11edo modes: Difference between revisions
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* 4 and 5 (equally): .86 bits | * 4 and 5 (equally): .86 bits | ||
* 3 and 6 (equally): .59 bits | * 3 and 6 (equally): .59 bits | ||
(if a scale degree is high entropy it tends to be the most informative on average; the modes that have this interval as major and minor respectively are roughly a 50-50 split). This tells us that unlike in the diatonic scale, thirds and sixths are the ''least'' informative in distinguishing orgone modes. On the other hand, seconds, fourths and sevenths are highly informative, and fortunately these scale degrees appear in the most consonant triads and tetrads of 11edo orgone, namely 8:9:11:15, 8:9:11:14, 16:17:22:28, and (the most "minor" version of 1-2-4-7) | (if a scale degree is high entropy it tends to be the most informative on average; the modes that have this interval as major and minor respectively are roughly a 50-50 split). This tells us that unlike in the diatonic scale, thirds and sixths are the ''least'' informative in distinguishing orgone modes. On the other hand, seconds, fourths and sevenths are highly informative, and fortunately these scale degrees appear in the most consonant triads and tetrads of 11edo orgone, namely 8:9:11:15, 8:9:11:14, 16:17:22:28, and (the most "minor" version of 1-2-4-7) 14:15:18:32. | ||
== [[Joan]] pentatonic (MOS 2L+3s, generator: 5\11) == | == [[Joan]] pentatonic (MOS 2L+3s, generator: 5\11) == |