Nominal-accidental chain: Difference between revisions

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: ''"Sharp" and "flat" redirect here. For the temperaments that used to go by those names, see [[Sharpie]] and [[Flattie]].''
This is a neologism for the common pattern in [[Musical notation|notating]] microtonal pitch systems. These are analogous extensions of basic Western musical notation.
'''Nominals''' are pitch elements that have specific names. In Western musical notation, these names are the seven letters A, B, C, D, E, F, and G (historically, H has also been used). In a pentatonic notation, there would be only five names.
{{Wikipedia| Accidental (music) }}
{{Wikipedia| Accidental (music) }}


: ''"Sharp" and "flat" redirect here. For the temperaments, see [[Sharp (temperament)]] and [[Flat (temperament)]].''
'''Accidentals''' are additional pitches that arise as modifications of the nominals. Unmodified pitches are natural notes. In diatonic [[circle-of-fifths notation]], the additional pitches are denoted by adding '''sharps''' or '''flats''' to the natural notes. The sharp accidental denotes a pitch raise by a [[chromatic semitone]], equivalent to a raise by 7 fifths minus 4 octaves. Conversely, the flat accidental denotes a pitch drop by the same amount. In [[equal temperament]]s, the number of steps this interval is mapped to is called the [[sharpness]].
 
These pitches form a chain, with each one separated from the next by a specific interval. This interval can be said to generate the notation, or the notation can be said to be based on this interval. In diatonic circle-of-fifths notation, this interval has been a just or near-just 3/2. Other intervals are possible, and even desirable for certain edos like 13, 18, and 23.
 
[[Enharmonic equivalence]] may arise from this approach, which is when the same pitch can have multiple names. People are often taught that C♯ is enharmonically equivalent to D♭ but this is only true in [[12edo]] and its multiples (24edo, 36edo, etc). The same term is sometimes used to refer to equivalence in general, but each edo technically has its own equivalence. [[7edo]] has the type of equivalence that could be called ''chromatic equivalence'', for example, since in 7edo the fact that stacking seven fifths takes one back to the root note means that sharps and flats are redundant.
 
== Inflections and alterations ==
Microtonal accidentals are sometimes referred to as '''inflections'''. Using this term allows the term ''accidental'' to refer exclusively to sharps, flats and naturals. Accidentals and inflections may then be referred to collectively as '''alterations'''. This terminology facilitates discussions of microtonal scores, especially in rank-1 and rank-2 systems.
 
Examples:
{| class="wikitable center-all"
|+ style="font-size: 105%" | Edo alterations
|-
! colspan="2" rowspan="2" | Accidentals
! colspan="2" | Inflections
|-
! colspan="2" | Arrows
|-
| Sharp
| Flat
| Up
| Down
|-
| ♯
| ♭
| ^
| v
|}
 
{| class="wikitable center-all"
|+ style="font-size: 105%" | [[Pergen]] alterations
|-
! colspan="2" rowspan="2" | Accidentals
! colspan="4" | Inflections
|-
! colspan="2" | Arrows
! colspan="2" | Slashes
|-
| Sharp
| Flat
| Up
| Down
| Lift
| Drop
|-
| ♯
| ♭
| ^
| v
| /
| \
|}
 
{| class="wikitable center-all"
|+ style="font-size: 105%" | Just intonation alterations
|-
! rowspan="2" |
! colspan="2" rowspan="2" | Accidentals
! colspan="6" | Inflections
|-
! colspan="2" | Prime 5
! colspan="2" | Prime 7
! colspan="2" | Prime 11
|-
! rowspan="2" | Color notation
| Sharp
| Flat
| Yo
| Gu
| Zo
| Ru
| iLo
| Lu
|-
| ♯
| ♭
| y
| g
| z
| r
| 1o
| 1u
|-
! FJS notation
| ♯
| ♭
| 5
| /5
| 7
| /7
| 11
| /11
|-
! Prime-factor Sagittal
| ♯
| ♭
| \!
| <nowiki>/|</nowiki>
| !)
| <nowiki>|)</nowiki>
| <nowiki>/|\</nowiki>
| \!/
|}
 
Each JI inflection inflects by a certain [[formal comma|comma]].  


This is a neologism for the common pattern in [[Notation|notating]] microtonal pitch systems. These are analogous extensions of basic Western musical notation.
These usages of the terms accidental, inflection and alteration were coined by [[Kite Giedraitis]].


