Lumatone mapping for 24edo: Difference between revisions

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m Expansion.
Barton: Potential use case: Ivan Wyschnegradsky's Diatonicized Chromaticism (11L 2s)
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{{Lumatone EDO mapping|n=24|start=0|xstep=4|ystep=-3}}
{{Lumatone EDO mapping|n=24|start=0|xstep=4|ystep=-3}}


== Barton ==
== Barton + Diatonicized Chromaticism ==
If you want to keep octaves completely horizontal, you need to use the [[2L 5s]] [[Barton]] mapping, which makes more xenharmonic combinations of notes easy to play and familiar diatonic chords difficult.
If you want to keep octaves completely horizontal, you need to use the [[2L 5s]] (step ratio 7:2) [[Barton]] mapping, which makes more xenharmonic combinations of notes easy to play and familiar diatonic chords difficult. In particular, if one can work with several keys worth of backtracking for the small step (quarter-tone = 1\24), this mapping also supports [[Ivan Wyschnegradsky]]'s Diatonicized Chromaticism ([[11L 2s]]) scale. One problem (apart from the required backtracking) is that Ivan Wyschnegradsky composed for the full 88 note range of each of two (or sometimes four) pianos, while the range of this mapping is just one note short of five octaves; however, since each note is represented at least twice, one approach would be to shift this layout so as to produce two manuals, of which the lower manual would be for the bass octaves and the upper manual for the treble octaves, with overlap to ensure an easy transition between the divisions of the range.
{{Lumatone EDO mapping|n=24|start=0|xstep=2|ystep=5}}
{{Lumatone EDO mapping|n=24|start=0|xstep=2|ystep=5}}


{{Navbox Lumatone}}
{{Navbox Lumatone}}