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| | This page contains impressions and thoughts of several wiki authors (and others) about selected [[edo]]s. |
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| |[[edo]]
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| |[[Bozu's opinions of various edos]]
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| |[[User:CritDeathX/Sam's EDO Impressions|Sam's EDO Impressions]]
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| |[[User:IlL/Inthar's EDO impressions|Inthar's EDO impression]]
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| |[[Keenan's EDO impressions]]
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| |[[Mike's EDO impressions]]
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| |[[Piotr's edo impressions]]
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| |[[Yourmusic Productions' opinion of various edos]]
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| |[[1edo]]
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| |LOL
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| |The harmony of the cavemen.
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| |People ought to write more 2-limit music. (Or not.)
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| |lol
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| |Infinite octave consonance!
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| |Contained within 12 and so not worth talking about.
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| |[[2edo]]
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| |0th order diminished. Nothing interesting, too constrained.
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| |The worse harmony of the cavemen.
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| |Boring
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| |lol
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| |Infinite tritave dissonance!
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| |Contained within 12 and so not worth talking about.
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| |[[3edo]]
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| |Elemental augmented type tuning. Fun for a minute or two, boring after that. Sounds augmented no matter what you play.
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| |Augmented chord.
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| |Boring
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| |lol
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| |While it does have a major third, it's weak otherwise.
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| |Contained within 12 and so not worth talking about.
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| |[[4edo]]
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| |Elemental diminished type tuning. Fun for a minute or two, boring after that. Sounds diminished no matter what you play.
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| |Diminished chord. It, surprisingly, has interesting melodic movement despite only being four notes.
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| |Boring
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| |lol
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| |uh,
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| |Contained within 12 and so not worth talking about.
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| |[[5edo]]
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| |Elemental hyperpent. You can actually play a couple of melodies in the tuning, but it gets exhausted after an hour or two. Good tuning for percussive-melodic instruments like gamelan, woodblock, etc., but it can get grating on its own.
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| |Equipentatonic. Nothing too original.
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| |Equipentatonic.
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| |Smallest useful EDO, and it's really cool. Basically 2.3.7 limit (no hint of the 5th harmonic at all), and a great candidate for a scale people can just bang away on. Regular temperament model of slendro.
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| |1. smallest EDO that has something resembling 3/2. Has a great approximation of the 7th harmonic. Really awesome, stretched out, equal pentatonic scale. Sevish features it here as a prominent subset of 15-EDO: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rPmuKUm2kJg
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| 2. equipentatonic, which is trippy
| | == [[1edo]] == |
| |5edo.
| | : '''Aura:''' The framework for all other EDOs. As it offers only 2-limit consonance, all notes belong to the same pitch class, and this can get boring pretty quickly, though admittedly not as boring as if you only had one note to play. |
| |The emancipation from harmony. Nothing clashes with anything else, so you're free to play any combination of notes and concentrate on rhythm, arrangement and instrumentation instead. (and you really need to push those other areas to keep it from getting boring.)
| | : '''Nicolai:''' The harmony of the cavemen. |
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| | : '''Keenan:''' People ought to write more 2-limit music. (Or not.) |
| |[[6edo]]
| | : '''Yourmusic Productions:''' Contained within 12 and so not worth talking about. |
| |Smallest 2nd order tuning set - augmented in whole steps. There are a number of possibilities, but trying to create any sort of tonal movement is useless, modality is useless, and overall, it's overconstrained.
| | : '''Carmen14edo/Bragtime:''' It's just a single note m8, but somehow it's all we need |
| |Whole tone scale. Take out 4\6 and you have a pentatonic subset of the lydian dominant scale.
| | : '''Fumica:''' An exposition of pitch. |
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| | : '''Glitchydarkness:''' Perfect, but eventually it gets boring, you can only rely on timbre for so long! I'd know it's all i do |
| |Boring as a subset of 12edo, but useful as a very simple 2.9.5.7 temperament. Most of the good 2.9.... scales have 6-note MOSes for this reason.
| | : '''Vector:''' Not as "trivial" as some people think. The 2-limit sorta forces you to think of the octave as less of an equivalence than in higher limits. |
| |the whole tone scale. But, if you flatten the octaves, you can get almost perfect 4:5:7:11 chords, which is worth noting.
| | : '''MisterShafXen:''' Very bland, not worth using. |
| |6edo.
| | : '''Budjarn Lambeth:''' Lends itself to meditative, minimalist music: music where rhythm and timbre are the source of most of the interest, while melody and harmony are repetitive and change by small increments, forcing the listener to pay close attention to the most subtle changes. |
| |A universe in monochrome. You can make things out, but so much is missing.
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| |[[7edo]]
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| |Elemental hypopent. The experience here is sort of like playing in 5edo, but it's more like a tuning where you have one complete scale to play with. For me, this is the smallest edo with which I would consider composing. But it's still overconstrained when it comes to trying to modulate anything.
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| |Equiheptatonic. Again, nothing too original.
