Kite's color notation
Kite's color notation
The following is excerpted from Kite's forthcoming book, "Alternative Tunings: Theory, Notation and Practice", available at www.TallKite.com.
Color notation provides a way to talk about ratios without using numbers, making microtonal music more accessible to people who aren't mathematically inclined. It's designed for just intonation, but like sagittal notation, it can be expanded to cover temperaments. Also, even those who never use JI still generally talk about ratios quite a bit, and this notation can be a useful tool. For example, temperaments can be named after the color of the comma(s) that are tempered out.
CRASH COURSE:
Wa = white = 3-limit, yo = yellow = major, gu = green = minor, zo = blue = subminor, ru = red = supermajor. The lattice looks like this:
Notes are named wC, zE♭, etc. Triads are named after their 3rd: Cy, Gz, etc. A yo chord is a major chord.
Tetrads are named Cy6, Dg,r6, etc. Here's the main 7-limit chord types:
Chord progressions: the root of each chord has a color, defaults to white. C -- Am -- F -- G would be Cy -- yAg -- Fy -- Gy. The I, IV and V chords are assumed to have white roots unless otherwise specified, so this becomes Iy -- yVIg -- IVy -- Vy.
Here's Iyb -- IVyb -- Iyb -- Vyb in B flat: