29edo
← 28edo | 29edo | 30edo → |
(semiconvergent)
29 equal divisions of the octave (abbreviated 29edo or 29ed2), also called 29-tone equal temperament (29tet) or 29 equal temperament (29et) when viewed under a regular temperament perspective, is the tuning system that divides the octave into 29 equal parts of about 41.4 ¢ each. Each step represents a frequency ratio of 21/29, or the 29th root of 2.
Theory
29 is the lowest edo which approximates the 3/2 just fifth more accurately than 12edo: 3/2 = 701.955… cents; 17 degrees of 29edo = 703.448… cents. Since the fifth is sharp instead of flat, 29edo is a positive temperament—a Parapythagorean tuning instead of a meantone system.
[File info] | [File info] |
(Super-)pythagorean diatonic major scale and cadence in 29edo | 12edo diatonic major scale and cadence, for comparison |
3 is the only harmonic, of the intelligibly low ones anyway, that 29edo approximates very closely, and it does so quite well. Nonetheless, and rather surprisingly, 29 is the smallest equal division which consistently represents the 15-odd-limit. It is able to do this since it has an accurate 3, and the 5, 7, 11 and 13, while not very accurate, are all tuned flatly. Hence it tempers out a succession of fairly large commas: 250/243 in the 5-limit, 49/48 in the 7-limit, 55/54 in the 11-limit, and 65/64 in the 13-limit. If using these approximations is desired, 29edo actually shines, and it can be used for such things as an alternative to 19edo for negri, as well as an alternative to 22edo or 15edo for porcupine. 29edo is also an oneirotonic tuning with generator 11\29, which generates ammonite temperament.
Another possible use for 29edo is as an equally tempered para-pythagorean scale. Using its fifth as a generator leads to a variant of garibaldi temperament which is not very accurate but which has relatively low 13-limit complexity. However, it gives the POL2 generator for edson temperament with essentially perfect accuracy, only 0.034 cents sharp of it.
Edson is a 2.3.7/5.11/5.13/5 subgroup temperament, and 29 it represents the 2.3.11/5.13/5 subgroup to very high accuracy, and the 2.3.7/5.11/5.13/5 to a lesser but still good accuracy, and so can be used with this subgroup, which is liberally supplied with chords such as the 1-11/7-13/7 (7:11:13) chord, the barbados triad 1-13/10-3/2 (10:13:15), the minor barbados triad 1-15/13-3/2, the 1-14/11-3/2 (22:28:33) triad, the 1-13/11-3/2 triad (22:26:33), and the petrmic triad, a 13-limit essentially tempered dyadic chord. 29 tempers out 352/351, 676/675 and 4000/3993 from the 2.3.11/5.13/5 subgroup, and in addition 196/195 and 364/363 from the 2.3.7/5.11/5.13/5 subgroup, so we have various relationships from the tempering, such as the fact that the 1-13/11-3/2 chord and the 1-14/11-3/2 chord are inverses of each other, a major-minor pairing. A larger subgroup containing both of these subgroups is the 3*29 subgroup 2.3.125.175.275.325; on this subgroup 29 tunes the same as 87, and the commas of 29 on this subgroup are the same as the 13-limit commas of 87. Still another subgroup of interest is the 2*29 subgroup 2.3.25.35.55.65.85; on this subgroup 29 tunes the same as 58 and has the same 17-limit commas.
29edo could be thought of as the "twin" of 12edo in the 5-limit, since 5-limit intervals in 12edo and 29edo are tuned with almost exactly the same absolute errors, but in opposite directions. There are other ways in which they are counterparts (12 tempers out 50:49 but not 49:48; 29 does the opposite). Each supports a particularly good tonal framework (meantone[7] and nautilus[14], respectively).
A more coincidental similarity is that just as the 12-tone scale is also a 1/2-tone scale (the whole tone being divided into 2 semitones), the 29-tone temperament may also be called 2/9-tone. This is because it has two different sizes of whole tone (4 and 5 steps wide, respectively). So the step size of 29edo may be called a 2/9-tone, just as 24edo's step size is called a quarter tone.
Prime harmonics
Harmonic | 2 | 3 | 5 | 7 | 11 | 13 | 17 | 19 | 23 | 29 | 31 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Error | Absolute (¢) | +0.0 | +1.5 | -13.9 | -17.1 | -13.4 | -12.9 | +19.2 | -7.9 | -7.6 | +4.9 | +13.6 |
Relative (%) | +0.0 | +3.6 | -33.6 | -41.3 | -32.4 | -31.3 | +46.4 | -19.0 | -18.3 | +11.9 | +32.8 | |
Steps (reduced) |
29 (0) |
46 (17) |
67 (9) |
81 (23) |
100 (13) |
107 (20) |
119 (3) |
123 (7) |
131 (15) |
141 (25) |
144 (28) |
Divisors
29edo is the 10th prime edo, following 23edo and coming before 31edo.
