16edo: Difference between revisions
Wikispaces>genewardsmith **Imported revision 189929578 - Original comment: ** |
Wikispaces>genewardsmith **Imported revision 189929728 - Original comment: ** |
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<h2>IMPORTED REVISION FROM WIKISPACES</h2> | <h2>IMPORTED REVISION FROM WIKISPACES</h2> | ||
This is an imported revision from Wikispaces. The revision metadata is included below for reference:<br> | This is an imported revision from Wikispaces. The revision metadata is included below for reference:<br> | ||
: This revision was by author [[User:genewardsmith|genewardsmith]] and made on <tt>2010-12-24 15: | : This revision was by author [[User:genewardsmith|genewardsmith]] and made on <tt>2010-12-24 15:28:35 UTC</tt>.<br> | ||
: The original revision id was <tt> | : The original revision id was <tt>189929728</tt>.<br> | ||
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The revision contents are below, presented both in the original Wikispaces Wikitext format, and in HTML exactly as Wikispaces rendered it.<br> | The revision contents are below, presented both in the original Wikispaces Wikitext format, and in HTML exactly as Wikispaces rendered it.<br> | ||
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The scale supports the diminished temperament with its 1/4 octave period, though its generator size, equal to its step size of 75 cents, is smaller than ideal. Its very flat "blown fifth" of 675 cents means it works as a mavila temperament tuning. For a 16-edo version of Indonesian music, four small steps of 225 cents and one large one of 300 cents gives a [[MOSScales|MOS]] version of the Slendro scale, and five small steps of 150 cents with two large ones of 225 steps a Pelog-like MOS. The temperament could be popular for its easy manageability of 150 cent intervals 3/4, 9/4 and 21/4-tones. The 25 cent difference in the steps can have a similar effect the [[scales of Olympos have]] with buried enharmonic genera. | The scale supports the diminished temperament with its 1/4 octave period, though its generator size, equal to its step size of 75 cents, is smaller than ideal. Its very flat "blown fifth" of 675 cents means it works as a mavila temperament tuning. For a 16-edo version of Indonesian music, four small steps of 225 cents and one large one of 300 cents gives a [[MOSScales|MOS]] version of the Slendro scale, and five small steps of 150 cents with two large ones of 225 steps a Pelog-like MOS. The temperament could be popular for its easy manageability of 150 cent intervals 3/4, 9/4 and 21/4-tones. The 25 cent difference in the steps can have a similar effect the [[scales of Olympos have]] with buried enharmonic genera. | ||
16edo is also a tuning for the [[Jubilismic clan|no-threes 7-limit temperament tempering out 50/49]]. This has a flat major third as generator, for which 16edo provides 5/16 octaves. For this, there are MOS of sizes 7, 10, and 13. | 16edo is also a tuning for the [[Jubilismic clan|no-threes 7-limit temperament tempering out 50/49]]. This has a flat major third as generator, for which 16edo provides 5/16 octaves. For this, there are MOS of sizes 7, 10, and 13; these are shown below under "magic family of scales". | ||
16-edo can be treated as four interwoven diminished seventh arpeggios, or as two interwoven 8-edo scales (narrow 11-limit whole tones which when stacked produce traditional 300 cent minor third intervals). There are two minor seventh intervals, a harmonic seventh at step 13, a 7/4 ratio approximation, off by 3.5879 cents, followed by an undecimal 11/6 ratio or neutral seventh. The septimal can be the 9/4th tone or septimal semi diminished fourth (35/27 ratio) , semi-augmented fifth (54/35), harmonic seventh (7/4), and septimal whole tone 8/7. The Undecimal intervals are the 3/4 tone or undecimal neutral second (12/11), and the 21/4th tone or undecimal neutral seventh (11/6). Another xenharmonic aspect of 16-tone is how the 11-limit whole tone scale, using the neutral second, interlocks with the diminished scale, similar to the augmented scale and whole tone relationship in 12-tone (the whole tone divides the major third in 12, in 16-its the minor third). | 16-edo can be treated as four interwoven diminished seventh arpeggios, or as two interwoven 8-edo scales (narrow 11-limit whole tones which when stacked produce traditional 300 cent minor third intervals). There are two minor seventh intervals, a harmonic seventh at step 13, a 7/4 ratio approximation, off by 3.5879 cents, followed by an undecimal 11/6 ratio or neutral seventh. The septimal can be the 9/4th tone or septimal semi diminished fourth (35/27 ratio) , semi-augmented fifth (54/35), harmonic seventh (7/4), and septimal whole tone 8/7. The Undecimal intervals are the 3/4 tone or undecimal neutral second (12/11), and the 21/4th tone or undecimal neutral seventh (11/6). Another xenharmonic aspect of 16-tone is how the 11-limit whole tone scale, using the neutral second, interlocks with the diminished scale, similar to the augmented scale and whole tone relationship in 12-tone (the whole tone divides the major third in 12, in 16-its the minor third). | ||
