German sixth chord: Difference between revisions
Per discussion, the 7-limit interpretation shouldn't be presented as historical. Copypaste some information from the 7/4 page |
Give the reason for the choice of 128:160:192:225 over 72:90:108:125 in the 5-limit; clarify that the meantone interpretation can include that chord as well; remove discussion of “rare and special dissonance” in the meantone section, since the 4:5:6:7 interpretation is actually consonant. |
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{{Wikipedia|Augmented sixth chord #German sixth}} | {{Wikipedia|Augmented sixth chord #German sixth}} | ||
A '''German sixth chord''' is a [[tetrad]] comprising a root, major third, fifth, and augmented sixth. | A '''German sixth chord''' is a [[tetrad]] comprising a root, major third, perfect fifth, and augmented sixth, often built on the sixth degree of the minor scale. | ||
In | == In just intonation == | ||
Because the German sixth chord is often built on the sixth degree of a minor scale, the [[128:160:192:225]] found on the ♭VI of the [[duodene]] is a good candidate for its interpretation in the [[5-limit]]. | |||
== In meantone == | |||
In [[meantone]], the augmented sixth represents both [[125/72]] and [[225/128]]. In the historically-prevalent [[quarter-comma meantone]] it is tuned only a few cents shy of a just [[7/4]], and in the closely related [[septimal meantone]] it explicitly represents [[7/4]] as well, so the meantone German sixth chord can be considered to approximate both [[4:5:6:7]] and [[128:160:192:225]]. |