21/11: Difference between revisions
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+FJS name; styling; the reason it's like a seventh is mainly caused by harmonic 11 not 7 |
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Revision as of 14:14, 28 June 2021
Interval information |
undecimal major seventh
[sound info]
21/11, the large undecimal diminished octave is an 11-limit interval, and the octave complement of 22/21. Of note is that the Huygens-Fokker Foundation dubs this interval the undecimal major seventh, which, in light of the size of 33/32, also makes sense, resulting in this interval being perhaps best classified as a "sevtave" – a type of cross between a seventh and an octave.
See also
- 22/21 – its octave complement