'''Nominals''' are pitch elements that have specific names. In Western musical notation, these names are the seven letters A B C D E F G (historically, H has also been used). In a pentatonic notation, there would be only five names.
== Specific notation schemes ==
; Diatonic
* [[Circle-of-fifths notation]] (and neutral circle-of-fifths notation)
** [[Ups and downs notation]]
** [[Syntonic&ndash;rastmic subchroma notation]]
** [[Sagittal notation]]


'''Accidentals''' are additional pitches that arise as modifications of the nominals. Unmodified pitches are natural notes. In diatonic [[circle-of-fifths notation]], the additional pitches are denoted by adding '''sharps''' or '''flats''' to A-G. The sharp accidental denotes a pitch raise by a [[chromatic semitone]], equivalent to a raise by 7 fifths minus 4 octaves. Conversely, the flat accidental denotes a pitch drop by the same amount. In [[equal temperament]]s, the number of steps this interval is mapped to is called the [[sharpness]].
; Nondiatonic
* [[4L 5s (3/1-equivalent)#Notation|Bohlen&ndash;Pierce "Lambda" notation]]
* [[Armodue]] number notation (based on the [[superdiatonic]] scale)
* [[Fox&ndash;Raven notation]] (based on the [[oneirotonic]] scale)
* [[Arcturus hendecatonic notation]] (based on the [[Arcturus]][11] scale)
* [[Diamond-mos notation]]


These pitches form a chain, with each one separated from the next by a specific interval. This interval can be said to generate the notation, or the notation can be said to be based on this interval. In diatonic circle-of-fifths notation, this interval has been a just or near-just 3/2. Other intervals are possible, and even desirable for certain edos like 13, 18 and 23.
; Unsorted
* [[Erv Wilson]]'s Greek letters <!-- what's this? -->
* [[Aaron Hunt]]'s system


'''Enharmonic equivalence''' may arise from this approach. This is when you have multiple names for the same pitch. C-sharp is enharmonically equivalent to D-flat, but only in 12edo, 24edo, 36edo, etc.
== Related topics ==
{{Todo| update |inline=1|comment=Find materials for these topics.}}


This page is incomplete, and will eventually contain or refer to
* The term "albitonic" (see [[Chromatic pairs]])
* Non-A-G extensions, including [[Erv Wilson]]'s greek letters, [[Bohlen-Pierce]] notation, [[Armodue]] number notation, [[Fox-Raven notation]]
* [[Mark Gould]]'s connection of accidentals to [[bi-level MOS]]
* [[Mark Gould]]'s connection of accidentals to [[bi-level MOS]]
* the term "[[albitonic]]"
* Connections to [[Sagittal notation]] and [[Aaron Hunt]]'s system


{{Todo| expand | update }}
[[Category:Notation]]
[[Category:Notation]]

Latest revision as of 11:31, 19 July 2025

"Sharp" and "flat" redirect here. For the temperaments that used to go by those names, see Sharpie and Flattie.

This is a neologism for the common pattern in notating microtonal pitch systems. These are analogous extensions of basic Western musical notation.

Nominals are pitch elements that have specific names. In Western musical notation, these names are the seven letters A, B, C, D, E, F, and G (historically, H has also been used). In a pentatonic notation, there would be only five names.

English Wikipedia has an article on:

Accidentals are additional pitches that arise as modifications of the nominals. Unmodified pitches are natural notes. In diatonic circle-of-fifths notation, the additional pitches are denoted by adding sharps or flats to the natural notes. The sharp accidental denotes a pitch raise by a chromatic semitone, equivalent to a raise by 7 fifths minus 4 octaves. Conversely, the flat accidental denotes a pitch drop by the same amount. In equal temperaments, the number of steps this interval is mapped to is called the sharpness.

These pitches form a chain, with each one separated from the next by a specific interval. This interval can be said to generate the notation, or the notation can be said to be based on this interval. In diatonic circle-of-fifths notation, this interval has been a just or near-just 3/2. Other intervals are possible, and even desirable for certain edos like 13, 18, and 23.

Enharmonic equivalence may arise from this approach, which is when the same pitch can have multiple names. People are often taught that C♯ is enharmonically equivalent to D♭ but this is only true in 12edo and its multiples (24edo, 36edo, etc). The same term is sometimes used to refer to equivalence in general, but each edo technically has its own equivalence. 7edo has the type of equivalence that could be called chromatic equivalence, for example, since in 7edo the fact that stacking seven fifths takes one back to the root note means that sharps and flats are redundant.

Inflections and alterations

Microtonal accidentals are sometimes referred to as inflections. Using this term allows the term accidental to refer exclusively to sharps, flats and naturals. Accidentals and inflections may then be referred to collectively as alterations. This terminology facilitates discussions of microtonal scores, especially in rank-1 and rank-2 systems.

Examples:

Edo alterations
Accidentals Inflections
Arrows
Sharp Flat Up Down
^ v
Pergen alterations
Accidentals Inflections
Arrows Slashes
Sharp Flat Up Down Lift Drop
^ v / \
Just intonation alterations
Accidentals Inflections
Prime 5 Prime 7 Prime 11
Color notation Sharp Flat Yo Gu Zo Ru iLo Lu
y g z r 1o 1u
FJS notation 5 /5 7 /7 11 /11
Prime-factor Sagittal \! /| !) |) /|\ \!/

Each JI inflection inflects by a certain comma.

These usages of the terms accidental, inflection and alteration were coined by Kite Giedraitis.

Specific notation schemes

Diatonic
Nondiatonic
Unsorted

Related topics

Todo: update

Find materials for these topics.