Meantone: Difference between revisions
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{{Wikipedia| Septimal meantone temperament }} | {{Wikipedia| Septimal meantone temperament }} | ||
'''Septimal meantone''' or '''7-limit meantone''' is a natural extension of meantone which also addresses septimal intervals including but not limited to [[7/4]], [[7/5]], and [[7/6]]. By extending the [[circle of fifths]], consonant septimal intervals start to appear. For example, 7/4 is represented by an augmented sixth (+10 fifths), and is notably present in the augmented sixth chord; it can also be seen as a diesis-flat minor seventh, as the diesis represents [[36/35]]~[[64/63]]. In septimal meantone, 7/5 is an augmented fourth, 7/6 is an augmented second, and [[9/7]] is a diminished fourth. Notably, septimal meantone equates the interval of a diminished fifth between the third and the seventh of a [[dominant seventh chord]] to [[10/7]], making it a [[9-odd-limit]] [[essentially tempered chord]]. Septimal meantone is best tuned close to [[31edo]]. | '''Septimal meantone''' or '''7-limit meantone''' is a natural extension of meantone which also addresses septimal intervals including but not limited to [[7/4]], [[7/5]], and [[7/6]]. By extending the [[circle of fifths]], consonant septimal intervals start to appear. For example, 7/4 is represented by an augmented sixth (+10 fifths, C–A♯), and is notably present in the augmented sixth chord; it can also be seen as a diesis-flat minor seventh, as the diesis represents [[36/35]]~[[64/63]]. In septimal meantone, 7/5 is an augmented fourth, 7/6 is an augmented second, and [[9/7]] is a diminished fourth. Notably, septimal meantone equates the interval of a diminished fifth between the third and the seventh of a [[dominant seventh chord]] to [[10/7]], making it a [[9-odd-limit]] [[essentially tempered chord]]. Septimal meantone is best tuned close to [[31edo]]. | ||
See [[huygens vs meanpop]] for a comparison of undecimal (11-limit) extensions. | See [[huygens vs meanpop]] for a comparison of undecimal (11-limit) extensions. | ||
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{{Main| Flattone }} | {{Main| Flattone }} | ||
Flattone is an alternative extension of meantone, which represents 7/4 as a diminished seventh rather than an augmented sixth. The fifth interval is adjusted narrower, nine of which give 8/7 and thirteen of which give 10/7 with octave reduction. Alternatively, stacking three minor thirds results in a diminished seventh that is close to 7/4. | Flattone is an alternative extension of meantone, which represents 7/4 as a diminished seventh rather than an augmented sixth. The fifth interval is adjusted narrower, nine of which give 8/7 and thirteen of which give 10/7 with octave reduction. Alternatively, stacking three minor thirds results in a diminished seventh that is close to 7/4. While less accurate than septimal meantone, flattone extends much more easily to the [[11-limit|11-]] and [[13-limit|13-]][[limit]]s, with [[11/8]] being an augmented fourth (+6 fifths, C–F♯) and [[13/8]] being a minor sixth (-4 fifths, C–A♭). | ||
==== Dominant ==== | ==== Dominant ==== | ||
{{Main| Dominant (temperament) }} | {{Main| Dominant (temperament) }} | ||
Dominant is an alternative extension of meantone, which represents 7/4 as a minor seventh rather than an augmented sixth. This equates 6/5 with 7/6 and 5/4 with 9/7, tempering out [[36/35]] (septimal quarter tone) and [[64/63]] (Archytas' comma). | Dominant is an alternative extension of meantone, which represents 7/4 as a minor seventh rather than an augmented sixth. This equates 6/5 with 7/6 and 5/4 with 9/7, tempering out [[36/35]] (septimal quarter tone) and [[64/63]] (Archytas' comma). Dominant was named because the [[dominant seventh chord]] of the [[5L 2s|diatonic]] scale represents [[4:5:6:7]] in it. | ||
== Intervals == | == Intervals == | ||