Talk:7L 2s
ARCHIVED WIKISPACES DISCUSSION BELOW
All discussion below is archived from the Wikispaces export in its original unaltered form.
PLEASE MAKE ANY NEW COMMENTS ABOVE THIS SECTION. Anything below here is for archival purposes only.
My revert
Sorry, I had to revert the last changes of JosephRuhf and restored the version of 5th Nov. 2016 http://xenharmonic.wikispaces.com/page/view/7L+2s/565347717
The intervals given in the newly added chord column were wrong. @Joseph: please let's discuss changes like this first!
- xenwolf November 09, 2016, 04:54:54 AM UTC-0800
Can we define "tone"
We need an exact defintioin or this doesn't mean much.
- genewardsmith May 28, 2012, 09:59:45 AM UTC-0700
Whole tones not good enough for you?
Josef Yasser defined a centitone as 100 divisions of a whole tone (200 cents). Even by this (whacked-up) standard, a tone is still a whole-tone.
- Sarzadoce May 29, 2012, 12:17:51 PM UTC-0700
No, it is completely meaningless to say "whole tone" if you are using it to give a precise measurement. If you want to use cents, that would be fine.
- genewardsmith May 29, 2012, 01:07:27 PM UTC-0700
Why diatonic?
I'm wondering why a nine-note scale is called "diatonic". Who called it that, and why?
- genewardsmith May 30, 2010, 04:21:31 PM UTC-0700
I call it Diatonic, nothing more than simple common sense to describe a peculiar form. For example if I have the form, which in sight, it looks like an ascending-sequential or whatever you want to call, as it is: LsLLs, logically I'm going to compare with the known form of which is called "Diatonic" LLsLLLs
who is in Number Ascending of its alterations, in the case of "Diatonic" is 2 and 3. Therefore, in view of previous reports, you will notice that the diatonic form is NOT exclusive of 7 notes, but also can be called Diatonic the: LsLLs, LLLsLLLLs and LLLLsLLLLLs forms (Alterations (1 and 2)(3 and 4)(4 and 5)) Understand?
- Osmiorisbendi May 31, 2010, 01:30:11 AM UTC-0700