User:Ganaram inukshuk/Models: Difference between revisions

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== Chroma-diesis model of mos child scales (outdated) ==
== Chroma-diesis model of mos child scales (outdated) ==
''Note: Much of the ideas here can be more [[User:Ganaram inukshuk/Notes#Describing moschromatic and mosenharmonic scales|easily described]] without having to consider the size of a (mos)chroma or (mos)diesis, and was also conceived before I realized that TAMNAMS already described a mosdiesis. This description is left for archival purposes.''
''Note: Much of the ideas here can be more [[User:Ganaram inukshuk/Notes#Describing moschromatic and mosenharmonic scales|easily described]] without having to consider the size of a (mos)chroma or (mos)diesis, and was also conceived before I realized that TAMNAMS already described a mosdiesis. This description is left for archival purposes.''
''Note: the idea of [[diatonic, chromatic, enharmonic, subchromatic|diatonic, chromatic, enharmonic, and subchromatic scales]] also applies to this, as well as the smaller intervals of a [[Extended meantone notation|chroma, diesis, and kleisma]]. I'd like to try to resurrect the ideas I independently tried to describe here as a temperament-agnostic interpretation of the two ideas described someday.''


This is a description of how to look at the child scales of a [[MOS scale|mos]] by looking at only the large and small steps of its parent mos. (It's also not well refined or proofread, hence it's a subpage of my userpage.) The motivation behind this comes from the notion of a [[chroma]] -- the interval that is defined as the difference between a mos's large and small steps -- and the [[diesis]], which can be defined as the difference between C# and Db in meantone temperaments.
This is a description of how to look at the child scales of a [[MOS scale|mos]] by looking at only the large and small steps of its parent mos. (It's also not well refined or proofread, hence it's a subpage of my userpage.) The motivation behind this comes from the notion of a [[chroma]] -- the interval that is defined as the difference between a mos's large and small steps -- and the [[diesis]], which can be defined as the difference between C# and Db in meantone temperaments.