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The scale supports the diminished temperament with its 1/4 octave period, though its generator size, equal to its step size of 75 cents, is smaller than ideal. Its very flat &quot;blown fifth&quot; of 675 cents means it works as a mavila temperament tuning. For a 16-edo version of Indonesian music, four small steps of 225 cents and one large one of 300 cents gives a <a class="wiki_link" href="/MOSScales">MOS</a> version of the Slendro scale, and five small steps of 150 cents with two large ones of 225 steps a Pelog-like MOS. The temperament could be popular for its easy manageability of 150 cent intervals 3/4, 9/4 and 21/4-tones. The 25 cent difference in the steps can have a similar effect the <a class="wiki_link" href="/scales%20of%20Olympos%20have">scales of Olympos have</a> with buried enharmonic genera.<br /> | The scale supports the diminished temperament with its 1/4 octave period, though its generator size, equal to its step size of 75 cents, is smaller than ideal. Its very flat &quot;blown fifth&quot; of 675 cents means it works as a mavila temperament tuning. For a 16-edo version of Indonesian music, four small steps of 225 cents and one large one of 300 cents gives a <a class="wiki_link" href="/MOSScales">MOS</a> version of the Slendro scale, and five small steps of 150 cents with two large ones of 225 steps a Pelog-like MOS. The temperament could be popular for its easy manageability of 150 cent intervals 3/4, 9/4 and 21/4-tones. The 25 cent difference in the steps can have a similar effect the <a class="wiki_link" href="/scales%20of%20Olympos%20have">scales of Olympos have</a> with buried enharmonic genera.<br /> | ||
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16edo is also a tuning for the <a class="wiki_link" href="/Jubilismic%20clan">no-threes 7-limit temperament tempering out 50/49</a>. This has a flat major third as generator, for which 16edo provides 5/16 octaves. For this, there are MOS of sizes 7, 10, and 13. <br /> | 16edo is also a tuning for the <a class="wiki_link" href="/Jubilismic%20clan">no-threes 7-limit temperament tempering out 50/49</a>. This has a flat major third as generator, for which 16edo provides 5/16 octaves. For this, there are MOS of sizes 7, 10, and 13; these are shown below under &quot;magic family of scales&quot;.<br /> | ||
<br /> | <br /> | ||
16-edo can be treated as four interwoven diminished seventh arpeggios, or as two interwoven 8-edo scales (narrow 11-limit whole tones which when stacked produce traditional 300 cent minor third intervals). There are two minor seventh intervals, a harmonic seventh at step 13, a 7/4 ratio approximation, off by 3.5879 cents, followed by an undecimal 11/6 ratio or neutral seventh. The septimal can be the 9/4th tone or septimal semi diminished fourth (35/27 ratio) , semi-augmented fifth (54/35), harmonic seventh (7/4), and septimal whole tone 8/7. The Undecimal intervals are the 3/4 tone or undecimal neutral second (12/11), and the 21/4th tone or undecimal neutral seventh (11/6). Another xenharmonic aspect of 16-tone is how the 11-limit whole tone scale, using the neutral second, interlocks with the diminished scale, similar to the augmented scale and whole tone relationship in 12-tone (the whole tone divides the major third in 12, in 16-its the minor third).<br /> | 16-edo can be treated as four interwoven diminished seventh arpeggios, or as two interwoven 8-edo scales (narrow 11-limit whole tones which when stacked produce traditional 300 cent minor third intervals). There are two minor seventh intervals, a harmonic seventh at step 13, a 7/4 ratio approximation, off by 3.5879 cents, followed by an undecimal 11/6 ratio or neutral seventh. The septimal can be the 9/4th tone or septimal semi diminished fourth (35/27 ratio) , semi-augmented fifth (54/35), harmonic seventh (7/4), and septimal whole tone 8/7. The Undecimal intervals are the 3/4 tone or undecimal neutral second (12/11), and the 21/4th tone or undecimal neutral seventh (11/6). Another xenharmonic aspect of 16-tone is how the 11-limit whole tone scale, using the neutral second, interlocks with the diminished scale, similar to the augmented scale and whole tone relationship in 12-tone (the whole tone divides the major third in 12, in 16-its the minor third).<br /> |