Intervals
Degree | Cents | Approx. Ratios of the 13-limit | Ups and Downs Notation | SKULO interval names and notation (K or S = 1) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
0 | 0.000 | 1/1 | P1 | unison | D | P1 | unison | D |
1 | 41.379 | 25/24, 33/32, 56/55, 81/80 | ^1, vm2 | up unison, downminor 2nd |
^D, vEb | S1, sm2 | comma-wide unison, super unison, subminor 2nd | KD, SD, sEb |
2 | 82.759 | 21/20 | m2 | minor 2nd | Eb | m2 | minor 2nd | Eb |
3 | 124.138 | 16/15, 15/14, 14/13, 13/12 | ^m2 | upminor 2nd | ^Eb | Km2 | classic minor 2nd | KEb |
4 | 165.517 | 12/11, 11/10, 10/9 | vM2 | downmajor 2nd | vE | kM2 | comma-narrow/classic major 2nd | kE |
5 | 206.897 | 9/8 | M2 | major 2nd | E | M2 | major 2nd | E |
6 | 248.276 | 8/7, 7/6, 15/13 | ^M2, vm3 | upmajor 2nd, downminor 3rd |
^E, vF | SM2, sm3 | supermajor 2nd, subminor 3rd | SE, sF |
·7 | 289.655 | 13/11 | m3 | minor 3rd | F | m3 | minor 3rd | F |
8 | 331.034 | 6/5, 11/9 | ^m3 | upminor 3rd | ^F | Km3 | classic minor 3rd | KF |
9 | 372.414 | 5/4, 16/13 | vM3 | downmajor 3rd | vF# | kM3 | classic major 3rd | kF# |
10 | 413.793 | 14/11 | M3 | major 3rd | F# | M3 | major 3rd | F# |
11 | 455.172 | 9/7, 13/10 | ^M3, v4 | upmajor 3rd down 4th |
^F#, vG | SM3, s4 | supermajor 3rd, sub 4th | SF#, sG |
·12 | 496.552 | 4/3 | P4 | 4th | G | P4 | perfect 4th | G |
13 | 537.931 | 11/8, 15/11 | ^4 | up 4th | ^G | K4 | comma-wide 4th | KG |
14 | 579.310 | 7/5, 18/13 | vA4, d5 | downaug 4th, dim 5th |
vG#, Ab | kA4, d5 | comma-narrow aug 4th, dim 5th | kG#, Ab |
15 | 620.690 | 10/7, 13/9 | A4, ^d5 | aug 4th, updim 5th |
G#, ^Ab | A4, Kd5 | aug 4th, comma-wide dim 5th | G#, KAb |
16 | 662.069 | 16/11, 22/15 | v5 | down 5th | vA | k5 | comm-narrow 5th | kA |
·17 | 703.448 | 3/2 | P5 | 5th | A | P5 | perfect 5th | A |
18 | 744.828 | 14/9, 20/13 | ^5, vm6 | up 5th, downminor 6th |
^A, vBb | S5, sm6 | super 5th, subminor 6th | SA, sBb |
19 | 786.207 | 11/7 | m6 | minor 6th | Bb | m6 | minor 6th | Bb |
20 | 827.586 | 8/5, 13/8 | ^m6 | upminor 6th | ^Bb | Km6 | classic minor 6th | KBb |
21 | 868.966 | 5/3, 18/11 | vM6 | downmajor 6th | vB | kM6 | classic major 6th | kB |
·22 | 910.345 | 22/13 | M6 | major 6th | B | M6 | major 6th | B |
23 | 951.724 | 7/4, 12/7, 26/15 | ^M6, vm7 | upmajor 6th, downminor 7th |
^B, vC | SM6, sm7 | supermajor 6th, subminor 7th | SB, sC |
24 | 993.103 | 16/9 | m7 | minor 7th | C | m7 | minor 7th | C |
25 | 1034.483 | 11/6, 20/11, 9/5 | ^m7 | upminor 7th | ^C | Km7 | comma-wide/classic minor 7th | KC |
26 | 1075.862 | 15/8, 28/15, 13/7, 24/13 | vM7 | downmajor 7th | vC# | kM7 | classic major 7th | kC# |
27 | 1117.241 | 40/21 | M7 | major 7th | C# | M7 | major 7th | C# |
28 | 1158.621 | 48/25, 64/33, 55/28, 160/81 | ^M7, v8 | upmajor 7th, down 8ve |
