Interval of equivalence: Difference between revisions
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In a [[periodic scale]], the '''equave''' (/ˈiːkwɪv/ ''EE-kwiv'' or /ˈiːkwəv/ ''EE-kwəv''), also called '''interval of equivalence''' or ''' | In a [[periodic scale]], the '''equave''' (/ˈiːkwɪv/ ''EE-kwiv'' or /ˈiːkwəv/ ''EE-kwəv''), also called '''interval of equivalence''' or '''equivalence interval''', is the interval such that pitches separated by it are considered [[equivalence|equivalent]] and are elements of the same [[pitch class]]. The term ''equave'' was coined by [[User:Inthar|Inthar]]. | ||
== Examples == | == Examples == | ||
* In octave-equivalent scales, the equave is [[2/1]]. | * In octave-equivalent scales, the equave is [[2/1]]. | ||
* In [[Bohlen-Pierce]], the equave is [[3/1]]. | * In [[Bohlen-Pierce]], the equave is [[3/1]]. | ||
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* [[Period]] | * [[Period]] | ||
[[Category:Equivalence interval]] | |||
[[Category:Scale]] | [[Category:Scale]] | ||
[[Category:Terms]] | [[Category:Terms]] | ||
Revision as of 02:26, 6 July 2023
In a periodic scale, the equave (/ˈiːkwɪv/ EE-kwiv or /ˈiːkwəv/ EE-kwəv), also called interval of equivalence or equivalence interval, is the interval such that pitches separated by it are considered equivalent and are elements of the same pitch class. The term equave was coined by Inthar.
Examples
- In octave-equivalent scales, the equave is 2/1.
- In Bohlen-Pierce, the equave is 3/1.
- In edfs, the equave is 3/2.