User:Holger Stoltenberg/embed: Difference between revisions
mNo edit summary |
Work in progress... |
||
| Line 86: | Line 86: | ||
|mode10 min (10:12:15)<br> ||[[File:TS_min_L10_D_V01.mp3|80px]] | |mode10 min (10:12:15)<br> ||[[File:TS_min_L10_D_V01.mp3|80px]] | ||
|} | |} | ||
<br><br><br><br> | |||
'''WORK IN PROGRESS''' Fig.8 shows four varieties of what I call a ''crossover'' (xover) triad, all rooted at the same pitch of 0 cents. Crossover triads are neither diminished nor augmented. From a major point of view, xover chords incorporate a flattened third and a sharp fifth. <br> | |||
[[File:Fig-7_tonal_space_1051i_min_02.png|thumb|430px|right|<u>Fig.7</u>: Selection of 4 different minor triads]] | |||
:{| class="wikitable" | |||
!Chord | |||
!Play | |||
|- | |||
|mode26 min (26:30:39)<br> ||[[File:TS_min_L26_D_V01.mp3|80px]] | |||
|- | |||
|mode16 min (16:19:24)<br> ||[[File:TS_min_L16_D_V01.mp3|80px]] | |||
|- | |||
|mode12 min (12:14:18)<br> ||[[File:TS_min_L12_D_V01.mp3|80px]] | |||
|- | |||
|mode10 min (10:12:15)<br> ||[[File:TS_min_L10_D_V01.mp3|80px]] | |||
|} | |||
<br> | <br> | ||
Revision as of 11:15, 4 February 2026
** This page is used to check out the embedding of media **
The fret marks guide the player to 12edo intervals, while the intervals between the strings are often tuned differently (i.e. just intervals, meantone tuning, various best-practice tunings)
Audio only
Link to Wikipedia source
Link with single brackets: steelguitar

- ↑ Video 1 - Webressource and licensing:
DaveB11th, CC BY 4.0 , via Wikimedia Commons
The original video is 3:14 minutes long. For demonstration purposes, an excerpt from 0:01 to 01:55 is shown here. - ↑ Eagledj, CC BY-SA 4.0 , via Wikimedia Commons
7 Levels of Jazz Harmony
Neely-intonalism
In 2020 music educator Adam Neely picked up the term intonalism and used it in his Seven Levels of Jazz Harmony, with a somewhat different and rather ambiguous intent, where he seemed to describe the use of a tempered scale (often 12edo) for the lead melody of a piece. The current melody note at any given point in time is then treated as a reference pitch, and the current backing chord uses pure just intonation, tuned relative to the current reference pitch. In a sense this is an inverse form of adaptive just intonation where the bass line adjusts to a tempered scale and the melody and harmony notes tune to it.
To distinguish this form of intonalism from the other, you could call it Neely-intonalism.[idiosyncratic term]
Intonalism [9:12], Xenharmonic [10:46]
Fig.5 shows a comparison of four augmented chords that sound quite different.
Listen to the following audio examples...

Chord Play mode16 aug (16:20:25)
2 stacked pure 3rdsmode14 aug (14:18:22)
sounds equal to (7:9:11)mode11 aug (11:14:17)
no, this is not major...mode10 aug (10:13:16)
extra wide 3rdmode8 maj (8:10:12)
pure major for reference
Fig.6 shows a comparison of five different diminished chords.

Chord Play mode16 dim (16:19:22) mode14 dim (14:17:20) mode11 dim (11:13:15) mode10 dim (10:12:14) mode8 dim (9:11:13)
Fig.7 shows a selection of four different minor chords.

Chord Play mode26 min (26:30:39) mode16 min (16:19:24) mode12 min (12:14:18) mode10 min (10:12:15)
WORK IN PROGRESS Fig.8 shows four varieties of what I call a crossover (xover) triad, all rooted at the same pitch of 0 cents. Crossover triads are neither diminished nor augmented. From a major point of view, xover chords incorporate a flattened third and a sharp fifth.

Chord Play mode26 min (26:30:39) mode16 min (16:19:24) mode12 min (12:14:18) mode10 min (10:12:15)