Ben Johnston's notation: Difference between revisions
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Johnston's notation sacrifices some mathematical intuition compared to [[Helmholtz–Ellis notation]], as it bases the natural notes on 4:5:6 chords rather than [[Pythagorean tuning]]. This comes at the possible advantage of fewer accidentals needed for music that emphasizes the 5-limit. | Johnston's notation sacrifices some mathematical intuition compared to [[Helmholtz–Ellis notation]], as it bases the natural notes on 4:5:6 chords rather than [[Pythagorean tuning]]. This comes at the possible advantage of fewer accidentals needed for music that emphasizes the 5-limit. | ||
== See also == | |||
* [[Helmholtz–Ellis notation]] | |||
* [[Functional Just System]] | |||
== External links == | == External links == |
Revision as of 19:25, 20 May 2024
Ben Johnston's notation is a staff notation system for just intonation. Ben Johnston developed it up to the 31-limit, employed in his String Quartet No. 9, although intervals exceeding the 13-limit are encountered mostly incidentally in his music.
The natural notes (white keys on the piano) are selected so that the chord F – A – C – E – G – B – D consists of three stacked 4:5:6 chords, i.e. F – A – C, C – E – G, and G – B – D are just major triads, which makes C – D – E – F – G – A – B – C a justly-intonated Ptolemy–Zarlino "intense" diatonic scale. Then the following accidentals are used for inflections, all of which denote superparticular ratios or their reciprocals:
Symbol | Ratio | Symbol | Ratio |
---|---|---|---|
+ | 81/80 | − | 80/81 |
♯ | 25/24 | ♭ | 24/25 |
7 | 35/36 | 7 | 36/35 |
↑ | 33/32 | ↓ | 32/33 |
13 | 65/64 | 13 | 64/65 |
17 | 51/50 | 17 | 50/51 |
19 | 95/96 | 19 | 96/95 |
23 | 46/45 | 23 | 45/46 |
29 | 145/144 | 29 | 144/145 |
31 | 31/30 | 31 | 30/31 |
Johnston combines the symbols 7 7 ↑ ↓ with sharps (♯) and flats (♭) if symbols from both categories are present.
A chain of just fifths is given by:
... F♭−− — C♭−− — G♭−− — D♭−− — A♭− — E♭− — B♭− — F — C — G — D — A+ — E+ — B+ — F♯++ — C♯++ — G♯++ — D♯++ — A♯+++ — E♯+++ — B♯+++ ...
with a plus or minus added for every loop around the ends of the core F – A – C – E – G – B – D sequence.
The odd harmonic series up to 31 starting on C is given by:
C — G — E — B♭7 — D — F↑ — A♭13 — B — C♯17 — E♭19 — F7+ — F♯23+ — G♯ — A+ — B♭29 — B31.
Johnston's notation sacrifices some mathematical intuition compared to Helmholtz–Ellis notation, as it bases the natural notes on 4:5:6 chords rather than Pythagorean tuning. This comes at the possible advantage of fewer accidentals needed for music that emphasizes the 5-limit.