Submajor and supraminor: Difference between revisions
Created page with "''This article is about the interval qualities closer to neutral than major/minor. For the opposite, see Supermajor and subminor.'' '''Submajor''' intervals are between standard major and neutral intervals, and likewise, '''supraminor''' intervals are between standard minor and neutral intervals. The prefix "supra-" is used in supraminor to avoid ambiguity with whether "superminor" would mean "sharper than minor" (i.e. supraminor) or "more extreme than minor" (i.e...." |
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Submajor and supraminor intervals are found in flatly tuned diatonic scales, such as where the fifth is tuned to around 691 cents. For a given neutral interval k in cents, submajor ranges from roughly k+10 to k+24 cents, and supraminor ranges from roughly k-24 to k-10 cents. For example, submajor seconds are found between about 157 to 171 cents, containing the lower range of the "equable heptatonic" region defined by Margo Schulter. | Submajor and supraminor intervals are found in flatly tuned diatonic scales, such as where the fifth is tuned to around 691 cents. For a given neutral interval k in cents, submajor ranges from roughly k+10 to k+24 cents, and supraminor ranges from roughly k-24 to k-10 cents. For example, submajor seconds are found between about 157 to 171 cents, containing the lower range of the "equable heptatonic" region defined by Margo Schulter. | ||
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