David Ryan's notation

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Revision as of 04:12, 13 November 2015 by Wikispaces>daveryan23 (**Imported revision 566300119 - Original comment: **)
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This revision was by author daveryan23 and made on 2015-11-13 04:12:51 UTC.
The original revision id was 566300119.
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Original Wikitext content:

A system of notating any fractional frequency in Just Intonation, created by the musician and theorist David Ryan

* Preprint: http://arxiv.org/pdf/1508.07739

Abstract:
Musical notation systems provide ways of recording which notes musicians should play at which times. One essential parameter described is the frequency. For twelve-note tuning systems the frequency can be described using letters A to G with sharp or flat symbols. For Just Intonation tuning systems these symbols are insufficient. This paper provides a system for describing any frequency which is a rational number multiplied by a suitable base frequency. Explicit notation is given for low prime numbers, and an algorithm for higher primes described.

Key features:
Can be inputted by computer keyboard alone (ASCII characters)
Can freely transpose keys in JI - done by multiplying notations - any two notations can be easily multiplied
Simple notations exist for 3-limit, 5-limit, 7-limit JI notes
Look-up table for providing ASCII notation for higher primes (11/8, 109/100, etc)
Algorithm for deriving these notations
Very compact notation for octave equivalence classes
Good for describing all the notes on a 5-limit or 7-limit tone lattice

Challenges:
Octaves are not sequential - easier to understand octave equivalence classes than exact notes . ( Example: C = 1/1 F = 4/3 G = 3/4 but 3/2 = `G so 3/2 requires an octave modifier to describe.)

Original HTML content:

<html><head><title>David Ryan's notation</title></head><body>A system of notating any fractional frequency in Just Intonation, created by the musician and theorist David Ryan<br />
<br />
<ul><li>Preprint: <!-- ws:start:WikiTextUrlRule:20:http://arxiv.org/pdf/1508.07739 --><a class="wiki_link_ext" href="http://arxiv.org/pdf/1508.07739" rel="nofollow">http://arxiv.org/pdf/1508.07739</a><!-- ws:end:WikiTextUrlRule:20 --></li></ul><br />
Abstract:<br />
Musical notation systems provide ways of recording which notes musicians should play at which times. One essential parameter described is the frequency. For twelve-note tuning systems the frequency can be described using letters A to G with sharp or flat symbols. For Just Intonation tuning systems these symbols are insufficient. This paper provides a system for describing any frequency which is a rational number multiplied by a suitable base frequency. Explicit notation is given for low prime numbers, and an algorithm for higher primes described.<br />
<br />
Key features:<br />
Can be inputted by computer keyboard alone (ASCII characters)<br />
Can freely transpose keys in JI - done by multiplying notations - any two notations can be easily multiplied<br />
Simple notations exist for 3-limit, 5-limit, 7-limit JI notes<br />
Look-up table for providing ASCII notation for higher primes (11/8, 109/100, etc)<br />
Algorithm for deriving these notations<br />
Very compact notation for octave equivalence classes<br />
Good for describing all the notes on a 5-limit or 7-limit tone lattice<br />
<br />
Challenges:<br />
Octaves are not sequential - easier to understand octave equivalence classes than exact notes . ( Example: C = 1/1 F = 4/3 G = 3/4 but 3/2 = `G so 3/2 requires an octave modifier to describe.)</body></html>