Chord of nature: Difference between revisions
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=See also= | =See also= | ||
[[The_Prime_Harmonic_Series|The Prime Harmonic Series]] | * [[The_Prime_Harmonic_Series|The Prime Harmonic Series]] | ||
* [[First_Five_Octaves_of_the_Harmonic_Series|First Five Octaves of the Harmonic Series]] | |||
[[First_Five_Octaves_of_the_Harmonic_Series|First Five Octaves of the Harmonic Series]] | * [[overtone_scales|Overtone Scales]] | ||
* [[Mike_Sheiman's_Very_Easy_Scale_Building_From_The_Harmonic_Series_Page|Mike Sheiman's Very Easy Scale Building From The Harmonic Series Page]] | |||
[[overtone_scales|Overtone Scales]] | |||
[[Mike_Sheiman's_Very_Easy_Scale_Building_From_The_Harmonic_Series_Page|Mike Sheiman's Very Easy Scale Building From The Harmonic Series Page]] | |||
Revision as of 16:01, 12 January 2019
The chord of nature is the overtone series, or harmonic series, considered as a chord; in German this has been called the Klang. The q-limit chord of nature is 1-2-3-4-...-q up to some odd number q, and is the basic q-limit otonality which can be equated via octave equivalence to other versions of the complete q-limit otonal chord.