Lumatone mapping for 15edo: Difference between revisions

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There are several conceivable ways to map [[15edo]] onto the [[Lumatone]] keyboard. However, as it has multiple small rings of 5ths, the [[Standard Lumatone mapping for Pythagorean]] is not one of them. Instead, there is the [[Porcupine]] mapping.
{{Lumatone mapping intro}} You can use the extremely flat 8\15 fifth of 640¢. This layout preserves the location of the octave, and places the down-fifth where the fifth usually is.
{{Lumatone EDO mapping|n=15|start=0|xstep=2|ystep=-1}}


The [[Blackwood]] mapping
{{Lumatone EDO mapping|n=15|start=12|xstep=1|ystep=4}}
 
This makes fingerings for most simple chords awkward though. The mappings that organise its intervals that make it easy to find consonant chords, in order of increasing compression, are the Porcupine, Blackwood, and Hanson mappings.
 
== [[Porcupine]] ==
{{Lumatone EDO mapping|n=15|start=0|xstep=2|ystep=1}}
 
== [[Blackwood]] ==
{{Lumatone EDO mapping|n=15|start=13|xstep=3|ystep=-1}}
{{Lumatone EDO mapping|n=15|start=13|xstep=3|ystep=-1}}


Or the [[Kleismic]] mapping.
== [[Hanson]] ==
{{Lumatone EDO mapping|n=15|start=9|xstep=4|ystep=-1}}
{{Lumatone EDO mapping|n=15|start=9|xstep=4|ystep=-1}}


{{Lumatone mapping navigation|15}}
{{Navbox Lumatone}}
 
[[Category:Lumatone mappings]] [[Category:15edo]]