Harmonic series

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The harmonic series (or overtone series) is a sequence of notes generated by whole-number frequency ratios over a fundamental: 1/1, 2/1, 3/1, 4/1, 5/1, 6/1, 7/1... ad infinitum. Each member of this series is a harmonic; the term overtone, which is not an exact synonym, is also used in the same sense by many people.

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In just intonation theory, the harmonic series is often treated as the foundation of consonance.

The subharmonic series (or undertone series) is the inversion of the harmonic series: 1/1, 1/2, 1/3, 1/4, 1/5, 1/6, 1/7... ad infinitum.

Music based on the harmonic series

The chord of nature is the name sometimes given to the harmonic series, or the series up to a certain stopping point, regarded as a chord.

Steps between adjacent members of the harmonic series are called "superparticular," and they appear in the form (n+1)/n (e.g. 4/3, 28/27, 33/32).

One might compose with the harmonic series by, for instance:

  • Tuning to the first several harmonics over one fundamental;
  • Tuning to an octave-repeating slice of the harmonic series for use as a scale (for instance overtones 8 though 16, 12 through 24, 20 through 40... see overtone scales);
  • Tuning to the overtones of the overtones & the undertones of the undertones. (This can produce complex scales such as Harry Partch's 43-tone Monophonic; this kind of thing is more often called "just intonation" than "overtone music".)

Some individual compositions

See also

External links