Subset notation: Difference between revisions
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'''Subset notation''' is the practice of applying a [[musical notation]] system designed for a [[tuning system]] to a {{w|subset}} tuning system. It is mostly used with [[dual-fifth]] tunings, for which the [[native fifth notation]] may be ambiguous or counterintuitive. | |||
The trivial case of subset notation is 12edo subset notation for {{EDOs|1edo, 2edo, 3edo, 4edo and 6edo}}. Since these edos only include intervals which are also in 12edo, it is easy to apply standard notation to these tuning systems. | The trivial case of subset notation is 12edo subset notation for {{EDOs|1edo, 2edo, 3edo, 4edo and 6edo}}. Since these edos only include intervals which are also in 12edo, it is easy to apply standard notation to these tuning systems. | ||
The most commonly used subset notations include every other element of the original notation, or one element every three, etc., in a regular fashion. This method allows notating edos which don't have a good approximation of the perfect fifth ([[3/2]]) by using the standard notation of a {{w|superset}} edo which has a good approximation of the perfect fifth. For example, [[13edo]] can be notated using [[26edo]] subset notation. | |||
== Properties == | |||
Subset notation allows multiple tuning systems that have common intervals to share the same notation for these intervals. For example, a piece in [[11edo]] will be more easily read in [[22edo]] for anyone already familiar with 22edo notation. | |||
Subset notation also helps avoiding issues that may arise when trying to apply the [[native fifth notation]] to certain tuning systems, such as negatively mapped accidentals. In particular, there is no consensus on the signification of sharps and flats in tunings with a fifth narrower than 4\7, between the regular or harmonic mapping (sharps down, flats up) and the melodic mapping (sharps up, flats down), with both options featuring important drawbacks about which one must be careful. | |||
On the other hand, subset notation allows multiple ways to name notes, depending on the choice of the root note. For example, in 11edo as a subset of 22edo, one option excludes C, D and E natural, while the other excludes F, G, A and B natural. Without a consensus on which of the two subsets to use, one has to become fluent in both subsets. | |||
== Edos suitable for subset notation == | |||
{| class="wikitable center-all" | {| class="wikitable center-all" | ||
|+ Table of edos with subset notation | |+ style="font-size: 105%;" | Table of edos with subset notation | ||
|- | |||
! Tuning system | ! Tuning system | ||
! Notated as a subset of... | ! Notated as a subset of... | ||
|- | |- | ||
| [[1edo]] | | [[1edo]] | ||
| [[12edo]] | | [[12edo]] (actually equivalent to any EDO) | ||
|- | |- | ||
| [[2edo]] | | [[2edo]] | ||
Line 26: | Line 35: | ||
|- | |- | ||
| [[8edo]] | | [[8edo]] | ||
| [[24edo]] | | [[24edo]] (or [[32edo]], [[40edo]], [[48edo]], [[56edo]]) | ||
|- | |- | ||
| [[9edo]] | | [[9edo]] | ||
Line 32: | Line 41: | ||
|- | |- | ||
| [[11edo]] | | [[11edo]] | ||
| [[22edo]] | | [[22edo]] (or [[33edo]], [[55edo]]) | ||
|- | |- | ||
| [[13edo]] | | [[13edo]] | ||
| [[26edo]] | | [[26edo]] (or [[39edo]]) | ||
|- | |- | ||
| [[16edo]] | | [[16edo]] | ||
| [[48edo]] | | [[48edo]] (or [[32edo]]) | ||
|- | |- | ||
| [[18edo]] | | [[18edo]] | ||
Line 46: | Line 55: | ||
| [[46edo]] | | [[46edo]] | ||
|- | |- | ||
| | | [[25edo]] | ||
| | | [[50edo]] | ||
|- | |||
| [[28edo]] | |||
| [[56edo]] | |||
|- | |||
| [[30edo]] | |||
| [[60edo]] | |||
|- | |||
| [[35edo]] | |||
| [[70edo]] | |||
|- | |||
|} | |} | ||
{{Navbox notation}} |
Latest revision as of 18:32, 11 February 2025
Subset notation is the practice of applying a musical notation system designed for a tuning system to a subset tuning system. It is mostly used with dual-fifth tunings, for which the native fifth notation may be ambiguous or counterintuitive.
The trivial case of subset notation is 12edo subset notation for 1edo, 2edo, 3edo, 4edo and 6edo. Since these edos only include intervals which are also in 12edo, it is easy to apply standard notation to these tuning systems.
The most commonly used subset notations include every other element of the original notation, or one element every three, etc., in a regular fashion. This method allows notating edos which don't have a good approximation of the perfect fifth (3/2) by using the standard notation of a superset edo which has a good approximation of the perfect fifth. For example, 13edo can be notated using 26edo subset notation.
Properties
Subset notation allows multiple tuning systems that have common intervals to share the same notation for these intervals. For example, a piece in 11edo will be more easily read in 22edo for anyone already familiar with 22edo notation.
Subset notation also helps avoiding issues that may arise when trying to apply the native fifth notation to certain tuning systems, such as negatively mapped accidentals. In particular, there is no consensus on the signification of sharps and flats in tunings with a fifth narrower than 4\7, between the regular or harmonic mapping (sharps down, flats up) and the melodic mapping (sharps up, flats down), with both options featuring important drawbacks about which one must be careful.
On the other hand, subset notation allows multiple ways to name notes, depending on the choice of the root note. For example, in 11edo as a subset of 22edo, one option excludes C, D and E natural, while the other excludes F, G, A and B natural. Without a consensus on which of the two subsets to use, one has to become fluent in both subsets.
Edos suitable for subset notation
Tuning system | Notated as a subset of... |
---|---|
1edo | 12edo (actually equivalent to any EDO) |
2edo | 12edo |
3edo | 12edo |
4edo | 12edo |
6edo | 12edo |
8edo | 24edo (or 32edo, 40edo, 48edo, 56edo) |
9edo | 36edo (or 27edo) |
11edo | 22edo (or 33edo, 55edo) |
13edo | 26edo (or 39edo) |
16edo | 48edo (or 32edo) |
18edo | 36edo |
23edo | 46edo |
25edo | 50edo |
28edo | 56edo |
30edo | 60edo |
35edo | 70edo |
View • Talk • EditMusical notation | |
---|---|
Universal | Sagittal notation |
Just intonation | Functional Just System • Ben Johnston's notation (Johnston–Copper notation) • Helmholtz–Ellis notation • Color notation |
MOS scales | Diamond-mos notation • KISS notation (Quasi-diatonic MOS notation) |
Temperaments | Circle-of-fifths notation • Ups and downs notation (alternative symbols) • Syntonic–rastmic subchroma notation • Extended meantone notation • Fractional sharp notation |
See musical notation for a longer list of systems by category. See Category:Notation for the most complete, comprehensive list, but not sorted by category. |