^C#, vD | SM7, s8 | supermajor 7th, comma-narrow 8ve, sub 8ve | SC#, kD, sD |
29 | 1200.000 | 2/1 | P8 | 8ve | D | P8 | 8ve | D |
Combining ups and downs notation with color notation, qualities can be loosely associated with colors:
quality | color name | monzo format | examples |
---|---|---|---|
downminor | zo | {a, b, 0, 1} | 7/6, 7/4 |
minor | fourthward wa | {a, b}, b < -1 | 32/27, 16/9 |
upminor | gu | {a, b, -1} | 6/5, 9/5 |
" | ilo | {a, b, 0, 0, 1} | 11/9, 11/6 |
downmajor | lu | {a, b, 0, 0, -1} | 12/11, 18/11 |
" | yo | {a, b, 1} | 5/4, 5/3 |
major | fifthward wa | {a, b}, b > 1 | 9/8, 27/16 |
upmajor | ru | {a, b, 0, -1} | 9/7, 12/7 |
All 29edo chords can be named using ups and downs. Alterations are always enclosed in parentheses, additions never are. An up or down immediately after the chord root affects the 3rd, 6th, 7th, and/or the 11th (every other note of a stacked-3rds chord 6-1-3-5-7-9-11-13). Here are the zo, gu, yo and ru triads:
color of the 3rd | JI chord | notes as edosteps | notes of C chord | written name | spoken name |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
zo | 6:7:9 | 0-6-17 | C vEb G | Cvm | C downminor |
gu | 10:12:15 | 0-8-17 | C ^Eb G | C^m | C upminor |
yo | 4:5:6 | 0-9-17 | C vE G | Cv | C downmajor or C down |
ru | 14:18:21 | 0-11-17 | C ^E G | C^ | C upmajor or C up |
For a more complete list, see Ups and Downs Notation #Chords and Chord Progressions.
Notation
Standard notation
29edo can be notated three different ways. Using only sharps and flats, the chromatic scale from C is:
C — B♯ — D♭ — C♯ — E𝄫 — D — C𝄪 — E♭ — D♯ — F♭ — E — G𝄫 — F — E♯ — G♭ — F♯ — A𝄫 — G — F𝄪 — A♭ — G♯ — B𝄫 — A — G𝄪 — B♭ — A♯ — C♭ — B — A𝄪 — C
Here, six pairs of enharmonic equivalents exist:
- B𝄪 = E𝄫
- E𝄪 = A𝄫
- A𝄪 = D𝄫
- D𝄪 = G𝄫
- G𝄪 = C𝄫
- C𝄪 = F𝄫
Sagittal notation
Sagittal notation is another possibility, as demonstrated by the below example:
This example in Sagittal notation shows 29-edo as a fifth-tone system. |
Ups and downs
Since a sharp raises by three steps, 29edo is a good candidate for ups and downs notation, similar to 22edo. Here, sharps and flats with arrows from Helmholtz–Ellis notation can be used:
Step Offset | 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Sharp Symbol | ||||||||
Flat Symbol |
Note that C♯ is enharmonic to D , and D♭ is enharmonic to C .
If arrows are taken to have their own layer of enharmonic spellings, then in some cases notes may be best spelled with double arrows.
Approximation to JI
Interval mappings
The following table shows how 15-odd-limit intervals are represented in 29edo. Prime harmonics are in bold.
As 29edo is consistent in the 15-odd-limit, the mappings by direct approximation and through the patent val are identical.
