← 23edo 24edo 25edo →
Prime factorization 23 × 3
Step size 50 ¢ 
Fifth 14\24 (700 ¢) (→ 7\12)
Semitones (A1:m2) 2:2 (100 ¢ : 100 ¢)
Consistency limit 5
Distinct consistency limit 5
Special properties

Template:EDO intro

English Wikipedia has an article on:

24edo is also known as quarter-tone tuning, since it evenly divides the 12-tone equal tempered semitone in two. Quarter-tones are the most commonly used microtonal tuning due to its retention of the familiar 12 tones, since it is the smallest microtonal equal temperament that contains all the 12 notes, and also because of its use in theory and occasionally in practice in Arabic music.

It is easy to jump into this tuning and make microtonal music right away using common 12 equal software and even instruments as illustrated in DIY Quartertone Composition with 12 equal tools.

Theory

The 5-limit approximations in 24edo are the same as those in 12edo, therefore 24edo offers nothing new as far as approximating the 5-limit is concerned.

The 7th harmonic-based intervals (7/4, 7/5 and 7/6) are almost as bad in 24edo as in 12edo. To achieve a satisfactory level of approximation while maintaining the 12 notes of 12edo requires high-degree tunings like 36et, 72et, 84et or 156et. However, it should be noted that 24edo, like 22edo, does temper out the quartisma, linking the otherwise sub-par 7-limit harmonies with those of the 11-limit.

Speaking of 11-limit representation in 24edo, the 11th harmonic, and most intervals derived from it, (11/10, 11/9, 11/8, 11/6, 12/11, 15/11, 16/11, 18/11, 20/11) are very well approximated in this edo. The 24-tone interval of 550 cents is 1.3 cents flatter than 11/8 and is almost indistinguishable from it. In addition, the interval approximating 11/9 is 7 steps which is exactly half the perfect fifth.

The tunings supplied by 72edo cannot be used for all low-limit just intervals, but they can be used on the 17-limit 3*24 subgroup 2.3.125.35.11.325.17 just intonation subgroup, making some of the excellent approximations of 72 available in 24edo. Chords based on this subgroup afford considerable scope for harmony, including in particular intervals and chords using only 2, 3, 11 and 17. Another approach would be to treat 24edo as a 2.3.11.17.19 subgroup temperament, on which it is quite accurate.

Prime harmonics

Approximation of prime harmonics in 24edo
Harmonic 2 3 5 7 11 13 17 19 23 29 31
Error Absolute (¢) +0.0 -2.0 +13.7 -18.8 -1.3 +9.5 -5.0 +2.5 +21.7 +20.4 +5.0
Relative (%) +0.0 -3.9 +27.4 -37.7 -2.6 +18.9 -9.9 +5.0 +43.5 +40.8 +9.9
Steps
(reduced)
24
(0)
38
(14)
56
(8)
67
(19)
83
(11)
89
(17)
98
(2)
102
(6)
109
(13)
117
(21)
119
(23)

Subsets and supersets

24edo is the 6th highly composite edo. Its nontrivial divisors are 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, and 12.

Notation

There are multiple ways of notating 24edo. While an arguably common form can be seen on Wikipedia's page on quartertones, there are other forms, and it is these other forms that will be considered here.

Ups and down notation

Degree Cents Approximate Ratios[1] ups and downs notation Solfege
0 0 1/1 P1 unison C Do
1 50 33/32, 34/33 ^P1, vm2 up-unison, downminor 2nd ^C, vDb Da/Ru
2 100 17/16, 18/17 A1, m2 aug unison, minor 2nd C#, Db Ro
3 150 12/11 ~2 mid 2nd vD Ra
4 200 9/8 M2 major 2nd D Re
5 250 22/19 ^M2, vm3 upmajor 2nd, downminor 3rd ^D, vEb Ri/Mu
6 300 19/16 m3 minor 3rd Eb Mo
7 350 11/9, 27/22 ~3 mid 3rd vE Ma
8 400 24/19 M3 major 3rd E Me
9 450 22/17 ^M3, v4 upmajor 3rd, down-4th ^E, vF Mi/Fu
10 500 4/3 P4 fourth F Fo
11 550 11/8 ^4, ~4 up-4th, mid-4th ^F Fa/Su
12 600 17/12 A4, d5 aug 4th, dim 5th F#, Gb Fe/So
13 650 16/11 v5, ~5 down-5th, mid-5th vG Fi/Sa
14 700 3/2 P5 fifth G Se
15 750 17/11 ^5, vm6 up-fifth, downminor 6th ^G, vAb Si/Lu
16 800 19/12 m6 minor 6th Ab Lo
17 850 18/11, 44/27 ~6 mid 6th vA La
18 900 32/19 M6 major 6th A Le
19 950 19/11 ^M6, vm7 upmajor 6th, downminor 7th ^A, vBb Li/Tu
20 1000 16/9 m7 minor 7th Bb To
21 1050 11/6 ~7 mid 7th vB Ta
22 1100 17/9, 32/17 M7 major 7th B Te
23 1150 33/17, 64/33 ^M7, vP8 upmajor 7th, down-8ve ^B, vC Ti/Du
24 1200 2/1 P8 perfect 8ve C Do
  1. based on treating 24edo as a 2.3.11.17.19 subgroup; other approaches are possible.

In many other edos, 5/4 is downmajor and 11/9 is mid. To agree with this, the term mid is generally preferred over down or downmajor.

Interval qualities in color notation

Combining ups and downs notation with color notation, qualities can be loosely associated with colors:

Quality Color Name Monzo Format Examples
downminor zo (a, b, 0, 1) 7/6, 7/4
minor fourthward wa (a, b), b < -1 32/27, 16/9
gu (a, b, -1) 6/5, 9/5
mid ilo (a, b, 0, 0, 1) 11/9, 11/6
lu (a, b, 0, 0, -1) 12/11, 18/11
major yo (a, b, 1) 5/4, 5/3
fifthward wa (a, b), b > 1 9/8, 27/16
upmajor ru (a, b, 0, -1) 9/7, 12/7

Ups and downs notation can be used to name chords. See 24edo Chord Names and Ups and Downs Notation #Chords and Chord Progressions.

William Lynch's notation

24edo breaks intervals into two sets of five categories. Infra - Minor - Neutral - Major - Ultra for seconds, thirds, sixths, and sevenths; and diminished - narrow - perfect - wide - augmented for fourths, fifths, unison, and octave.

For other strange enharmonics, wide and narrow can be used in conjunction with augmented and diminished intervals such as 550 cents being called a narrow diminished fifth and 850 cents being called a wide augmented fifth.

These are the intervals of 24edo that do not exist in 12edo:

Cents Names
50 quartertone, infra second, wide unison
150 neutral second
250 ultra second, infra third
350 neutral third
450 minor fourth, ultra third, narrow fourth
550 wide fourth
650 narrow fifth
750 wide fifth, infra sixth
850 neutral sixth
950 ultra sixth , infra seventh
1050 neutral seventh
1150 ultra seventh, narrow octave

Interval alterations

The special alterations of the intervals and chords of 12edo can be notated like this:

  • Supermajor or "Tendo" is a major interval raised a quarter tone
  • Subminor or "Arto" is a minor interval lowered a quarter tone
  • Neutral are intervals that exist between the major and minor version of an interval
  • The prefix under indicates a perfect interval lowered by one quarter tone
  • The prefix over indicates a perfect interval raised by a quarter tone
  • The Latin words "tendo" (meaning "expand") and "arto" (meaning "contract") can be used to replace the words "supermajor" and "subminor" in order to shorten the names of the intervals.

Chord names

Naming chords in 24edo can be achieved by adding a few things to the already existing set of terms that are used to name 12edo chords.