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| |Equi-diatonic.
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| |Cool in many of the ways that 5 is. Regular temperament model of a scale used in Thai music.
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| |1. next-smallest EDO that has something resembling 3/2. This sounds like an "equalized" diatonic scale, so that there are no more "major" or "minor" thirds, but just "thirds." 7-EDO is also notable for being an equalized version of a number of scales, including but not limited to: the diatonic scale, mohajira/maqamic[7] and its MODMOS's, porcupine[7], tetracot[7], and mavila[7]. Anyone who's familiar with any of these scales will be able to hear echos of them in 7-EDO. Additionally, if you stretch the octaves to about 1230 cents, you get something which is like every other step of the popular nonoctave [[88cET]], and which can also be thought of as a nonoctave version of [[Tetracot family|tetracot temperament]], with really good 2:3:5 chords.
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| 2. equidiatonic, which is trippy
| | == [[2edo]] == |
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| | : '''Aura:''' This EDO is very simple, offering only the perfect consonance of the octave and perfect dissonance of the tritone. The brute force contrast between the antitonic (my name for the diatonic function of pitches located at or around 600 cents away from the tonic) and the tonic does make for good minimalistic harmonic progression, but to use this to its maximum potential requires some of the same techniques needed to master traditional music theory's Locrian mode, and even then, this EDO's limited note palette only ensures that it gets boring rather quickly. |
| |The emancipation from harmony, but now with recognisable, if bland diatonic melodies.
| | : '''Bozu:''' 0th order diminished. Nothing interesting, too constrained. |
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| | : '''Nicolai:''' The worse harmony of the cavemen. |
| |[[8edo]]
| | : '''Yourmusic Productions:''' Contained within 12 and so not worth talking about. |
| |kind of a cool diminished scale, but it suffers from the same problems as other drone-like edo's, in terms of options and constraints.
| | : '''Carmen14edo/Bragtime:''' It's just a tritone m8, but 12edo and fellow even edos just wouldn't be the same without it |
| |First EDO with some kind of quarter tone interval.
| | : '''Fumica:''' An exposition of consonance and dissonance. |
| |Good edo if you like having only neutral second steps and no conventional consonances.
| | : '''Glitchydarkness:''' Diminished harmony without the thirds, It's interesting, but there's not enough notes yet. |
| |A very weird edo. It has passable 10:11:12:14 chords, but nothing "rooted" (unless 750 cents is an acceptable 3/2).
| | : '''MisterShafXen:''' Nowhere near enough notes. |
| |1. An EDO that's often dismissed as an equalized diminished[8] scale, yet contains a lot more. For starters, it's also an equalized sensi[8] (especially if viewed as existing in the 2.9/7.5/3 subgroup, and has, for its size, excellent approximations to the tempered 1/1-9/7-5/3 [[Sensamagic chords|sensamagic chord]]), made of two 450 cent "supermajor thirds" on top of one another. This chord provides a great contrast to the usual diminished chord, as it's much less intense and "evil" sounding, and much more floaty and abstract. I also tend to enjoy huge stacks of 450 cent intervals, which I think are beautiful. Stacks of 750 cent intervals can also be very beautiful: I don't know whether they "approximate 3/2 poorly" or "approximate 14/9 well" or whatever it is, but they sound really good. They're two things that categorically sound to me like sharp fifths mixed with minor sixths, and two of them gets you a minor tenth; this is another way to get away from making it sound "diminished." Lastly, I also note that 8-EDO is an equalized porcupine[8], so for those who are used to porcupine, 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 may trip you out as being sort of like porcupine but with 4:5:6 replaced with 7:9:11. With sensamagic chords, diminished chords, and 7:9:11 chords - all of which differ in consonance - there's no reason why you can't use this tuning to make beautiful, programmatic, and to my ears somewhat "spacy" sounding music.
| | : '''Budjarn Lambeth:''' Lends itself to meditative, minimalist music: music where rhythm and timbre are the source of most of the interest, while melody and harmony are repetitive and change by small increments, forcing the listener to pay close attention to the most subtle changes. |
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| 2. 8-EDO is a great tuning but I dunno if it has a ton of specifically categorically interesting stuff
| | == [[3edo]] == |
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| | : '''Aura:''' This EDO is also quite simple, and it relies on the perfect consonance of the octave to obtain resolution, with the dominant harmony consisting only of the two steps surrounding the octave. Like with 2edo, 3edo does make for good minimalistic harmonic progression, but to use it to its maximum potential requires serious skills, and its limited note palette again ensures that it gets boring rather quickly. |
| |Any combination of more than 2 notes sounds bad, and most 2 note combinations sound bad too. Just vile.
| | : '''Bozu:''' Elemental augmented type tuning. Fun for a minute or two, boring after that. Sounds augmented no matter what you play. |
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| | : '''Nicolai:''' Augmented chord. |
| |[[9edo]]
| | : '''Yourmusic Productions:''' Contained within 12 and so not worth talking about. |
| |3rd order augmented scale. I want to like this tuning, but I can't see any value in it beyond noodling.
