17edo tetrachords: Difference between revisions

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Line 91: Line 91:
| | 1-3-3
| | 1-3-3
| | do ra me fa
| | do ra me fa
| | phrygian
| | phrygian (jins Kurd)
| | diatonic (phrygian)
| | diatonic (phrygian)
|-
|-
Line 101: Line 101:
| | 1-5-1
| | 1-5-1
| | do ra mi fa
| | do ra mi fa
| | balkan, Hijaz (arabic)
| | balkan, jins Hijaz
| |  
| |  
|-
|-
| | 2-2-3
| | 2-2-3
| | do ru me fa
| | do ru me fa
| | Bayyati (arabic)
| | jins Bayyati
| | [[17edo neutral scale]] (led)
| | [[17edo neutral scale]] (led)
|-
|-
| | 2-3-2
| | 2-3-2
| | do ru mu fa
| | do ru mu fa
| | Iraq (arabic)
| | "ʻIraq" tetrachord
| | [[17edo neutral scale]] (bish, fish, jwl)
| | [[17edo neutral scale]] (bish, fish, jwl)
|-
|-
Line 121: Line 121:
| | 3-1-3
| | 3-1-3
| | do re me fa
| | do re me fa
| | aeolian
| | aeolian (jins Nahawand)
| | diatonic (aolian, dorian) ; [[scorp]] (mode 3)
| | diatonic (aolian, dorian) ; [[scorp]] (mode 3)
|-
|-
| | 3-2-2
| | 3-2-2
| | do re mu fa
| | do re mu fa
| | Rast (arabic)
| | jins Rast
| | [[17edo neutral scale]] (dril, gil, kleeth)
| | [[17edo neutral scale]] (dril, gil, kleeth)
|-
|-
| | 3-3-1
| | 3-3-1
| | do re mi fa
| | do re mi fa
| | ionian
| | ionian (jins ʻAjam)
| | diatonic (ionian, mixolydian)
| | diatonic (ionian, mixolydian)
|}
|}
Notes on the above:
* Many references say that the semitones in Hijaz should be greater than 100 cents, but in 17edo they are significantly smaller (about 70 cents).
* The "ʻIraq" tetrachord is similar to the first four notes of Maqam ʻIraq, but those are not usually considered a jins because the fourth note is not a place of rest (in particular it is not the ''ghammaz''). This tetrachord is jins Sikah with an extra note on top making a perfect fourth with the tonic.


Another way of showing them:
Another way of showing them:

Revision as of 22:01, 14 June 2021

Let a "17edo primary tetrachord" mean a set of four pitches in 17edo that span a perfect fourth (seven degrees) and include one of each of the following:

  • the unison - 0 (degrees of 17edo) - solfege name 'do'.
  • a second - includes 1 (ra, a minor second), 2 (ru, a neutral second), and 3 (re, a major second).
  • a third - includes 4 (me, a minor third), 5 (mu, a neutral third), and 6 (mi, a major third).
  • the perfect fourth - 7 (fa).

correspondance:

degrees cents name solfege
0 0 unison do
1 71 minor second (a.k.a third-tone) ra
2 141 neutral second (a.k.a. two-thirds-tone) ru
3 212 major second (a.k.a. tone) re
4 282 minor third (a.k.a. subminor third) me
5 353 neutral third mu
6 424 major third (a.k.a. supermajor third) mi
7 494 perfect fourth fa

tetrachord notation

Tetrachord notation will show three scalar steps (as degrees of 17edo) separated by hyphens.

For instance, tetrachord 3-3-1 consists of

0 (do), the unison;

3 (re), a major second, 3 degrees up from 0;

6 (mi), a major third, 3 degrees up from 3; and

7 (fa), the perfect fourth, 1 degree up from 6.

The numbers in a tetrachord name will always add to 7.

17edo primary tetrachords

We have 9 primary tetrachords in 17edo.

tetrachord notation solfege name (suggestions?) used in
1-3-3 do ra me fa phrygian (jins Kurd) diatonic (phrygian)
1-4-2 do ra mu fa
1-5-1 do ra mi fa balkan, jins Hijaz
2-2-3 do ru me fa jins Bayyati 17edo neutral scale (led)
2-3-2 do ru mu fa "ʻIraq" tetrachord 17edo neutral scale (bish, fish, jwl)
2-4-1 do ru mi fa
3-1-3 do re me fa aeolian (jins Nahawand) diatonic (aolian, dorian) ; scorp (mode 3)
3-2-2 do re mu fa jins Rast 17edo neutral scale (dril, gil, kleeth)
3-3-1 do re mi fa ionian (jins ʻAjam) diatonic (ionian, mixolydian)

Notes on the above:

  • Many references say that the semitones in Hijaz should be greater than 100 cents, but in 17edo they are significantly smaller (about 70 cents).
  • The "ʻIraq" tetrachord is similar to the first four notes of Maqam ʻIraq, but those are not usually considered a jins because the fourth note is not a place of rest (in particular it is not the ghammaz). This tetrachord is jins Sikah with an extra note on top making a perfect fourth with the tonic.

Another way of showing them:

ra ru re
me 1-3-3 2-2-3 3-1-3
mu 1-4-2 2-3-2 3-2-2
mi 1-5-1 2-4-1 3-3-1

17edo tetrachords complete

A more generalized tetrachord system would allow multiple seconds or multiple thirds: for instance, 1-1-5 or 5-1-1. Thus, a complete chart of 17edo tetrachords looks like this (with primary tetrachords in bold):

1-1-5 2-1-4 3-1-3 4-1-2 5-1-1
1-2-4 2-2-3 3-2-2 4-2-1
1-3-3 2-3-2 3-3-1
1-4-2 2-4-1
1-5-1

Thus, by allowing multiples seconds or multiple thirds, we add 6 new tetrachords to our 9 primary tetrachords, for a total of 15. Our new ones:

tetrachord notation solfege name (suggestions?) used in
1-1-5 do ra ru fa
1-2-4 do ra re fa
2-1-4 do ru re fa
4-1-2 do me mu fa
4-2-1 do me mi fa
5-1-1 do mu mi fa

See also: tetrachord, 22edo tetrachords, Tricesimoprimal Tetrachordal Tesseract.