Hexatonic: Difference between revisions

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Other hexatonic scales may be found at: [[:Category:6-tone scales]].
Other hexatonic scales may be found at: [[:Category:6-tone scales]].
Hexatonic scales may sometimes be used as chords rather than scales, in which case they are called [[hexad]]s.


“Equihexatonic” scales are scales with 6 roughly equally spaced tones per [[octave]]. Equihexatonic scales are rare in the world’s musical traditions, with one big exception: the whole tone scale of modern Western music. It is an equihexatonic scale, so equi-, in fact, that it is exactly [[6edo]].
“Equihexatonic” scales are scales with 6 roughly equally spaced tones per [[octave]]. Equihexatonic scales are rare in the world’s musical traditions, with one big exception: the whole tone scale of modern Western music. It is an equihexatonic scale, so equi-, in fact, that it is exactly [[6edo]].

Revision as of 04:16, 17 November 2024

A hexatonic scale is a scale with 6 tones per equave.

Hexatonic MOS scales may be found at: Hexatonic MOS.

Other hexatonic scales may be found at: Category:6-tone scales.

Hexatonic scales may sometimes be used as chords rather than scales, in which case they are called hexads.

“Equihexatonic” scales are scales with 6 roughly equally spaced tones per octave. Equihexatonic scales are rare in the world’s musical traditions, with one big exception: the whole tone scale of modern Western music. It is an equihexatonic scale, so equi-, in fact, that it is exactly 6edo.

See also