| | : '''Carmen14edo/Bragtime:''' Honestly I've just never been much of a fan of this one. |
| |Cool approximation of 7/6. I also consider it something of the parent scale of gamelan music.
| | : '''Fumica:''' Augmented chord. |
| |Simplest and most extreme mavila tuning.
| | : '''MisterShafXen:''' Finally, at least one chord! Although it is dissonant… |
| |On the one hand you can treat the 667 cent intervals as 3/2, yielding an extreme version of [[mavila]] (or 7-limit [[armodue]]) which is a very acceptable tuning for pelog selisir. On the other hand you can treat it has having no 3rd harmonics, as something like a 2.5.7/3 temperament. (Treating it as a super-accurate 2.27/25.7/3 temperament makes no sense to me.) First EDO with '''recognizable''' "major" and "minor" chords.
| | : '''Glitchydarkness:''' You can make chords with this one! I'll name a few: Augmented ... ...Augmented... Yeah you can't really do much, but it's neat! It's still the first EDO to actually have chords, and it's better than whatever 2edo was! |
| |1. If we're considering the 667 cent intervals to be 3/2, then this is the first EDO that doesn't temper out 25/24 in the 5-limit, and as such distinguishes between 4:5:6 and 10:12:15. However you want to view it, it's definitely the first EDO to my ears where I can hear distinct "major" and "minor" chords, as detuned as they may be. This is also the first EDO that supports [[Pelogic family|mavila]] and [[Pelogic family|pelogic]] temperament, and the 7-note MOS's are of prime interest here. Because of that, it's the first EDO I know how to create something like "functional harmony" in, although it sounds detuned (which I can get used to; it's not the end of the world). Example here: <nowiki>http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KV_MzdtU2WQ</nowiki>. Also, like mavila in general, it also allows for common practice music to be translated into this tuning, where major chords become minor and vice versa; however, this experience can be unpleasant if one uses a harsh timbre or isn't prepared for the more discordant harmonies. Examples of that here: <nowiki>http://soundcloud.com/mikebattagliaexperiments/sets/the-mavila-experiments-9-edo/</nowiki>. Random other things: it has a great 7/6 and can also be viewed as an equalized version of superpelog[9] and orwell[9] and augmented[9], contains an interesting augmented[6] where the "minor thirds" are 7/6, and has been used to tune the mavila pelog scale (albeit with stretched octaves).
| | : '''Budjarn Lambeth:''' Lends itself to meditative, minimalist music: music where rhythm and timbre are the source of most of the interest, while melody and harmony are repetitive and change by small increments, forcing the listener to pay close attention to the most subtle changes. |
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| 2. has a lot of what 16-EDO does but with less notes. However, 3/2 is weaker. comparing 9-EDO to 16-EDO can let you compare less notes + easier categorization vs more notes + better accuracy. Smallest EDO with major and minor chords (unless you count 8-EDO but that's kind of out there)
| | == [[4edo]] == |
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| | : '''Aura:''' This EDO is twice as complicated as 2edo, but no more than that. Again, it relies on the perfect consonance of the octave to obtain any type of resolution, and the brute force contrast between the antitonic and the tonic makes for good minimalistic harmonic progression. This time, however, the pitch directly above the tonic can be used in conjunction with the tonic and the octave to create a surprisingly decent tonic chord- more or less the exact means of obtaining resolution in the strictest forms of traditional music theory's Locrian mode. However, given that there are only two other pitch classes to work with, a chord like this is best saved for the end of a piece. Unlike 2edo, 4edo has more of a melodic structure to work with, but again, this requires skills, and this EDO is liable to get boring rather quickly in the hands of an unskilled composer. |
| |Marvellously elegant little system. More than enough room for complex melodies and fortifying them with double-stopped 3rds and 6ths sounds awesome.
| | : '''Bozu:''' Elemental diminished type tuning. Fun for a minute or two, boring after that. Sounds diminished no matter what you play. |
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| | : '''Nicolai:''' Diminished chord. It, surprisingly, has interesting melodic movement despite only being four notes. |
| |[[10edo]]
| | : '''Yourmusic Productions:''' Contained within 12 and so not worth talking about. |
| |Hyperpent with something resembling the chromatic scale. This is the smallest edo set that has anything worthwhile to offer. Constraints are within the critical range where melody, harmony, and chord changes can make some kind of sense. It's not my favourite edo, but it has its own characteristics.
| | : '''Carmen14edo/Bragtime:''' UH OH IT'S A TRAIN A-COMING 💀 |
| |The first ''actually'' usable EDO. Decent chords & decent melodic ideas. Sevish's ''Vidya'' is a good example of how it can sound.
| | : '''Fumica:''' Diminished chord. |
| |The first conventional-sounding EDO in that it has both fifths and at least two sizes of seconds. The 7-note neutral third scale is cool.
