Kite-valved Brass Instruments: Difference between revisions

TallKite (talk | contribs)
mNo edit summary
TallKite (talk | contribs)
mNo edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
This page discusses the Kite trumpet, Kite flugelhorn, Kite french horn, Kite tuba, etc., al of which use skip-valves that omit every other step of 41-edo.
A simple horn without any valves or slides is only capable of playing the harmonic series. A conventional brass instrument (with the exception of the trombone, which is naturally microtonal) has valves that lengthen the tubing and lower the pitch by small amounts, typically a minor 2nd, a major 2nd and a minor 3rd. By selecting the proper combination of valves, the player can fill the gap between the various harmonics and play a complete 12-edo scale. The intervals don't add up precisely because they add a fixed length rather than multiply the length by a fixed ratio. The player must compensate for this.
A simple horn without any valves or slides is only capable of playing the harmonic series. A conventional brass instrument (with the exception of the trombone, which is naturally microtonal) has valves that lengthen the tubing and lower the pitch by small amounts, typically a minor 2nd, a major 2nd and a minor 3rd. By selecting the proper combination of valves, the player can fill the gap between the various harmonics and play a complete 12-edo scale. The intervals don't add up precisely because they add a fixed length rather than multiply the length by a fixed ratio. The player must compensate for this.


A possible Kite-tuned brass instrument would have 4 valves that lower the pitch by 2\41, 4\41, 8\41 and 16\41. These valves are analogous to the frets of a [[Kite Guitar|Kite guitar]]. Each fret is 2\41, so these valves are for 1, 2, 4 or 8 frets respectively.  Various valve combinations lower the pitch by 1 to 15 frets. (A 1\41 valve is actually physically difficult to make, since the tube length is so short.)
A skip-valved Kite brass instrument would have 4 valves that lower the pitch by 2\41, 4\41, 8\41 and 16\41. Skip-valved is analogous to the skip-fretting of a [[Kite Guitar|Kite guitar]]. Each fret is 2\41, so these valves are for 1, 2, 4 or 8 frets respectively.  Various valve combinations lower the pitch by 1 to 15 frets. (A 1\41 valve is actually physically difficult to make, since the tube length is so short.)


The individual harmonics in the harmonic series are analogous to the strings of a Kite guitar. The instrument proposed here would have especially long tubing, so that the harmonics 3-9 are easily played, and harmonics 1 and 2 are not and would be unused. The reasoning is that the interval between two harmonics should be an odd number of edosteps, which 3/2 is not. This is so that the harmonic will fill in the gaps of the lower harmonic. Also, each harmonic needs to be at most 16 frets (32 edosteps) from the harmonic two above it, since that is the range of the valves. Thus the ratio must be at most 12/7 = 32\41. Harmonics 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 and 9 meet these requirements. The 8th harmonic is like an extra string that overlaps the 7th harmonic's notes and provides an alternate path to certain notes. Harmonics 10 and 11 overlap the 9th harmonic, so 9 is a good stopping point.
The individual harmonics in the harmonic series are analogous to the strings of a Kite guitar. The instrument proposed here would have especially long tubing, so that the harmonics 3-9 are easily played, and harmonics 1 and 2 are not and would be unused. The reasoning is that the interval between two harmonics should be an odd number of edosteps, which 3/2 is not. This is so that the harmonic will fill in the gaps of the lower harmonic. Also, each harmonic needs to be at most 16 frets (32 edosteps) from the harmonic two above it, since that is the range of the valves. Thus the ratio must be at most 12/7 = 32\41. Harmonics 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 and 9 meet these requirements. The 8th harmonic is like an extra string that overlaps the 7th harmonic's notes and provides an alternate path to certain notes. Harmonics 10 and 11 overlap the 9th harmonic, so 9 is a good stopping point.