Pre-Columbian South American music: Difference between revisions
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Pre-Columbian South American music is loosely based around a [[2L_3s|pentatonic]] scale. Whether or not this scale deviates from the contemporary [[12edo|12-equal]] pentatonic scale is up for debate, though there is much speculation and research indicating that the Natives did not strictly adhere to a single fixed-tuning of this pentatonic scale. | '''Pre-Columbian South American music''' is loosely based around a [[2L_3s|pentatonic]] scale. Whether or not this scale deviates from the contemporary [[12edo|12-equal]] pentatonic scale is up for debate, though there is much speculation and research indicating that the Natives did not strictly adhere to a single fixed-tuning of this pentatonic scale. | ||
==See Also | == See Also == | ||
[https://dolsenmusic.com/books/el-dorado/ Music of El Dorado] (audio examples) | * [https://dolsenmusic.com/books/el-dorado/ Music of El Dorado] (audio examples) | ||
* [http://mcis2.princeton.edu/jaguar/jaguar.html Music from the Land of the Jaguar] (audio and pictures) | |||
[ | [[Category:Pentatonic]] | ||
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Revision as of 07:57, 19 February 2021
Pre-Columbian South American music is loosely based around a pentatonic scale. Whether or not this scale deviates from the contemporary 12-equal pentatonic scale is up for debate, though there is much speculation and research indicating that the Natives did not strictly adhere to a single fixed-tuning of this pentatonic scale.
See Also
- Music of El Dorado (audio examples)
- Music from the Land of the Jaguar (audio and pictures)