| | : '''MisterShafXen:''' It’s… okay. Only 1 tetrad, but at least there are 3 triads! |
| |Like [[blackwood]], except with neutral thirds. Or, blackwood intersects [[dicot]]. Same circle-of-3/2s structure as 5edo, but now there are 360-cent "neutral thirds" and 600-cent "tritones". It's easy to trick people into thinking that [[decimal]] MODMOSes are the familiar "blues scale" (and for that matter, that 0 360 960 cents is a "dominant seventh").
| | : '''Glitchydarkness:''' Has some good melodic movement for its size, and can play the diminished chord! Who cares if it's contained within 12edo, you could name any EDO and it's contained in another higher one too, it's a property of numbers! |
| |1. A neutral triad version of [[blackwood]], or a "neutral tetrad" version of [[pajara]], or a neutral [[negri]], or a neutral [[lemba]]. Elaine Walker's written some great stuff in this. I have the feeling that this is a great base scale for "diatonic"-style melodies, but haven't explored it as much yet. Also an equalized [[Trienstonic clan|octokaidecal]][10]. Need to play more
| | : '''Budjarn Lambeth:''' Lends itself to meditative, minimalist music: music where rhythm and timbre are the source of most of the interest, while melody and harmony are repetitive and change by small increments, forcing the listener to pay close attention to the most subtle changes. |
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| 2. don't know a lot about it, but 10-note scales are interesting for also being something in which major and minor can share a triad class, which may be of semi-categorical relevance
| | == [[5edo]] == |
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| | : '''Aura:''' This EDO is the smallest one commonly used and is the first one that allows the usage of the fifth above the tonic as part of a resolved tonic harmony, though this admittedly sounds dirty, and furthermore the note a fifth above the dominant acts more like a second than a third in this case. Thankfully, this EDO doesn't take as much skill to work with as the previous three EDOs, and it is not quite as dissonant in terms of its note palette either. Beyond this, and the fact that it provides the framework for the varicant and contravaricant functions, I can't say much more about this EDO than what has already been said by others who have used it, as the only reason I know anything beyond what I've mentioned here is due to observations of others' work on this EDO. |
| |A universe that's recognisable, but everything is distorted and the people have no faces. The merging of 3rds and 6ths removes one of the primary forms of textural expressiveness in 12, leaving it disconcertingly emotionally flat.
| | : '''Bozu:''' Elemental hyperpent. You can actually play a couple of melodies in the tuning, but it gets exhausted after an hour or two. Good tuning for percussive-melodic instruments like gamelan, woodblock, etc., but it can get grating on its own. |
| |-
| | : '''Nicolai:''' Equipentatonic. Nothing too original. |
| |[[11edo]]
| | : '''Keenan:''' Smallest useful EDO, and it's really cool. Basically 2.3.7 limit (no hint of the 5th harmonic at all), and a great candidate for a scale people can just bang away on. Regular temperament model of slendro. |
| |This one is one of the three edo's that don't really fit any distinct category, and it shows. In my opinion, it's the second most difficult to use. Lots of possibilities of notes, unlike anything smaller than 9edo, but nothing seems to sound particularly great, not that it sounds particularly awful, either.
| | : '''MisterShafXen:''' Equipentatonic, has a shell of a 4:5:6:7 chord (no 5/4). |
| |This is probably a good example of where you should use secundal harmony rather than tertial harmony.
| | : '''Mike:''' |
| |Supports some cool chords and scales. The widened seconds and thirds are a vibe in itself. Underrated.
