Equiheptatonic: Difference between revisions

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Created page with "'''Equiheptatonic''' scales are heptatonic scales with 7 ''roughly equally'' spaced tones per octave. They are usually not exactly equally spaced, but deviate from e..."
 
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An exactly equal equiheptatonic scale equals [[7edo]], which is popular with modern Western xenharmonic composers.
An exactly equal equiheptatonic scale equals [[7edo]], which is popular with modern Western xenharmonic composers.
== See also ==
* [[Equipentatonic]]


[[Category:7-tone scales]][[Category:7edo]][[Category:Traditions]]
[[Category:7-tone scales]][[Category:7edo]][[Category:Traditions]]

Revision as of 03:39, 17 November 2024

Equiheptatonic scales are heptatonic scales with 7 roughly equally spaced tones per octave.

They are usually not exactly equally spaced, but deviate from equal by small amounts, often to improve the tuning of 3/1 and 5/1.

Musical traditions that make use of equiheptatonic scales include:

Note that just because a tradition has an equiheptatonic scale doesn’t mean it uses it exclusively. They often have other tunings too. Also, the term “scale” here is used loosely, because many, perhaps the majority, of musical traditions don’t use scales, but use something else like tetrachords, raag, etc. that scales can only loosely model.

An exactly equal equiheptatonic scale equals 7edo, which is popular with modern Western xenharmonic composers.

See also