List of approaches to musical tuning: Difference between revisions

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**[[Pre-Columbian South American Music|Pre-Columbian South American]] (e.g. Maya, Inca, Aztec..)
**[[Pre-Columbian South American Music|Pre-Columbian South American]] (e.g. Maya, Inca, Aztec..)
**[[Wikipedia:Music of Thailand|Thai]]
**[[Wikipedia:Music of Thailand|Thai]]
*[[Historical temperaments|Historical western temperaments]]: The (somewhat forgotten) use of [[Pythagorean tuning]], [[meantone]] tunings and [[well temperament]]s in Western common practice music.
*[[Historical temperaments]]: The (somewhat forgotten) use of [[Pythagorean tuning]], [[meantone]] tunings and [[well temperament]]s in Western common practice music.
*[[Tetrachord|Tetrachordal scales]]: the use of divided fourths as building blocks for composition.
*[[Tetrachord|Tetrachordal scales]]: the use of divided fourths as building blocks for composition.



Revision as of 04:18, 18 February 2024

Musical tuning can be approached in many different ways. Here are some of the currently-established theories and approaches:

Subjective processes

The following approaches describe the subjective exploration process or its representations rather than its objective, audible result:

  • Contextual Xenharmonics: The exploration of why things sound the way they do to some and not others.
  • Empirical: 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.
  • Musical notation: Pretty pictures for the purpose of writing music down.
  • 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