord" mean a set of four pitches in 17edo that span a perfect fourth (seven degrees) and include one of each of the following:
- the unison - 0 (degrees of 17edo) - solfege name 'do'.
- a second - includes 1 (ra, a minor second), 2 (ru, a neutral second), and 3 (re, a major second).
- a third - includes 4 (me, a minor third), 5 (mu, a neutral third), and 6 (mi, a major third).
- the perfect fourth - 7 (fa).
correspondance:
| degrees
|
cents
|
name
|
solfege
|
| 0
|
0
|
unison
|
do
|
| 1
|
71
|
minor second (a.k.a third-tone)
|
ra
|
| 2
|
141
|
neutral second (a.k.a. two-thirds-tone)
|
ru
|
| 3
|
212
|
major second (a.k.a. tone)
|
re
|
| 4
|
282
|
minor third (a.k.a. subminor third)
|
me
|
| 5
|
353
|
neutral third
|
mu
|
| 6
|
424
|
major third (a.k.a. supermajor third)
|
mi
|
| 7
|
494
|
perfect fourth
|
fa
|
tetrachord notation
Tetrachord notation will show three scalar steps (as degrees of 17edo) separated by hyphens.
For instance, tetrachord 3-3-1 consists of
0 (do), the unison;
3 (re), a major second, 3 degrees up from 0;
6 (mi), a major third, 3 degrees up from 3; and
7 (fa), the perfect fourth, 1 degree up from 6.
The numbers in a tetrachord name will always add to 7.
17edo primary tetrachords
We have 9 primary tetrachords in 17edo.
| tetrachord notation
|
solfege
|
name (suggestions?)
|
used in
|
| 1-3-3
|
do ra me fa
|
phrygian (jins Kurd)
|
diatonic (phrygian)
|
| 1-4-2
|
do ra mu fa
|
|
|
| 1-5-1
|
do ra mi fa
|
balkan, jins Hijaz
|
|
| 2-2-3
|
do ru me fa
|
jins Bayyati
|
17edo neutral scale (led)
|
| 2-3-2
|
do ru mu fa
|
"ʻIraq" tetrachord
|
17edo neutral scale (bish, fish, jwl)
|
| 2-4-1
|
do ru mi fa
|
|
|
| 3-1-3
|
do re me fa
|
aeolian (jins Nahawand)
|
diatonic (aolian, dorian) ; scorp (mode 3)
|
| 3-2-2
|
do re mu fa
|
jins Rast
|
17edo neutral scale (dril, gil, kleeth)
|
| 3-3-1
|
do re mi fa
|
ionian (jins ʻAjam)
|
diatonic (ionian, mixolydian)
|
Notes on the above:
- Many references say that the semitones in Hijaz should be greater than 100 cents, but in 17edo they are significantly smaller (about 70 cents).
- The "ʻIraq" tetrachord is similar to the first four notes of Maqam ʻIraq, but those are not usually considered a jins because the fourth note is not a place of rest (in particular it is not the ghammaz). This tetrachord is jins Sikah with an extra note on top making a perfect fourth with the tonic.
Another way of showing them:
|
|
ra
|
ru
|
re
|
| me
|
1-3-3
|
2-2-3
|
3-1-3
|
| mu
|
1-4-2
|
2-3-2
|
3-2-2
|
| mi
|
1-5-1
|
2-4-1
|
3-3-1
|
17edo tetrachords complete
A more generalized tetrachord system would allow multiple seconds or multiple thirds: for instance, 1-1-5 or 5-1-1. Thus, a complete chart of 17edo tetrachords looks like this (with primary tetrachords in bold):
| 1-1-5
|
2-1-4
|
3-1-3
|
4-1-2
|
5-1-1
|
| 1-2-4
|
2-2-3
|
3-2-2
|
4-2-1
|
|
| 1-3-3
|
2-3-2
|
3-3-1
|
|
|
| 1-4-2
|
2-4-1
|
|
|
|
| 1-5-1
|
|
|
|
|
Thus, by allowing multiples seconds or multiple thirds, we add 6 new tetrachords to our 9 primary tetrachords, for a total of 15. Our new ones:
| tetrachord notation
|
solfege
|
name (suggestions?)
|
used in
|
| 1-1-5
|
do ra ru fa
|
|
|
| 1-2-4
|
do ra re fa
|
|
|
| 2-1-4
|
do ru re fa
|
|
|
| 4-1-2
|
do me mu fa
|
|
|
| 4-2-1
|
do me mi fa
|
|
|
| 5-1-1
|
do mu mi fa
|
|
|
See also: tetrachord, 22edo tetrachords, Tricesimoprimal Tetrachordal Tesseract.