The 16 most stable triads of 22edo: Difference between revisions
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Created page with "File:16stabletable.png|thumb|611x611px|[[File:16 most stable triads.png|thumb|611x611px|The 16 most stable triads of 22-TET, from an empirical experiment, notated in [[Ups a..." |
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[[File:16 most stable triads.png|thumb|611x611px|The 16 most stable triads of 22-TET, from an empirical experiment, notated in [[Ups and Downs Notation|Ups and Downs]]]] | |||
Audio samples for each of the triads can be found here | Audio samples for each of the triads can be found here | ||
Triads represent inversional equivalence classes and are written in normal form, with a root of zero. The second and third numbers in the triple represent the lower and outer intervals in degrees of 22-TET respectively. Triads are written in the inversion for which the outer interval is the smallest, and, in the case that two inversion have the same sized outer interval, that the lower interval is the smallest. |
Revision as of 11:51, 31 January 2021

Audio samples for each of the triads can be found here
Triads represent inversional equivalence classes and are written in normal form, with a root of zero. The second and third numbers in the triple represent the lower and outer intervals in degrees of 22-TET respectively. Triads are written in the inversion for which the outer interval is the smallest, and, in the case that two inversion have the same sized outer interval, that the lower interval is the smallest.