List of approaches to musical tuning

Revision as of 09:01, 26 April 2023 by BudjarnLambeth (talk | contribs) (Moved just intonation higher on the list again. Removed "frequency integer ratios" from the list of just intonation examples because isn't that what all just intonation is by definition anyway?)

Musical tuning can be approached in many different ways. Here are some of the currently-established theories and approaches:

Subjective processes

The following approaches describe the subjective exploration process or its representations rather than its objective, audible result:

  • Empirical: This is a form of hands-on field research as opposed to a form of acoustical or scale engineering, where tunings are specifically derived from listening and playing experiments carried out in the pitch continuum.
  • Pretty Pictures that represent scales in one way or another
  • Notation (pretty pictures for the purpose of writing music down)
  • Nominal-Accidental Chains A common approach to notation
  • The notion of a Scalesmith who builds scales, with various methods, perhaps for single occasions
    • Mathematically based scales
    • Acoustically-based scales (resonant frequencies of performance space, for example)
    • Scale transformation and stretching
    • Counter-intuitive, random, arbitrary scales