They are:

  • Super + perfect interval such as "perfect fifth" means to raise it by a quarter tone
  • Sub + perfect interval means to lower a quarter tone
  • Sharp is to raise by one half tone
  • Flat is to raise by a half tone
  • Neutral, arto and tendo refer to triads or tetrads
  • Neutral, arto, or tendo + interval name of 2nd, 3rd, 6th, or 7th is to alter respectively

Examples:

  • Neutral Super Eleventh or neut^11 = C neutral 7th chord with a super 11th thrown on top
  • Arto Sub Seventh Tendo Thirteenth or artsub7^13 = Arto tetrad with an arto seventh and a tendo thirteenth on top Minor Seventh Flat Five Arto Ninth Super Eleventh or m7b5^9^11

Quartertone accidentals

Besides ups and downs, there are various systems for notating quarter tones. Here are some of them, along with their pros and cons.

Mainstream quartertone notation

 

or ^ = quarter-tone sharp or "Jump" or "up"


 


or #^ or ^# = three-quarter-tone sharp or "Jump-Sharp" or "upsharp"


 


or v = quarter-tone flat or "Drop" or "down"


 


or bv or vb = three-quarter-tone sharp or "Drop-Flat" or "downflat"



Pros: Familiar, fairly easy to learn

Cons: Clutters a score easily, can get confusing when sight read at faster paces

Persian accidentals

 
Koron (en | fa) = quarter-tone flat
 
Sori (fa) = quarter-tone sharp

Pros: Easy to read

Cons: Hard to write on a computer, doesn't fit with standard notation well

Sagittal notation

Sagittal notation works extremely well for 24edo notation as well as other systems.

It is easy on the eyes, easy to recognize the various symbols and keeps a score looking tidy and neat.

A possibility for the best approach would be to not use traditional sharps and flats altogether and replace them with Sagittal signs for sharp and flat.

 

Pros: Easy to read, and less likely to clutter the score

Cons: Not as familiar as traditional notation, and thus not immediately accessible to many traditional musicians who are just starting out with microtonality

We also have, from the appendix to The Sagittal Songbook by Jacob A. Barton, a diagram of how to notate 24edo in the Revo flavor of Sagittal:

 

Further discussion of 24edo notation

Regular temperament properties

Uniform maps

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Commas

24edo tempers out the following commas. This assumes val 24 38 56 67 83 89].

Prime
Limit
Ratio[1] Monzo Cents Color name Name(s)
3 (12 digits) [-19 12 23.46 Lalawa Pythagorean comma
5 648/625 [3 4 -4 62.57 Quadgu Major diesis, diminished domma
5 128/125 [7 0 -3 41.06 Trigu Diesis, augmented comma
5 81/80 [-4 4 -1 21.51 Gu Syntonic comma, Didymus comma, meantone comma
5 2048/2025 [11 -4 -2 19.55 Sagugu Diaschisma
5 (16 digits) [26 -12 -3 17.60 Sasa-trigu Misty comma
5 32805/32768 [-15 8 1 1.95 Layo Schisma
5 (98 digits) [161 -84 -12 0.02 Sepbisa-quadbigu Atom
7 49/48 [-4 -1 0 2 35.70 Zozo Slendro diesis
7 245/243 [0 -5 1 2 14.19 Zozoyo Sensamagic
7 19683/19600 [-4 9 -2 -2 7.32 Labirugu Cataharry
7 6144/6125 [11 1 -3 -2 5.36 Sarurutrigu Porwell
11 121/120 [-3 -1 -1 0 2 14.37 Lologu Biyatisma
11 176/175 [4 0 -2 -1 1 9.86 Lorugugu Valinorsma
11 896/891 [7 -4 0 1 -1 9.69 Saluzo Pentacircle
11 243/242 [-1 5 0 0 -2 7.14 Lulu Rastma
11 385/384 [-7 -1 1 1 1 4.50 Lozoyo Keenanisma
11 9801/9800 [-3 4 -2 -2 2 0.18 Bilorugu Kalisma, Gauss' comma
13 91/90 [-1 -2 -1 1 0 1 19.13 Thozogu Superleap
13 676/675 [2 -3 -2 0 0 2 2.56 Bithogu Island comma, parizeksma
  1. Ratios longer than 10 digits are presented by placeholders with informative hints

Rank-2 temperaments

Important MOSes include:

  • semaphore 4L1s 55455 (generator: 5\24)
  • semaphore 5L4s 414144141 (generator: 5\24)
  • mohajira 3L4s 3434343 (generator: 7\24)
  • mohajira 7L3s 3313313313 (generator: 7\24)
Periods per octave Generator Name
1 1\24
1 5\24 Semaphore/godzilla / Bridgetown
1 7\24 Mohajira (or neutrominant with 24d val)
1 11\24 Barton
2 1\24 Shrutar
2 5\24 Sruti, Anguirus, Decimal
3 1\24 Semiaug
3 3\24 Triforce
4 1\24 Hemidim
6 1\24 Hemisemiaug
8 1\24 Semidim
12 1\24 Catler

Scales / modes

See 24edo modes.

Tetrachords

See 24edo tetrachords.

Chord types

24edo features a rich variety of not only new chords, but also alterations that can be used with regular 12edo chords. For example, an approximation of the ninth, eleventh, and thirteenth harmonic can be added to a major triad to create a sort of super-extended chord structure of a major chord: 4:5:6:9:11:13.

As for entirely new chords, the most obvious is the neutral or mid triad 0-7-14. However there are other options such as:

  • 0-9-14 (Ultra Triad or upmajor triad)
  • 0-5-14 (Infra Triad or downminor triad)

These chords tend to lack the forcefulness to sound like resolved, tonal sonorities, but can be resolved of that issue by using tetrads in place of triads. For example, the neutral triad can have the neutral 7th added to it to make a full neutral tetrad: 0-7-14-21. However, another option is to replace the neutral third with an 11/8 to produce a sort of 11 limit neutral tetrad: 0-14-21-35 William Lynch considers this chord to be the most consonant tetrad in 24edo involving a neutral tonality.

24edo also is very good at 15 limit and does 13 quite well allowing barbodos 10:13:15 and barbodos minor triad 26:30:39 to be used as an entirely new harmonic system.

More good chords in 24edo:

  • 0-4-8-11-14 ("major" chord with a 9:8 and a 11:8 above the root)
  • Its inversion, 0-3-6-10-14 ("minor")
  • 0-5-10 (another kind of "neutral", splitting the fourth in two. The 0-5-10 can be extended into a pentatonic scale, 0-5-10-14-19-24 (godzilla), that is close to equi-pentatonic and also close to several Indonesian slêndros. In a similar way 0-7-14 extends to 0-4-7-11-14-18-21-24 (mohajira), a heptatonic scale close to several Arabic scales.)

William Lynch considers these as some possible good tetrads:

 

Chord name Degrees of 24edo Chord spelling Audio example
neutral 0 7 14 21 1 v3 5 v7
arto 0 5 14 20 1 vb3 5 b7
tendo 0 9 14 19 1 ^3 5 vb7 ...

The tendo chord can also be spelled 1 ^3 5 ^6. Due to convenience, the names Arto and tendo have been changed to Ultra and Infra.

Counterpoint

24edo is the first edo to have both a sqrt(25/24) distinct from 25/24 and a correct 5-odd-limit. It is thus the first edo which allows to lead the two voices of a major third to a minor third by strict contrary motion. And vice versa.

Furthermore, in the same fashion, every sequence of intervals available in 12edo are reachable by equal contrary motion in 24edo.

 
Every sequence of 12edo intervals are reachable by strict contrary motion in 24edo.

Instruments

The ever-arising question in microtonal music, how to play it on instruments designed for 12edo, has a relatively simple answer in the case of 24edo: use two standard instruments tuned a quartertone apart. This "12 note octave scales" approach is used in a wide part of the existing literature - see below.

External image: http://www.swordguitars.com/Sword_quartertone_stratsm.jpg

WARNING: MediaWiki doesn't have very good support for external images.
Furthermore, since external images can break, we recommend that you replace the above with a local copy of the image.

24-tone "1/4-tone" Guitar by Ron Sword / Sword guitars

Hidekazu Wakabayashi tuned a piano and harp to where the normal sharps and flats are tuned 50 cents higher in which he called Iceface tuning.

24edo can also be played on the Lumatone: see Lumatone mapping for 24edo

Music

 
English Wikipedia has an article on:

Further reading

See also


External links