Kite Guitar explanation for non-microtonalists: Difference between revisions
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Fortunately, there's another way to get more notes besides adding frets: detune the strings. A guitar has a built in redundancy, because a note appears in more than one place on the fretboard. The open 1st string note (middle-E) also appears on the 2nd string at fret 5, the 3rd string at fret 9, 4th at fret 14, etc. If you tune every other string half a fret sharp, every other middle-E becomes a new note. Same for every note, and you now have twice as many notes (24-EDO). The downside is that E appears in fewer places and it's sometimes harder to reach. Before, a major 3rd was one string over, one fret back. Now, there's a half-augmented 3rd there, and all your major chords sound awful! The major 3rd is still on the guitar, but 4 frets away where it's hard to reach. The perfect 4th and 5th are also inaccessible, because the nearby ones have been replaced with half-augmented 4ths and 5ths. So tuning your guitar this way gives you something new, but you lose a lot of what you had before. | Fortunately, there's another way to get more notes besides adding frets: detune the strings. A guitar has a built in redundancy, because a note appears in more than one place on the fretboard. The open 1st string note (middle-E) also appears on the 2nd string at fret 5, the 3rd string at fret 9, 4th at fret 14, etc. If you tune every other string half a fret sharp, every other middle-E becomes a new note. Same for every note, and you now have twice as many notes (24-EDO). The downside is that E appears in fewer places and it's sometimes harder to reach. Before, a major 3rd was one string over, one fret back. Now, there's a half-augmented 3rd there, and all your major chords sound awful! The major 3rd is still on the guitar, but 4 frets away where it's hard to reach. The perfect 4th and 5th are also inaccessible, because the nearby ones have been replaced with half-augmented 4ths and 5ths. So tuning your guitar this way gives you something new, but you lose a lot of what you had before. | ||
The Kite guitar adds notes <u>both</u> ways. There are almost twice as many frets, <u>and</u> every other string is detuned by a half-fret. The Kite guitar uses 41-EDO, a very accurate EDO. Omitting half the frets makes such a large EDO quite playable. It feels like and plays like an EDO half the size. The downside is that half the notes are hard to reach. But by an amazing coincidence, in 41-EDO, and <u>only</u> in 41-EDO, these are all dissonant intervals! For example, 41-EDO has octaves and 5ths that are 30¢ sharp or flat, | The Kite guitar adds notes <u>both</u> ways. There are almost twice as many frets, <u>and</u> every other string is detuned by a half-fret. The Kite guitar uses 41-EDO, a very accurate EDO. Omitting half the frets makes such a large EDO quite playable. It feels like and plays like an EDO half the size. The downside is that half the notes are hard to reach. But by an amazing coincidence, in 41-EDO, and <u>only</u> in 41-EDO, these are all dissonant intervals! For example, 41-EDO has good octaves and 5ths, but it also has octaves and 5ths that are ~30¢ sharp or flat of the good ones, that sound awful! Those intervals are moved safely out of the way. | ||
Unfortunately, the standard EADGBE tuning simply won't work. Because then those slightly sharp/flat octaves and 5ths become all too accessible, and show up in the A and E barre chord shapes. Instead, the guitar is tuned in major 3rds. (There are also some open tunings, but those limit your ability to modulate.) | Unfortunately, the standard EADGBE tuning simply won't work. Because then those slightly sharp/flat octaves and 5ths become all too accessible, and show up in the A and E barre chord shapes. Instead, the guitar is tuned in major 3rds. (There are also some open tunings, but those limit your ability to modulate.) | ||
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So there are disadvantages, but the advantages are enormous. Chords are only a few cents away from JI, and sound great! And there are so many harmonic options. There are four main kinds of 3rds: large major, small major, large minor and small minor. There are likewise four 6ths and four 7ths. There's more of everything: two major chords, two minor chords, two dim7 chords, three augmented chords, four dom7 chords, etc. | So there are disadvantages, but the advantages are enormous. Chords are only a few cents away from JI, and sound great! And there are so many harmonic options. There are four main kinds of 3rds: large major, small major, large minor and small minor. There are likewise four 6ths and four 7ths. There's more of everything: two major chords, two minor chords, two dim7 chords, three augmented chords, four dom7 chords, etc. | ||
The Kite guitar also gives you lots of melodic options. Going up one fret takes you up about 60¢. This is the perfect size -- barely large enough to feel like a small minor 2nd and not a quartertone. In other words, in the right context, two notes a fret apart can feel like two distinct notes of a scale, and not two microtonal versions of the same note. But 60¢ is also small enough that two frets still feels like a minor 2nd, although a large one. Three frets is a small major 2nd and four frets is a large one. Many melodic pathways from note A to note B. And there's more! | The Kite guitar also gives you lots of melodic options. Going up one fret takes you up about 60¢. This is the perfect size -- barely large enough to feel like a small minor 2nd and not a quartertone. In other words, in the right context, two notes a fret apart can feel like two distinct notes of a scale, and not two microtonal versions of the same note. But 60¢ is also small enough that two frets still feels like a minor 2nd, although a large one. Three frets is a small major 2nd and four frets is a large one. Many melodic pathways from note A to note B. And there's more! The next string up has other 2nds in between these. There's a mid-sized minor 2nd of 1.5 frets and a mid-sized major 2nd of 3.5 frets. Right between them is the middle-eastern-sounding 11-limit neutral 2nd of 2.5 frets. All these 2nds are available for heptatonic scales. Or you can use the large major 2nd and the small minor 3rd to make an African-sounding near-equipentatonic scale. Or you can play exotic octotonic, nonotonic and decatonic scales. | ||
Naming all 41 notes in all 41 keys, and all the intervals, scales and chords they make, is no small feat. Kite's [[Ups and Downs Notation|ups and downs]] notation manages it by adding only two symbols to the standard notation. Notes are named ^C and vD (up-C and down-D), chords are named E^m and vF#v7 (E upminor and down-F# down-7), and so forth. | Naming all 41 notes in all 41 keys, and all the intervals, scales and chords they make, is no small feat. Kite's [[Ups and Downs Notation|ups and downs]] notation manages it by adding only two symbols to the standard notation. Notes are named ^C and vD (up-C and down-D), chords are named E^m and vF#v7 (E upminor and down-F# down-7), and so forth. |