Squib (talk | contribs)
Tags: Mobile edit Mobile web edit
Squib (talk | contribs)
Tags: Mobile edit Mobile web edit
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[image of layout]
[image of layout]


There's a problem. 9/8, the whole tone, is as easy to reach as 108/1! Not only does this make useful intervals like 9/8 more difficult to use, but since keyboard space is limited, this adds extremely high and low notes that render much of the space unusable. So instead, notes can be represented as any combination of fourths (4/3) and fifths (3/2). This leaves 2/1 and 3/1 easily accessible while moving very large intervals further away, as well as moving more complex smaller intervals closer together. It's also much more natural to think of 9/8 as the difference between a fourth and a fifth than it is to think of it as the difference between three 2/1s and two 3/1s.
There's a problem. 9/8, the whole tone, is as easy to reach as 108/1! Not only does this make useful intervals like 9/8 more difficult to use, but since keyboard space is limited, this adds extremely high and low notes that render much of the space unusable. So instead, notes can be represented as any combination of fourths (4/3) and fifths (3/2). This leaves 2/1 and 3/1 easily accessible while moving very large intervals further away, as well as moving more complex smaller intervals closer together. It's also much more natural to think of 9/8 as the difference between a fourth and a fifth than it is to think of it as the difference between three 2/1s and two 3/1s, for example.


[image of layout]
[image of layout]
This is the most basic tuning and layout of this music theory, and it works very well. Aside from absolute pitch, every place on the keyboard is the same, a property called isomorphism. This allows any interval or chord to be placed anywhere on the keyboard.
But what about ratios involving 5? 4 can be created from 2×2, and 6 can be created from 2×3, but 5 is prime. It could be represented using a third dimension, but that would be difficult to visualize and next to impossible to play, since most keyboards are at most 2-dimensional, including the Launchpad. So how can we add new notes?