23edo and octave stretching: Difference between revisions
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The octave-stretching also results is various other intervals "inverting" in unexpected ways; for instance the septimal minor seventh (7:4) is the inversion of the septimal minor third (7:6), not of the septimal whole tone (8:7)! Because of this property, this interval could also be considered a sixth rather than a seventh (depending on the context in which it occurs). | The octave-stretching also results is various other intervals "inverting" in unexpected ways; for instance the septimal minor seventh (7:4) is the inversion of the septimal minor third (7:6), not of the septimal whole tone (8:7)! Because of this property, this interval could also be considered a sixth rather than a seventh (depending on the context in which it occurs). | ||
Lookalikes: [[68edo|68ed8]], [[159edo|159ed128]], [[227edo|227ed1024]] | Lookalikes: [[36edt]], [[68edo|68ed8]], [[159edo|159ed128]], [[227edo|227ed1024]] | ||
==Stretched 23edo and pianos== | ==Stretched 23edo and pianos== |