List of approaches to musical tuning: Difference between revisions
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Converted comma list of just intonation methods into a dot point list. Moved just intonation lower down on the list so that the article doesn't immediately open with a massive wall of intimidating technical-sounding terms. |
m Merged overtone scales and primodality into a single dot point because they are highly related |
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*[[Isoharmonic chords]]: the use of chords with an equal harmonic difference between the pitches as building blocks for scales. | *[[Isoharmonic chords]]: the use of chords with an equal harmonic difference between the pitches as building blocks for scales. | ||
* [[Just intonation]]: The tuning of pitches so that their fundamental frequencies are related by ratios of whole numbers. An infinite world of numerous models: | * [[Just intonation]]: The tuning of pitches so that their fundamental frequencies are related by ratios of whole numbers. An infinite world of numerous models: | ||
** [[Combination product sets]] | **[[Combination product sets]] | ||
** The [[harmonic series]] | ** The [[harmonic series]] | ||
** [[Fokker blocks]] | ** [[Fokker blocks]] | ||
** Integer frequency ratios | ** Integer frequency ratios | ||
** [[Overtone scale]]s | ** [[Overtone scale]]s & [[primodality]] | ||
** [[Tonality diamond]]s | ** [[Tonality diamond]]s | ||
** etc. | ** etc. |
Revision as of 08:55, 26 April 2023
Musical tuning can be approached in many different ways. Here are some of the currently-established theories and approaches:
- Equal-step tunings: Tunings that use a single interval (and combinations thereof) to form a subtle monoculture of intervals. These include edos (equal divisions of the octave), but also many nonoctave tunings (sometimes called edonoi).
- Regular temperaments: (including linear temperaments): a centuries-old practice that has recently undergone a mathematical facelift, in which just intonation is selectively and regularly detuned in various ways, to better meet a variety of compositional desires
- Moment of symmetry (MOS): Tunings (or better, scales) that use iterations of a generating interval, modulo a period interval, to produce scales of two step-sizes.
- Historical western temperaments: The (somewhat forgotten) use of Pythagorean and meantone tunings and well temperaments in Western common practice music.
- Musical traditions of indigenous, ancient, and/or non-Western cultures:
- African
- Ancient Greek
- Arabic, Turkish, Persian
- Byzantine
- Georgian
- Indian (North, South)
- Indonesian (Java, Bali)
- Pre-Columbian South American (e.g. Maya, Inca, Aztec..)
- Thai
- Tetrachordal scales: the use of divided fourths as building blocks for composition.
- Isoharmonic chords: the use of chords with an equal harmonic difference between the pitches as building blocks for scales.
- Just intonation: The tuning of pitches so that their fundamental frequencies are related by ratios of whole numbers. An infinite world of numerous models:
- Combination product sets
- The harmonic series
- Fokker blocks
- Integer frequency ratios
- Overtone scales & primodality
- Tonality diamonds
- etc.
- Timbral tuning: An approach similar to just intonation, but using an instrument's actual, non-harmonic overtone spectrum (e.g. the partials of a metal bar, drum head, or synthesized timbre) to relate frequencies instead of the harmonic series.
The following approaches describe the subjective exploration process or its representations rather than its objective, audible result:
- Empirical: This is a form of hands-on field research as opposed to a form of acoustical or scale engineering, where tunings are specifically derived from listening and playing experiments carried out in the pitch continuum.
- Pretty Pictures that represent scales in one way or another
- Notation (pretty pictures for the purpose of writing music down)
- Nominal-Accidental Chains A common approach to notation
- The notion of a Scalesmith who builds scales, with various methods, perhaps for single occasions
- Mathematically based scales
- Acoustically-based scales (resonant frequencies of performance space, for example)
- Scale transformation and stretching
- Counter-intuitive, random, arbitrary scales