| | :: 1. smallest EDO that has something resembling 3/2. Has a great approximation of the 7th harmonic. Really awesome, stretched out, equal pentatonic scale. Sevish features it here as a prominent subset of 15-EDO: [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rPmuKUm2kJg ''Sevish - Fifteen (15 tone microtonal music) - YouTube''] |
| |Every other note of [[22edo|22]]. This makes it a great 2.9.7.11 temperament. Includes [[machine]], [[orgone]], [http://x31eq.com/cgi-bin/rt.cgi?ets=11_14&limit=2_9_7_11 and http://x31eq.com/cgi-bin/rt.cgi?ets=11_20&limit=2_9_7_11 <nowiki>http://x31eq.com/cgi-bin/rt.cgi?ets=11_14&limit=2_9_7_11</nowiki> and <nowiki>http://x31eq.com/cgi-bin/rt.cgi?ets=11_20&limit=2_9_7_11</nowiki>]
| | :: 2. equipentatonic, which is trippy |
| |1. Amazing and totally underrated EDO. It supports excellent 4:7:9:11 chords, as well as 4:7:9:11:15:17:19 chords if you're into that thing. Was once thought to be mostly "atonal" for lacking 3/2, but revealed as a low-numbered EDO of prime interest after the Great Subgroup Revolution Of 2011. Giving you decently accurate tetradic harmony for only 11 notes is almost a miracle. Supports [[machine]] temperament, of which the 2 2 1 2 2 2 MOS is of interest for being stable and sounding like a "warped diatonic." Example here that loosely uses it:
| | : '''Yourmusic Productions:''' The emancipation from harmony. Nothing clashes with anything else, so you're free to play any combination of notes and concentrate on rhythm, arrangement and instrumentation instead. (and you really need to push those other areas to keep it from getting boring.) |
| http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AhPjsCoMy-Q. Also supports orgone[7], or 2 2 1 2 1 2 1, which is another "warped diatonic" scale. An example of this:
| | : '''Carmen14edo/Bragtime:''' As the others have already explained, this one is a certified hood classic. I second what Bozu and Keenan said |
| | : '''Fumica:''' Equalized pentic scale. |
| | : '''Glitchydarkness:''' Really good for its size, and is the first EDO to have multiple types of chords! There are now sus2 and sus4 chords to be used, the harmony is evolving! We also get some more variety over at the melodic aspect of the scale, and overall everything is better then all previous edos. Even better, we have a perfect fifth! The key to harmony! Overall the best tiny EDO |
| | : '''Vector:''' This is the best 2.3.7 edo by far for its size. Other than that, it's equipentatonic, and so you get the first hint of diatonic-style melody in this edo. It's a subset of 15edo. |
| | : '''Budjarn Lambeth:''' Lends itself to meditative, minimalist music: music where rhythm and timbre are the source of most of the interest, while melody and harmony are repetitive and change by small increments, forcing the listener to pay close attention to the most subtle changes. |
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| http://soundcloud.com/mikebattagliaexperiments/sets/tonal-study-in-orgone-temperament/. Also, much like 8-EDO supports the excellent and underrated 2.9/7.5/3 version of sensi temperament.
| | == [[6edo]] == |
| | : '''Aura:''' This EDO requires a mixture of the aforementioned techniques for 2edo and 3edo for proper harmonizing, along with knowledge of the whole tone scale from 12edo, as that scale is exactly what this EDO is. I'd really like to see someone take on this challenge, especially as there are more options for this EDO than for either 2edo or 3edo- particularly in the realm of melody. |
| | : '''Bozu:''' Smallest 2nd order tuning set - augmented in whole steps. There are a number of possibilities, but trying to create any sort of tonal movement is useless, modality is useless, and overall, it's overconstrained. |
| | : '''Nicolai:''' Whole tone scale. Take out 4\6 and you have a pentatonic subset of the lydian dominant scale. |
| | : '''Keenan:''' Boring as a subset of 12edo, but useful as a very simple 2.9.5.7 temperament. Most of the good 2.9.... scales have 6-note MOSes for this reason. |
| | : '''Mike:''' the whole tone scale. But, if you flatten the octaves, you can get almost perfect 4:5:7:11 chords, which is worth noting. |
| | : '''Yourmusic Productions:''' A universe in monochrome. You can make things out, but so much is missing. |
| | : '''Carmen14edo/Bragtime:''' ''wooOO the main character's having a flashback or a dream! *always visually accompanied by a ripple effect*'' |
| | : '''Fumica:''' Whole tone scale. |
| | : '''Vector:''' Whole tone scale. It's interesting because it has basically all the basic consonances of 12edo except the fifths. I usually end up harmonizing with tritones; it doesn't even sound that dissonant because I'm already using the wholetone scale. |
| | : '''MisterShafXen:''' Augmented in whole tones. So much missing. |
| | : '''Budjarn Lambeth:''' Lends itself to meditative, minimalist music: music where rhythm and timbre are the source of most of the interest, while melody and harmony are repetitive and change by small increments, forcing the listener to pay close attention to the most subtle changes. |
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| 2. has machine[6] which is a key warped diatonic scale, and orgone[7]. I'd say 11-EDO is way up there in terms of key things to learn for categories because it's small, has great 4:7:9:11 triads, and has warped diatonic scales.
| | == [[7edo]] == |
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| | : '''ArrowHead:''' I find 7edo to be great for blowing people's minds since it completely eliminates any concept of "minor" or "major" in the diatonic scale. Everything is neutral. |
| |It can almost pass for 12 as long as you only play one note at at time, but more than that and it's limitations become painfully clear.
| | : '''Aura:''' This EDO provides the framework for all the diatonic functions and most of the paradiatonic functions. Beyond that, the fact that all triads are essentially neutral in this EDO, and the fact that this EDO supports Amity, I have very little to comment on. |
| |-
| | : '''Bozu:''' Elemental hypopent. The experience here is sort of like playing in 5edo, but it's more like a tuning where you have one complete scale to play with. For me, this is the smallest edo with which I would consider composing. But it's still overconstrained when it comes to trying to modulate anything. |
| |[[12edo]]
| | : '''Nicolai:''' Equiheptatonic. Again, nothing too original. |
| |Honestly, the best edo. Not too many notes, not too few. What notes are there sound great. It's the lowest composite hypopent, as well as the lowest composite of augmented and diminished. You can use it to affect major, minor, augmented, and diminished tonalities very well. The only place it truly falls short is anything beyond that. It's not too great at approximating higher order harmonics, nor does it offer any neutral intervals. It'd be sort of silly to think of a beginner musician starting with anything other than this or some form of meantone or JI that 12edo approximates.
