User:Williamcopper: Difference between revisions

From Xenharmonic Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Created page with "User page for composer William Copper. Related pages to include 1. Johnston-Copper notation, which is similar to Johnston notation with the important addition of key signat..."
 
added links
 
Line 1: Line 1:
User page for composer William Copper.  Related pages to include  
User page for composer William Copper.  Related pages to include  


1. Johnston-Copper notation, which is similar to Johnston notation with the important addition of key signatures which give the Johnston 3-chord just intonation scheme a means of changing by harmonic center, or, in other words, to avoid being restricted to a C Major just intonation bias.   
1. [[Johnston-Copper Notation]] , which is similar to Johnston notation with the important addition of key signatures which give the Johnston 3-chord just intonation scheme a means of changing by harmonic center, or, in other words, to avoid being restricted to a C Major just intonation bias.   
2. Intonalism, which is a method of composition that supports keeping all intervals vertical and horizontal in pure just intonation (5-limit or any limit that suits the music).  
2. [[intonalism]] , which is a method of composition that supports keeping all intervals vertical and horizontal in pure just intonation (5-limit or any limit that suits the music).  
3. William Copper, composer and works.
3. [[William Copper]] , composer and works.

Latest revision as of 16:32, 7 September 2023

User page for composer William Copper. Related pages to include

1. Johnston-Copper Notation , which is similar to Johnston notation with the important addition of key signatures which give the Johnston 3-chord just intonation scheme a means of changing by harmonic center, or, in other words, to avoid being restricted to a C Major just intonation bias. 2. intonalism , which is a method of composition that supports keeping all intervals vertical and horizontal in pure just intonation (5-limit or any limit that suits the music). 3. William Copper , composer and works.