Pythagorean tuning

Revision as of 11:43, 21 April 2025 by Sintel (talk | contribs) (Split off discussion of temperaments to seperate section, add some discussion of schismatic system)

Pythagorean tuning is a system where all intervals are determined by pure fifths and octaves. This makes it essentially the same as 3-limit just intonation.

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When accounting for octave equivalence, Pythagorean tuning mirrors the structure of the chain of fifths.

History

 
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Pythagorean tuning was not actually invented by Pythagoras. The earliest records are from Ancient Mesopotamia, and it was later inherited by the Ancient Greeks.

The 12-tone form of Pythagorean tuning was (probably independently) invented in Ancient China between 600 BCE and 240 CE, where it was called shi'er lü.

Relation to temperaments

Pythagorean tuning can be considered a trivial rank-2 temperament in the 2.3 subgroup, where it tempers out no commas (providing no additional mappings for intervals other than the pure just structure). As such, all rank-2 temperaments generated by 3/2 and 2/1 in the 5-limit or higher (e.g. meantone) can be seen as extensions of Pythagorean temperament.

Because the schisma is so small, a series of just fifths can also be considered a reasonable tuning of the schismatic temperament, where the diminished fourth (e.g. C – F♭) approximates 5/4. Mark Lindley[1] argues such a system was used in Europe during the 15th century, with keyboards tuned to nearly pure fifths as

G♭ – C♭ – A♭ – E♭ – B – F – C – G – D – A – E – B.

When respelled enharmonically, triads such as D – F♯ – A are close to 4:5:6 in this tuning.

Scales

Pythagorean tuning generates the following MOS scales:

The hardnesses of the Pythagorean scales are about 1.442 for pentic, 2.260 for diatonic, 1.260 for chromatic, and 3.846 for enharmonic.

Music

See 3-limit #Music.

See also

  • 3-limit, the corresponding JI subgroup.
  • Chain of fifths, a harmonic structure based on the concepts of Pythagorean tuning.

References

  1. Mark Lindley, Pythagorean Intonation and the Rise of the Triad, Royal Musical Association Research Chronicle, 1980