| | : '''Keenan:''' Cool in many of the ways that 5 is. Regular temperament model of a scale used in Thai music. |
| |I probably shouldn't have listed this.
| | : '''Mike: ''' |
| |Not a bad tuning, all things considered.
| | :: 1. next-smallest EDO that has something resembling 3/2. This sounds like an "equalized" diatonic scale, so that there are no more "major" or "minor" thirds, but just "thirds." 7-EDO is also notable for being an equalized version of a number of scales, including but not limited to: the diatonic scale, mohajira/maqamic[7] and its MODMOS's, porcupine[7], tetracot[7], and mavila[7]. Anyone who's familiar with any of these scales will be able to hear echos of them in 7-EDO. Additionally, if you stretch the octaves to about 1230 cents, you get something which is like every other step of the popular nonoctave [[88cET]], and which can also be thought of as a nonoctave version of [[Tetracot family|tetracot temperament]], with really good 2:3:5 chords. |
| |Excellent 5-limit temperament with strong hints of 7. The ideal tuning for the wildly popular [[dominant]] temperament. Also [[augmented]] and [[diminished]]. Currently used as a basis for adaptive tuning, as well as directly, by a huge number of "non-xenharmonic" ensembles.
| | :: 2. equidiatonic, which is trippy |
| |If all things are considered, and any personal boredom with it is ignored, it's a really frickin good temperament. For its size, it supports remarkable 5-limit harmony, has a debatably passable representation of the 7-limit, and can sort of "hint" at 11, as in the string of ascending dom9#11 chords in the beginning of this Art Tatum video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CaPeks0H3_s. Our theory places "12-EDO" and "meantone" as one example of an infinite series of musical tunings, all of which are of potential interest - however, care must be taken to not unfairly diminish 12-EDO's value in a mathematical sense because one may simply be bored with it. Many feel that everything in it "has already been done"; I have a different perspective as a jazz musician in NYC, where people do new and interesting things with 12-EDO every time I go to Smalls'. (Be more creative!!)
| | : '''Yourmusic Productions:''' The emancipation from harmony, but now with recognisable, if bland diatonic melodies. |
| |Widely used...
| | : '''Carmen14edo/Bragtime:''' The basis of knowsur's melody and harmony on the 14edo album NANA WODORI, and thus one of my personal favorites. |
| |The more I study it, the more it's flaws and limitations irritate me.
| | : '''Fumica:''' Equalized diatonic scale. |
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| | : '''Vector:''' This... could honestly fit in as a diatonic tuning. It's the first kind of tuning where we have functional harmony, although all the chords are neutral. |
| |[[13edo]]
| | : '''Budjarn Lambeth:''' Offers exciting melodic shapes, but requires careful attention to timbre to prevent it sounding "out of tune". |
| |To me, this one is the most difficult edo to bend to my will. Like 11edo, it doesn't fit any category, but the tones all just sound off to me.
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| |Extremely dissonant, but at least the major chord sounds somewhat decent. Not much decent, but its better than nothing.
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| |The 7- and 8-note pseudo-diatonic scales are good entry points for a beginner. Using the intervals which are similar to 12edo but have different moods requires balancing different tradeoffs.
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| |Every other note of [[26edo|26]]. This makes it a good temperament for a subgroup containing the primes 5, 11, and 13 (but not 3). Alternatively, the ~738 cent interval could be treated as 3/2, giving a few high-error 5-limit temperaments, including [[uncle]] and [[dicot]].
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| |1. [[13edo|13]] is insane. I can't get my head wrapped around it, but I love it at the same time. 13 wreaks havoc on my brain because it constantly sends crazy signals about my 12-EDO categories which misfire in fantastic ways. 11-EDO does the same thing, but 13-EDO is worse for no particular reason. You can use this to a particular effect by coming up with warped diatonic scales which have the pattern 2212221, but in which the "octave" now becomes more like a major 7th. Other than that, 13 is also notable for having a bunch of exceedingly beautiful scales which can generate some of the most far out harmonies you've ever heard, and is also simultaneously notable for being totally ignored in this capacity because a long time ago it got a reputation for being harmonically inaccurate and that reputation stuck. The crown jewel in the 13, uh, crown, is father[8], which is an amazingly vivid and bright scale, which for me evokes the imagery of galaxies in deep space and underwater coral reefs and stuff, but it's been largely ignored because it has an interval which is 30 cents off from 3/2 and which sounds bad if you expect it to be 3/2. Despite all that, I like the 738 cent interval for just being the color it is - treat it with caution but use it as an "extension" in chords and such. You can also treat it as 32/21, which means you're treating the inverse as 21/16, at which point you'll probably realize that this scale isn't bad at all - it's just the 2.9.7/3 version of mothra temperament, which Igs has called "A-team." Other nice scales include 2222212, which is glacial[7], and some other stuff. Oh yeah, and also the 738 cent interval is an augmented fifth in 26-EDO, which is twice 13. No comment. It also has good 13/8 and 11/8, and a good 7/6, and a decent 9/8, and a bunch of other random stuff. The circle of not-quite-3/2's hits a ton of those intervals.
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| 2. 13-EDO and 11-EDO both have warped diatonic scales with stretched/compressed octaves
| | == [[8edo]] == |
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| | : '''Aura:''' The only things I knew for a fact about this EDO going in were from my understanding of 4edo- namely that the same techniques available in 4edo are also viable here, with the added bonus of being able to use the Locrian-style tonic harmony in other ways due to there being more available pitch contrasts. It is true that one has to omit the fifth from most chords for harmony in this EDO to be useful, but I have to say I was pleasantly surprised when I found out not only that the antitonic harmony could now be fortified with what is effectively a supermajor third rather than simply another instance of the tonic, but also that the pitch immediately above the antitonic could serve as a good set-up for the antitonic harmony thanks to also having this same supermajor third above the root in the form of the tonic itself. Suffice to say I now have a new xenharmonic trick up my sleeve. |
| |All the various kinds of 9thno5 chords work, and have interesting new flavours compared to their 12edo equivalents. Well worth getting to grips with the cluster based harmony needed to make it sound nice.
| | : '''Bozu:''' kind of a cool diminished scale, but it suffers from the same problems as other drone-like edo's, in terms of options and constraints. |
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| | : '''Nicolai:''' First EDO with some kind of quarter tone interval. |
| |[[14edo]]
| | : '''Keenan:''' A very weird edo. It has passable 10:11:12:14 chords, but nothing "rooted" (unless 750 cents is an acceptable 3/2). |
| |2nd order hypopent. It's like the scale from 7edo has some different colours added to its palette. Not super easy to wield, but it does have a nice spacey sound that makes sense to the ears in a weird way.
| | : '''Mike:''' |
| |Cool chords. People say that its really dissonant, but I don't hear anything out of the ordinary.
| | :: 1. An EDO that's often dismissed as an equalized diminished[8] scale, yet contains a lot more. For starters, it's also an equalized sensi[8] (especially if viewed as existing in the 2.9/7.5/3 subgroup, and has, for its size, excellent approximations to the tempered 1/1-9/7-5/3 [[Sensamagic chords|sensamagic chord]]), made of two 450 cent "supermajor thirds" on top of one another. This chord provides a great contrast to the usual diminished chord, as it's much less intense and "evil" sounding, and much more floaty and abstract. I also tend to enjoy huge stacks of 450 cent intervals, which I think are beautiful. Stacks of 750 cent intervals can also be very beautiful: I don't know whether they "approximate 3/2 poorly" or "approximate 14/9 well" or whatever it is, but they sound really good. They're two things that categorically sound to me like sharp fifths mixed with minor sixths, and two of them gets you a minor tenth; this is another way to get away from making it sound "diminished." Lastly, I also note that 8-EDO is an equalized porcupine[8], so for those who are used to porcupine, 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 may trip you out as being sort of like porcupine but with 4:5:6 replaced with 7:9:11. With sensamagic chords, diminished chords, and 7:9:11 chords - all of which differ in consonance - there's no reason why you can't use this tuning to make beautiful, programmatic, and to my ears somewhat "spacy" sounding music. |
| |Intriguing and spicy tuning.
| | :: 2. 8-EDO is a great tuning but I dunno if it has a ton of specifically categorically interesting stuff |
| |Jamesbond, [[bug]]/[[semaphore]], etc. (Quite bad whitewood tuning.) Pretty much misses "minor" and "major" thirds entirely, going straight from "subminor" to "neutral" to "supermajor", which makes it very xenharmonic (thought not necessarily *pleasant*). Also don't forget the presence of DTMF ("touch tone") tones. Any phone number is a two-part piece of music!
| | : '''Yourmusic Productions:''' Any combination of more than 2 notes sounds bad, and most 2 note combinations sound bad too. Just vile. |
| |1. [[14edo|14-EDO]] has frickin touch tone noises! Holy shit! Just play two 7-EDO chains a b9 apart and you'll hear it! It's also interesting for not having 5/4 or 6/5 in any real capacity, but having 11/9 and 9/7 and a passable 7/6. So if you think about the way a 14-EDO native listener would hear the harmonic series, instead of hearing the sequence of intervals like octave-fifth-fourth-major third-minor third-smaller minor third, they'd probably hear octave-fifth-fourth-large neutral third-small neutral third-large subminor third-small subminor third-etc. Note that they'd probably not use names like "neutral" and "subminor" though, since those are just our names for those things. It also has a really interesting version of hedgehog temperament which makes the 5:6 in 5:6:7 out to be a neutral third; this is great for categories and then when you move into hedgehog[8] in 22-EDO, the scalar structure remains intelligible despite the intonation shifting under it. A great tuning I also wish I knew more about.
