Pelog: Difference between revisions
revise paragraph on 9edo approximation -- we can talk about non-Western tunings without comparing them to tangential Western ones |
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{{Wikipedia|Pelog}} | {{Wikipedia|Pelog}} | ||
'''Pelog''' refers to 7-note [[tuning]]s used in Indonesian gamelan music. There is no one definitive pelog scale, as there is considerable variation between gamelan, and especially between different regions (in particular Java, Bali, and Sunda). | '''Pelog''' refers to 7-note [[tuning]]s used in Indonesian gamelan music. There is no one definitive pelog scale, as there is considerable variation between gamelan, and especially between different regions (in particular Java, Bali, and Sunda). The other major traditional Indonesian tuning is [[slendro]], which has 5 tones. | ||
It provides an octave-repeating heptatonic [[scale]], although [[stretched and compressed tuning|octaves are usually stretched]] to account for the high inharmonicity inherent to gamelans and (in Bali) to produce complex beating patterns known as ''ombak''.<ref>Sethares, W. A., & Vitale, W. (2020). ''Ombak'' and octave stretching in Balinese gamelan. Journal of Mathematics and Music, 16(1), 1–17. https://doi.org/10.1080/17459737.2020.1812128</ref> | It provides an octave-repeating heptatonic [[scale]], although [[stretched and compressed tuning|octaves are usually stretched]] to account for the high inharmonicity inherent to gamelans and (in Bali) to produce complex beating patterns known as ''ombak''.<ref>Sethares, W. A., & Vitale, W. (2020). ''Ombak'' and octave stretching in Balinese gamelan. Journal of Mathematics and Music, 16(1), 1–17. https://doi.org/10.1080/17459737.2020.1812128</ref> |