9/7: Difference between revisions

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Inthar (talk | contribs)
m the reason i'm removing these JI glyphs is that there can be no complete, systematic system of JI glyphs for all JI intervals, thus they aren't very useful. They aren't used in practice in the community, either.
Xenwolf (talk | contribs)
this should be not the reason: Undo revision 66276 by IlL (talk)
Tag: Undo
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Infobox Interval
{{Infobox Interval
| JI glyph = [[File:glyph_9_7.png|x48px]]
| Ratio = 9/7
| Ratio = 9/7
| Monzo = 0 2 0 -1
| Monzo = 0 2 0 -1

Revision as of 06:54, 12 April 2021

Interval information
Ratio 9/7
Factorization 32 × 7-1
Monzo [0 2 0 -1
Size in cents 435.0841¢
Names supermajor third,
septimal major third
Color name r3, ru 3rd
FJS name [math]\displaystyle{ \text{M3}_{7} }[/math]
Special properties reduced
Tenney norm (log2 nd) 5.97728
Weil norm (log2 max(n, d)) 6.33985
Wilson norm (sopfr(nd)) 13

[sound info]
Open this interval in xen-calc

In Just Intonation, 9/7 is the supermajor third or septimal major third of approximately 435.1¢, characteristic of 7-limit and beyond. On its own, it has a very strident quality, but in the context of a chord, it can sound perfectly consonant. The 9-limit hexad 4:5:6:7:8:9 includes a septimal supermajor third between the 7th and the 9th. The interval has an interesting neutral quality to it similar to the way 9/8 behaves as ratios of nine all share this quality.

A just chord can be built with this wide third in place of the more traditional 5/4. This supermajor triad would be 14:18:21. This triad can be very effective in music, but in this context, the modern ear accustomed to 12edo thirds of 400¢ is likely to hear 9/7 as a mistuned major third instead of a new class of interval in its own right. Because 9/7 is a ratio of 9, it shares sonority qualities with 9/8 much more than 5/4. Chords such as the 9-limit hexad above and subsets of it give more opportunity for 9/7 to be heard as consonant.

See also