| | : '''Carmen14edo/Bragtime:''' I'm convinced anyone who thinks this edo legitimately sounds good are lying |
| | : '''Deja Igliashon:''' Do you like 24edo? Do you think a chord of 0-400-550-700-850-1000¢ sounds close enough to 8:10:11:12:13:14? Great! Now play just the 10:11:12:13:14 part of the chord--it's 0-150-300-450-600¢, which also happens to be five consecutive notes of 8edo. Say what?! A decently-concordant 5-note chord in an 8-note tuning that everyone thinks is awful?! Who knew?? You can even extend it to 10:11:12:13:14:17 if you like that spicy 17th-harmonic flavor: just add 900¢ to the chord, and enjoy playing 3/4 of all the notes in the tuning at once and still sounding good! |
| | : '''Fumica:''' The first nontrivial nondiatonic edo. Since neither the fifth nor the major second passes as consonance, quintal harmony isn't available, not to mention tertian harmony. From here the more complex ratios it approximates on paper generally lack the context to make them ring, so with the very sparse harmonic resource, it forces an approach that focuses on rhythm, texture – anything but harmony. Of course, some resource is there if you try hard enough, but suspending the idea of treating it as more than two diminished chords will spare you a demoralizing fight. Ultimately, I just believe music that sounds good in it sounds good despite it, not because of it; this isn't different from any of the previous edos. |
| | : '''Budjarn Lambeth:''' Offers exciting melodic shapes, but requires careful attention to timbre to prevent it sounding "out of tune". |
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| 2. has the whole "kloog" slash "kleeg" thing going on, and also has touch tone noises as intervals for you to try and categorize
| | == [[9edo]] == |
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| | : '''Aura:''' The only things I know for a fact about this EDO come from my understanding of 3edo, as the same techniques available in 3edo are also viable here. Listening to others' antidiatonic scales in this EDO does have my curiosity peaked, but at the same time, the lack of a good fifth is a turn-off for me. |
| |The opposite of 10 - recognisable, but distorted so there's three types of 3rd and 6th with exaggerated expressive qualities. Even though it's best intervals aren't as in tune as 12, it sounds much less dissonant when playing all the notes at once, so it seems a natural home for Schoenberg influenced serialism and extended chords.
| | : '''Bozu:''' 3rd order augmented scale. I want to like this tuning, but I can't see any value in it beyond noodling. |
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| | : '''Keenan:''' On the one hand you can treat the 667 cent intervals as 3/2, yielding an extreme version of [[mavila]] (or 7-limit [[armodue]]) which is a very acceptable tuning for pelog selisir. On the other hand you can treat it has having no 3rd harmonics, as something like a 2.5.7/3 temperament. (Treating it as a super-accurate 2.27/25.7/3 temperament makes no sense to me.) First EDO with '''recognizable''' "major" and "minor" chords. |
| |[[15edo]]
| | : '''Mike:''' |
| |3rd order hyperpent, also with the augmented tonalities pasted in. Perhaps one of the most user-friendly edo's, it has a lot to offer, but also makes composers accustomed to 12edo think outside of the box.
| | :: 1. If we're considering the 667 cent intervals to be 3/2, then this is the first EDO that doesn't temper out 25/24 in the 5-limit, and as such distinguishes between 4:5:6 and 10:12:15. However you want to view it, it's definitely the first EDO to my ears where I can hear distinct "major" and "minor" chords, as detuned as they may be. This is also the first EDO that supports [[Pelogic family|mavila]] and [[Pelogic family|pelogic]] temperament, and the 7-note MOS's are of prime interest here. Because of that, it's the first EDO I know how to create something like "functional harmony" in, although it sounds detuned (which I can get used to; it's not the end of the world). Example here: <nowiki>http://www.youtube.com/watch? |
| |Probably the most popular small EDO. Great chords, good approximation of 6/5, and supports some nice temperaments. Also I kinda introduced Weigel to a Hanson keyboard, and then he made it into his keyboard, so I feel a little happy about telling him about that.
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| |Great tuning for simple but cool alternate-universe 5-limit temperaments such as porcupine and blackwood.
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| |Very interesting for [[blackwood]], [[porcupine]], and others. A good all-around EDO. If you want to internalize [[Porcupine intervals|porcupine interval categories]], use 15edo.
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| |has 5-limit harmony plus a 5 note circle of 3/2's, which is crazy in terms of "tonality," which would seem to be peripherally relevant
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| |Like 14, not as good at simple harmonies as 12, but some glorious extended blackwood chords that combine more notes than you can in 12 and still sound good. Porcupine looks simpler, but I actually find it more of a struggle than blackwood to use.
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| |[[16edo]]
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| |diminished mayhem with extra mayhem. Check out Last Sacrament to see what this bad boy
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