Boogiewoogiescale

Revision as of 00:00, 17 July 2018 by Wikispaces>FREEZE

Boogie Woogie Scale

In this posting of the Yahoo tuning list, Paul G. Hjelmstad wrote:

Take the standard 12-bar boogie-woogie. Let's use F major:

F A C Eb

Bb D F Ab

C E G Bb

Tune to the seven-limit and keep fifths. You get

12 15 18 21

4 5 6 7

36 45 54 63

Fit into one octave (F, G, Ab,A,Bb,C,D,Eb,E)

24, 27,28,30,32,36,40,42,45 and 63 (extra Bb)

Taking all the ratios, we find that they are all superparticular (n/n-

1)

9/8, 28/27, 15/14, 16/15, 9/8, 10/9, 21/20, 15/14, 16/15 (and the

schisma for Bb/Bb 64/63)

You also get 8/7, 7/6, 6/5, 4/3, 3/2, 1/1, with multiple scale

steps..

The first seven triangular numbers are used; 1/1, 3/2, 6/5, 10/9,

15/14, 21/20, 28/27

Five of the squares are used: 1/1, 4/3, 9/8, 16/15 and 64/63

8/7 and 7/6 are the only ratios which are not squared or triangular

superparticular ratios but they are still superparticular!

All from the simple boogie woogie!


Gene Ward Smith described some additional properties (in this posting):

Here it is in Scala format:

! boogie.scl

Paul Hjelmstad's boogie woogie scale

10

!

9/8

5/4

21/16

45/32

3/2

27/16

7/4

15/8

63/32

2/1

Three otonal tetrads, no utonal tetrads, not CS or epimorphic,

superparticular ratios as noted.

I found a number of ten-note seven limit epimorphic scales with four

tetrads; here's one Paul Erlich found first:

! cx1.scl

First 10/4 scale = erlich11 <10 16 23 28| epimorphic

10

!

15/14

7/6

5/4

4/3

10/7

3/2

5/3

7/4

15/8

2

! [0, -1, -1], [0, -1, 0], [0, 0, 0], [0, 0, 1]

Quite a lot of musical possibilities in these relatively small 7-limit

JI scales, I think.