4:6:7: Difference between revisions
→Related chords: add 28:36:42:49 |
No edit summary |
||
| (One intermediate revision by one other user not shown) | |||
| Line 4: | Line 4: | ||
Its first rotation, '''6:7:8''', is significant because it consists of the intervals [[7/6]] and [[8/7]] stacked on top of each other. The intervals in this chord divide the [[4/3|perfect fourth]] rather than the [[3/2|perfect fifth]], and contrast by [[49/48]], similarly to how [[5/4]] and [[6/5]] contrast by [[25/24]] in [[4:5:6]]. By swapping the order of 7/6 and 8/7, we get the utonal inverse of 6:7:8, that being [[21:24:28|1/(8:7:6) = 21:24:28]]. | Its first rotation, '''6:7:8''', is significant because it consists of the intervals [[7/6]] and [[8/7]] stacked on top of each other. The intervals in this chord divide the [[4/3|perfect fourth]] rather than the [[3/2|perfect fifth]], and contrast by [[49/48]], similarly to how [[5/4]] and [[6/5]] contrast by [[25/24]] in [[4:5:6]]. By swapping the order of 7/6 and 8/7, we get the utonal inverse of 6:7:8, that being [[21:24:28|1/(8:7:6) = 21:24:28]]. | ||
Another notable setting is the open voicing | Another notable setting is the open voicing 4:7:12, which shares the property with 6:7:8 that its intervals, 7/4 and [[12/7]], contrast by 49/48, but they divide the [[3/1|perfect twelfth]] instead. This also has the advantage of avoiding the unresolvedness of a dominant seventh chord that occurs in the 6:7:8 and 4:6:7 voicings. Its utonal version is 7:12:21, an open voicing of [[14:21:24]]. | ||
== Rotations around the octave == | == Rotations around the octave == | ||
| Line 10: | Line 10: | ||
[[File:SculpEufaDem6-7-8-onD.mp3|none|thumb|6:7:8 "1st inversion"]] | [[File:SculpEufaDem6-7-8-onD.mp3|none|thumb|6:7:8 "1st inversion"]] | ||
[[File:SculpEufaDem7-8-12-onD.mp3|none|thumb|7:8:12 "2nd inversion"]] | [[File:SculpEufaDem7-8-12-onD.mp3|none|thumb|7:8:12 "2nd inversion"]] | ||
{{chord edo approximation}} | |||
== Related chords == | == Related chords == | ||