Enharmonic: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
mNo edit summary |
Update link for enharmonic equivalence, add descriptions |
||
| Line 10: | Line 10: | ||
'''In regards to interval classification, see:''' | '''In regards to interval classification, see:''' | ||
* [[Diatonic, Chromatic, Enharmonic, Subchromatic]] | * [[Diatonic, Chromatic, Enharmonic, Subchromatic]], a hierarchy of [[interval class]]es | ||
* [[Enharmonic diesis]] | * [[Enharmonic diesis]], a diminished second (or an inverse diminished second) | ||
* [[Enharmonic | * [[Enharmonic unison]], an interval enharmonically equivalent to a [[unison]] | ||
{{Disambiguation}} | {{Disambiguation}} | ||
Revision as of 15:15, 24 December 2024
The term enharmonic has several meanings.
In regards to scales, see:
- A mos scale of 17 or 19 notes that is 7a 12b or 5a 12b with unspecified sizes for a and b, which can be:
- The enharmonic genus, a genus in ancient Greek music theory
In regards to interval classification, see:
- Diatonic, Chromatic, Enharmonic, Subchromatic, a hierarchy of interval classes
- Enharmonic diesis, a diminished second (or an inverse diminished second)
- Enharmonic unison, an interval enharmonically equivalent to a unison