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WikispacesArchive>Mike Battaglia |
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| = ARCHIVED WIKISPACES DISCUSSION BELOW =
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| '''All discussion below is archived from the Wikispaces export in its original unaltered form.'''
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| <span style="color:#800000">'''PLEASE MAKE ANY NEW COMMENTS <u>ABOVE</u> THIS SECTION.'''</span> Anything below here is for archival purposes only.
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| == My revert ==
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| Sorry, I had to revert the last changes of JosephRuhf and restored the version of 5th Nov. 2016 http://xenharmonic.wikispaces.com/page/view/7L+2s/565347717
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| The intervals given in the newly added chord column were wrong. @Joseph: please let's discuss changes like this first!
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| - '''xenwolf''' November 09, 2016, 04:54:54 AM UTC-0800
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| == Can we define "tone" ==
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| We need an exact defintioin or this doesn't mean much.
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| - '''genewardsmith''' May 28, 2012, 09:59:45 AM UTC-0700
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| Whole tones not good enough for you?
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| Josef Yasser defined a centitone as 100 divisions of a whole tone (200 cents). Even by this (whacked-up) standard, a tone is still a whole-tone.
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| - '''Sarzadoce''' May 29, 2012, 12:17:51 PM UTC-0700
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| No, it is completely meaningless to say "whole tone" if you are using it to give a precise measurement. If you want to use cents, that would be fine.
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| - '''genewardsmith''' May 29, 2012, 01:07:27 PM UTC-0700
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| == Why diatonic? ==
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| I'm wondering why a nine-note scale is called "diatonic". Who called it that, and why?
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| - '''genewardsmith''' May 30, 2010, 04:21:31 PM UTC-0700
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| I call it Diatonic, nothing more than simple common sense to describe a peculiar form. For example if I have the form, which in sight, it looks like an ascending-sequential or whatever you want to call, as it is: LsLLs, logically I'm going to compare with the known form of which is called "Diatonic" LLsLLLs
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| who is in Number Ascending of its alterations, in the case of "Diatonic" is 2 and 3. Therefore, in view of previous reports, you will notice that the diatonic form is NOT exclusive of 7 notes, but also can be called Diatonic the: LsLLs, LLLsLLLLs and LLLLsLLLLLs forms (Alterations (1 and 2)(3 and 4)(4 and 5)) Understand?
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| - '''Osmiorisbendi''' May 31, 2010, 01:30:11 AM UTC-0700
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