MOS diagrams
IMPORTED REVISION FROM WIKISPACES
This is an imported revision from Wikispaces. The revision metadata is included below for reference:
- This revision was by author xenjacob and made on 2007-05-31 21:06:30 UTC.
- The original revision id was 4722642.
- The revision comment was:
The revision contents are below, presented both in the original Wikispaces Wikitext format, and in HTML exactly as Wikispaces rendered it.
Original Wikitext content:
The moment-of-symmetry process of unfolding a scale takes, for most people, a conceptual leap or two. Best we think about visual ways of bridging the leap. * horagrams/floragrams. Scala does them. And exports them quite easily. Let's upload some pictures. * the scale tree. Erv Wilson has a nice one I hung on my wall for a while, and eventually I "got" it. An interactive zoomable flash scale tree. Make me one! * A diagram of bounces along a line. The line goes from zero (1/1) to one (2/1). The bounces go above and below the line, perhaps depending on if they're wrapping around. Aaron Hunt used one in a presentation. * Charles Lucy describes a technique involving dis-continuous chains of fifths (i.e. skipping some). I write these with X's and O's. * Joe Monzo's helixes could also be of use here...
Original HTML content:
<html><head><title>MOSDiagrams</title></head><body>The moment-of-symmetry process of unfolding a scale takes, for most people, a conceptual leap or two. Best we think about visual ways of bridging the leap.<br /> <br /> <ul><li>horagrams/floragrams. Scala does them. And exports them quite easily. Let's upload some pictures.</li><li>the scale tree. Erv Wilson has a nice one I hung on my wall for a while, and eventually I "got" it. An interactive zoomable flash scale tree. Make me one!</li><li>A diagram of bounces along a line. The line goes from zero (1/1) to one (2/1). The bounces go above and below the line, perhaps depending on if they're wrapping around. Aaron Hunt used one in a presentation.</li><li>Charles Lucy describes a technique involving dis-continuous chains of fifths (i.e. skipping some). I write these with X's and O's.</li><li>Joe Monzo's helixes could also be of use here...</li></ul></body></html>