User:Zhenlige/Chromatic notation
This page introduces a proposed notation system centering the 5L 7s chromatic scale. This system is suitable for temperaments with consonant intervals far away in the chain of fifths, such as schismatic. Adding more naturals is usually unnecessary, since the 12-comma is much smaller than the limma in JI. For the meantone chromatic scale 7L 5s, there are two approches to use this system, in anology to using the standard notation system for the antidiatonic scale.
Intervals
The degrees are named as 0-indexed numbers of “sem”, which stands for “semitone”, referring to the chromatic step. 12edo diatonic interval names can also be used for representing degrees, with A4 and d5 merged into “tritone”. The 5L 7s major, minor, augmented and diminished are renamed to wide (W), narrow (n), super (S) and sub (s) respectively, to avoid ambiguity. Note that diatonic major is always wide and diatonic minor is always narrow, which also applies to fourths and fifths as if they were named the same as other intervals. Mid or neutral degrees should be abbreviated as “m” or “~” to avoid confusion with “n” which stands for narrow.
| Interval | Abbrev. | Steps | 29edo tuning (steps) |
Equivalent diatonic degree |
Approximate ratios | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Degree | Degree name from 12edo diatonic |
Quality | L | s | schismatic | additional in garibaldi | |||
| Unison 0-tone 0-sem |
Unison | Perfect | P0s / P1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | P1 | 1/1 | |
| Semitone Sem / 1-sem |
Minor second | Narrow | n1s / nm2 | 0 | 1 | 2 | m2 | 135/128, 256/243 | 21/20 |
| Wide | W1s / Wm2 | 1 | 0 | 3 | A1 | 16/15 | 15/14 | ||
| Tone / 1-tone 2-sem |
Major second | Narrow | n2s / nM2 | 0 | 2 | 4 | d3 | 10/9 | |
| Wide | W2s / WM2 | 1 | 1 | 5 | M2 | 9/8 | |||
| 3-sem | Minor third | Narrow | n3s / nm3 | 1 | 2 | 7 | m3 | 32/27 | |
| Wide | W3s / Wm3 | 2 | 1 | 8 | A2 | 6/5 | |||
| Ditone / 2-tone 4-sem |
Major third | Narrow | n4s / nM3 | 1 | 3 | 9 | d4 | 5/4 | 56/45 |
| Wide | W4s / WM3 | 2 | 2 | 10 | M3 | 81/64 | 80/63, 63/50 | ||
| 5-sem | Fourth | Perfect | P5s / P4 | 2 | 3 | 12 | P4 | 4/3 | |
| Super | S5s / S4 | 3 | 2 | 13 | A3 | 27/20 | |||
| Tritone / 3-tone 6-sem |
Tritone | Narrow | n6s / nT | 2 | 4 | 14 | d5 | 45/32 | 7/5 |
| Wide | W6s / WT | 3 | 3 | 15 | A4 | 64/45 | 10/7 | ||
| 7-sem | Fifth | Sub | s7s / s5 | 2 | 5 | 16 | d6 | 40/27 | |
| Perfect | P7s / P5 | 3 | 4 | 17 | P5 | 3/2 | |||
| Tetratone / 4-tone 8-sem |
Minor sixth | Narrow | n8s / nm6 | 3 | 5 | 19 | m6 | 128/81 | 63/40, 100/63 |
| Wide | W8s / Wm6 | 4 | 4 | 20 | A5 | 8/5 | 45/28 | ||
| 9-sem | Major sixth | Narrow | n9s / nM6 | 3 | 6 | 21 | d7 | 5/3 | |
| Wide | W9s / WM6 | 4 | 5 | 22 | M6 | 27/16 | |||
| Pentatone / 5-tone 10-sem |
Minor seventh | Narrow | n10s / nm7 | 4 | 6 | 24 | m7 | 16/9 | |
| Wide | W10s / Wm7 | 5 | 5 | 25 | A6 | 9/5 | |||
| 11-sem | Major seventh | Narrow | n11s / nM7 | 4 | 7 | 26 | d8 | 15/8 | 28/15 |
| Wide | W11s / WM7 | 5 | 6 | 27 | M7 | 243/128, 256/135 | 40/21 | ||
| Hexatone / 6-tone 12-sem |
Octave | Perfect | P12s / P8 | 5 | 7 | 29 | P8 | 2/1 | |
The 12edo diatonic based interval names along the chain of fifths is P1-P5-WM2-WM6-WM3-WM7-WT-Wm2-Wm6-Wm3-Wm7-S4-S1-S5-SM2-… with the quality goes as perfect - wide major - wide minor - super perfect - super major - super minor - double super perfect….
Note names
Latin letters ABCDEFG and Greek letters αβγδε are used. Latin letters represent the same notes as diatonic. Each Greek letter represents the note a diatonic chroma below the note marked with the corresponding Latin letter. Ups and downs are used for altering 12-commas.
| Chromatic | Diatonic |
|---|---|
| D | D |
| ε | E♭ |
| ^ε | D♯ |
| E | E |
| F | F |
| γ | G♭ |
| ^γ | F♯ |
| G | G |
| α | A♭ |
| ^α | G♯ |
| A | A |
| β | B♭ |
| ^β | A♯ |
| B | B |
| C | C |
| δ | D♭ |
| ^δ | C♯ |
| D | D |
Staves
A 9-lined staff is used. To improve readability, the lines alter between thin and thick. The first and last lines are thick. Only C-clef is used. C is always on a thick line. For the standard clef, the notes on the lines are EγαβCDEγα.
Applications
The chromatic notation is useful for notating temperaments that require many fifths to get some primes, making diatonic notation very unintuitive, or that have interdiatonic degrees such as the half octave.
| Interval | Ponta | Cassandra | Leapday | Diaschismic |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5/4 | nM3 | nM3 | Sm3 | ~M3 |
| 7/4 | 3SM6 | sm7 | SM6 | 1/2-sm7 |
| 11/8 | 7s5 | 2S4 | S4 | 1/2-sT |
| 13/8 | Sm6 | Wm6 | 1/2-sM6 | |
| 17/16 | 2S1 | ~m2 |
| Interval | Ponta | Cassandra | Leapday | Diaschismic |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5/4 | n4s | n4s | S3s | ~4s |
| 7/4 | 3S9s | s10s | S9s | 1/2-s10s |
| 11/8 | 7s7s | 2S5s | S5s | 1/2-s6s |
| 13/8 | S8s | W8s | 1/2-s9s | |
| 17/16 | 2S0s | ~1s |