Enharmonic: Difference between revisions
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'''In regards to scales, see:''' | '''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: | * A [[mos scale]] of 17 or 19 notes that is 7a 12b or 5a 12b with unspecified sizes for a and b (descended from 5L 2s such that diatonic enharmonic equivalents become distinct generic interval classes), which can be: | ||
** [[7L 12s|7L 12s (f-enharmonic)]] | ** [[7L 12s|7L 12s (f-enharmonic)]] | ||
** [[12L 7s|12L 7s (m-enharmonic)]] | ** [[12L 7s|12L 7s (m-enharmonic)]] | ||
** [[12L 5s|12L 5s (p-enharmonic)]] | ** [[12L 5s|12L 5s (p-enharmonic)]] | ||
** [[5L 12s|5L 12s (s-enharmonic)]] | ** [[5L 12s|5L 12s (s-enharmonic)]] | ||
* The enharmonic genus, a {{w|genus (music)|genus}} in ancient Greek music theory | * The enharmonic genus, a {{w|genus (music)|genus}} in ancient Greek music theory containing scales with comma-sized steps | ||
'''In regards to interval classification, see:''' | '''In regards to interval classification, see:''' | ||
* [[Diatonic, chromatic, enharmonic, subchromatic]], a hierarchy of [[interval class]]es | * [[Diatonic, chromatic, enharmonic, subchromatic]], a hierarchy of [[interval class]]es, which explores the concept of enharmonicity from the perspective of the 12-note chromatic scale | ||
* [[Enharmonic diesis]], a diminished second (or an inverse diminished second) | * [[Enharmonic diesis]], a diminished second (or an inverse diminished second) | ||
* [[Enharmonic unison]], an interval enharmonically equivalent to a [[unison]] | * [[Enharmonic unison]], an interval enharmonically equivalent to a [[unison]] | ||
{{Disambiguation}} | {{Disambiguation}} | ||