17edo: Difference between revisions

Keyboards: Add demo video of a MIDI keyboard rebuilt for 17EDO
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Instruments: add new entry, consolidate existing ones.
 
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[[File:17edo soprano ukulele with 3D printed fretboard.jpg|frameless|640x640px]]
[[File:17edo soprano ukulele with 3D printed fretboard.jpg|frameless|640x640px]]
Keyboards have also been built for 17edo — see [[Stephen Weigel]]'s [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2B14mttkavA ''Take This Stone (17-TET microtonal cover)''] (2025).


=== Keyboards ===
=== Keyboards ===
[[Lumatone mapping for 17edo|Lumatone mappings for 17edo]] are available.
[[Lumatone mapping for 17edo|Lumatone mappings for 17edo]] are available.


It is possible to rebuild some standard MIDI keyboards to have 17 note per octave by combining parts from multiple keyboards, as with the finished product shown in the following video by [[Chris Vaisvil]]:
The Striso Board can be tuned in many ways, but as it has 17 notes per octave and is organised in a circle of fifths based layout, it works particularly well with 17edo, letting you play far wider stretches of notes than a standard keyboard.
 
[[File:Strisoboard_piano2a_s.jpg|frameless]]
 
It is possible to rebuild some standard MIDI keyboards to have 17 note per octave by combining parts from multiple keyboards, as with the finished product shown in the following videos by [[Stephen Weigel]] and [[Chris Vaisvil]]:


* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2B14mttkavA ''Take This Stone (17-TET microtonal cover)''] (2025)
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nboggmtayk0 ''DIY microtonal piano - 17 notes per octave''] (2026)
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nboggmtayk0 ''DIY microtonal piano - 17 notes per octave''] (2026)