Halftone: Difference between revisions
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[[File:halftone6.wav|thumb|Halftone[6] example in 16edf and 4<nowiki>|</nowiki>1 mode]] | [[File:halftone6.wav|thumb|Halftone[6] example in 16edf and 4<nowiki>|</nowiki>1 mode]] | ||
'''Halftone''' is a [[nonoctave]] (fifth-repeating) [[regular temperament]] in the 3/2.5/2.7/2 fractional subgroup that tempers out 9604/9375 and has a generator of a flat [[7/5]] of around 570-580 cents. It could be used as a harmonic basis for "1/2 prime" (3/2.5/2.7/2.11/2.13/2 etc.) systems with the equivalence as [[3/2]], similar to [[meantone]] for full prime-limit systems with the equivalence as [[2/1]] and [[BPS]] for no-twos systems with the equivalence as [[3/1]]. Halftone temperament can be extended to the 11-limit (3/2.5/2.7/2.11/2) by additionally tempering out 1232/1215, the difference between [[15/14]] and [[88/81]] (the fifth-reduction of 11/2). Small [[EDF]]s that [[support]] halftone | '''Halftone''' is a [[nonoctave]] (fifth-repeating) [[regular temperament]] in the 3/2.5/2.7/2 fractional subgroup that tempers out 9604/9375 and has a generator of a flat [[7/5]] of around 570-580 cents. It could be used as a harmonic basis for "1/2 prime" (3/2.5/2.7/2.11/2.13/2 etc.) systems with the equivalence as [[3/2]], similar to [[meantone]] for full prime-limit systems with the equivalence as [[2/1]] and [[BPS]] for no-twos systems with the equivalence as [[3/1]]. Halftone temperament can be extended to the 11-limit (3/2.5/2.7/2.11/2) by additionally tempering out 1232/1215, the difference between [[15/14]] and [[88/81]] (the fifth-reduction of 11/2). Small [[EDF]]s that [[support]] halftone include [[6edf]], [[11edf]], [[16edf]], [[17edf]] (not in the patent val), [[21edf]], and [[27edf]]. | ||
If tone clusters with intervals of supraminor seconds or less are ignored, the most fundamental 3/2.5/2.7/2 chord that is narrower than a perfect fifth is 45:50:63 (1-[[10/9]]-[[7/5]]), essentially a diminished triad with a major second instead of a minor third. There is also a more "major-sounding" counterpart of it 50:63:70 (1-[[63/50]]-[[7/5]]), a diminished triad with a major third instead of a minor third. These chords generally sound more consonant than a standard diminished triad but far less than a standard major or minor triad. Both of these are well approximated in halftone because it equates 4 [[7/5]] generators with [[10/9]]. | If tone clusters with intervals of supraminor seconds or less are ignored, the most fundamental 3/2.5/2.7/2 chord that is narrower than a perfect fifth is 45:50:63 (1-[[10/9]]-[[7/5]]), essentially a diminished triad with a major second instead of a minor third. There is also a more "major-sounding" counterpart of it 50:63:70 (1-[[63/50]]-[[7/5]]), a diminished triad with a major third instead of a minor third. These chords generally sound more consonant than a standard diminished triad but far less than a standard major or minor triad. Both of these are well approximated in halftone because it equates 4 [[7/5]] generators with [[10/9]]. |
Revision as of 01:09, 10 June 2023
Halftone is a nonoctave (fifth-repeating) regular temperament in the 3/2.5/2.7/2 fractional subgroup that tempers out 9604/9375 and has a generator of a flat 7/5 of around 570-580 cents. It could be used as a harmonic basis for "1/2 prime" (3/2.5/2.7/2.11/2.13/2 etc.) systems with the equivalence as 3/2, similar to meantone for full prime-limit systems with the equivalence as 2/1 and BPS for no-twos systems with the equivalence as 3/1. Halftone temperament can be extended to the 11-limit (3/2.5/2.7/2.11/2) by additionally tempering out 1232/1215, the difference between 15/14 and 88/81 (the fifth-reduction of 11/2). Small EDFs that support halftone include 6edf, 11edf, 16edf, 17edf (not in the patent val), 21edf, and 27edf.
If tone clusters with intervals of supraminor seconds or less are ignored, the most fundamental 3/2.5/2.7/2 chord that is narrower than a perfect fifth is 45:50:63 (1-10/9-7/5), essentially a diminished triad with a major second instead of a minor third. There is also a more "major-sounding" counterpart of it 50:63:70 (1-63/50-7/5), a diminished triad with a major third instead of a minor third. These chords generally sound more consonant than a standard diminished triad but far less than a standard major or minor triad. Both of these are well approximated in halftone because it equates 4 7/5 generators with 10/9.
For technical data, see Subgroup temperaments#Halftone.
Interval chain
53.040 | 182.823 | 312.606 | 442.389 | 572.172 | 0 | 129.783 | 259.566 | 389.349 | 519.132 | 648.915 |
28/27 | 10/9 | 25/21 | 125/98~98/75 | 7/5 | 1/1 | 15/14 | 225/196~147/125 | 63/50 | 27/20 | 81/56 |
MOS scales
Halftone possesses MOS scales with 4 (1L 3s⟨3/2⟩ or "neptunian"), 5 (1L 4s⟨3/2⟩), 6 (5L 1s⟨3/2⟩) and 11 (5L 6s⟨3/2⟩/6L 5s⟨3/2⟩) notes. The tetratonic scale is usable, but the tempered 10/9 is not present in it, so the pentatonic and hexatonic scales are the smallest options for halftone.