Aberrismic theory

Revision as of 01:55, 12 February 2024 by Inthar (talk | contribs) (Aberrismic theory and RTT: Link to RTT)

groundfault's aberrismic theory is a xen theory paradigm using aberrismas, a type of scale step which can be added to a scale pattern to turn it into a scale of one rank higher. The aberrisma is a new category of melodic steps that are smaller than the steps in the original scale, which are prototypically categorical "seconds" such as whole tones and semitones. The typical range for an aberrisma is 20 to 60 cents; groundfault holds the optimal melodic size for an aberrisma to be approximately 40 cents. Examples of ternary patterns that can be made by adding aberrismas to diatonic scales are:

Aberrismic theory and RTT

Certain scales with aberrismas may be endowed with JI interpretations via RTT temperaments, such as equal temperaments. Under groundfault's use of edos (usually patent vals) as RTT temperaments, the aberrisma tends to become 81/80 in a 2.3.5 context and a 64/63 in a 2.3.7 context. Some scales such as 5L2m5s and 5L2m7s admit a more accurate 2.3.5.7 interpretation that tempers neither 81/80 nor 64/63 but identifies the two commas, tempering out 5120/5103.

At times, a scale pattern has varying temperaments according to the tuning. For example, 5L2m3s may be given the temperament structure of either untempered 2.3.5 or Ultrapyth temperament.

Example: blackdye

The following table shows two different temperament interpretations for the same aberrismic scale pattern blackdye (sLmLsLmLsL), under untempered 2.3.5 and Ultrapyth respectively.

  • Untempered does not mean that the final tuning must be the JI tuning, but simply that there exists a tuning with no deviation from JI, or that the temperament before applying the tuning map has the same rank as the JI subgroup.
  • Ultrapyth, 2.3.5.7.11.13[32 & 37], is a diatonic temperament generated by a fifth even sharper than in Superpyth. 37edo provides a nearly optimal tuning. Note that we chose to regard the 3-step 2L + s as 14/11 rather than as 5/4, lest the interpretation merely be an extension of the untempered 2.3.5 one.
Blackdye intervals in two temperaments
Interval class Sizes Untempered 2.3.5 Ultrapyth
1-steps s
m
L
81/80
16/15
10/9
143/140
22/21
160/143
2-steps L + s
L + m
9/8
32/27
8/7, 9/8
7/6
3-steps L + 2s
L + m + s
2L + s
2L + m
729/640
6/5
5/4
320/243
7/6
13/11
14/11
13/10
4-steps 2L + 2s
2L + m + s
81/64
4/3
13/10
4/3
5-steps 2L + m + 2s
2L + 2m + s
3L + 2s
3L + m + s
27/20
64/45
45/32
40/27
66/49
11/8
16/11
49/33
6-steps 3L + m + 2s
3L + 2m + s
3/2
128/81
3/2
20/13
7-steps 3L + m + 3s
3L + 2m + 2s
4L + m + 2s
4L + 2m + s
243/160
8/5
5/3
1280/729
20/13
11/7
22/13
12/7
8-steps 4L + m + 3s
4L + 2m + 2s
27/16
16/9
12/7
7/4, 16/9
9-steps 5L + 2m + s
5L + m + 2s
4L + 2m + 2s
9/5
15/8
160/81
143/80
21/11
280/143