Interval and complement | Error (abs, ¢) | Error (rel, %) |
---|---|---|
1/1, 2/1 | 0.000 | 0.0 |
13/11, 22/13 | 0.445 | 1.1 |
11/10, 20/11 | 0.513 | 1.2 |
15/13, 26/15 | 0.535 | 1.3 |
13/10, 20/13 | 0.958 | 2.3 |
15/11, 22/15 | 0.980 | 2.4 |
3/2, 4/3 | 1.493 | 3.6 |
9/8, 16/9 | 2.987 | 7.2 |
7/5, 10/7 | 3.202 | 7.7 |
11/7, 14/11 | 3.715 | 9.0 |
13/7, 14/13 | 4.160 | 10.1 |
15/14, 28/15 | 4.695 | 11.3 |
15/8, 16/15 | 12.407 | 30.0 |
13/8, 16/13 | 12.941 | 31.3 |
11/8, 16/11 | 13.387 | 32.4 |
5/4, 8/5 | 13.900 | 33.6 |
13/12, 24/13 | 14.435 | 34.9 |
11/6, 12/11 | 14.880 | 36.0 |
5/3, 6/5 | 15.393 | 37.2 |
13/9, 18/13 | 15.928 | 38.5 |
11/9, 18/11 | 16.373 | 39.6 |
9/5, 10/9 | 16.886 | 40.8 |
7/4, 8/7 | 17.102 | 41.3 |
7/6, 12/7 | 18.595 | 44.9 |
9/7, 14/9 | 20.088 | 48.5 |
Regular temperament properties
Subgroup | Comma list | Mapping | Optimal 8ve stretch (¢) |
Tuning error | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Absolute (¢) | Relative (%) | ||||
2.3 | [46 -29⟩ | [⟨29 46]] | −0.47 | 0.47 | 1.14 |
2.3.5 | 250/243, 16875/16384 | [⟨29 46 67]] | +1.68 | 3.07 | 7.41 |
2.3.5.7 | 49/48, 225/224, 250/243 | [⟨29 46 67 81]] | +2.78 | 3.28 | 7.91 |
2.3.5.7.11 | 49/48, 55/54, 100/99, 225/224 | [⟨29 46 67 81 100]] | +3.00 | 2.97 | 7.15 |
2.3.5.7.11.13 | 49/48, 55/54, 100/99, 105/104, 225/224 | [⟨29 46 67 81 100 107]] | +3.09 | 2.71 | 6.54 |
2.3.5.7.11.13.19 | 49/48, 55/54, 65/64, 77/76, 100/99, 105/104 | [⟨29 46 67 81 100 107 123]] | +2.91 | 2.55 | 6.16 |
2.3.5.7.11.13.19.23 | 49/48, 55/54, 65/64, 70/69, 77/76, 100/99, 105/104 | [⟨29 46 67 81 100 107 123 131]] | +2.76 | 2.42 | 5.85 |
- 29et (29g val) has a lower relative error than any previous equal temperament in the 23-limit. The next equal temperament doing better in this subgroup is 46.
- 29et does well in the no-17 19-limit and no-17 23-limit, being consistent to the no-17 23-odd-limit. However, 15edo is lower in relative error in both these subgroups than 29.
Commas
29edo tempers out the following commas. This assumes the patent val ⟨29 46 67 81 100 107]. Cent values are rounded to 5 digits.
Prime limit |
Ratio[1] | Monzo | Cents | Color name | Name(s) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
3 | (28 digits) | [46 -29⟩ | 43.31 | Wa-29 | 29-comma, mystery comma |
5 | 78125/73728 | [-13 -2 7⟩ | 100.29 | Lasepyo | Wesley comma |
5 | 16875/16384 | [-14 3 4⟩ | 51.12 | Laquadyo | Negri comma, double augmentation diesis |
5 | 250/243 | [1 -5 3⟩ | 49.17 | Triyo | Porcupine comma, maximal diesis |
5 | (14 digits) | [16 -13 2⟩ | 47.21 | Sasa-yoyo | Immunity comma |
5 | 32805/32768 | [-15 8 1⟩ | 1.95 | Layo | Schisma |
7 | 525/512 | [-9 1 2 1⟩ | 43.41 | Lazoyoyo | Avicennma, Avicenna's enharmonic diesis |
7 | 49/48 | [-4 -1 0 2⟩ | 35.70 | Zozo | Semaphoresma, slendro diesis |
7 | 686/675 | [1 -3 -2 3⟩ | 27.99 | Trizo-agugu | Senga |
7 | 64827/64000 | [-9 3 -3 4⟩ | 22.23 | Laquadzo-atrigu | Squalentine comma |
7 | 3125/3087 | [0 -2 5 -3⟩ | 21.18 | Triru-aquinyo | Gariboh comma |
7 | 50421/50000 | [-4 1 -5 5⟩ | 14.52 | Quinzogu | Trimyna comma |
7 | 4000/3969 | [5 -4 3 -2⟩ | 13.47 | Rurutriyo | Octagar comma |
7 | 225/224 | [-5 2 2 -1⟩ | 7.71 | Ruyoyo | Marvel comma, septimal kleisma |
7 | 5120/5103 | [10 -6 1 -1⟩ | 5.76 | Saruyo | Hemifamity comma |
7 | (16 digits) | [25 -14 0 -1⟩ | 3.80 | Sasaru | Garischisma |
11 | 55/54 | [-1 -3 1 0 1⟩ | 31.77 | Loyo | Telepathma |
11 | 100/99 | [2 -2 2 0 -1⟩ | 17.40 | Luyoyo | Ptolemisma |
11 | 121/120 | [-3 -1 -1 0 2⟩ | 14.37 | Lologu | Biyatisma |
11 | 896/891 | [7 -4 0 1 -1⟩ | 9.69 | Saluzo | Pentacircle comma |
11 | 441/440 | [-3 2 -1 2 -1⟩ | 3.93 | Luzozogu | Werckisma |
11 | 4000/3993 | [5 -1 3 0 -3⟩ | 3.03 | Trithuyo | Wizardharry comma |
13 | 65/64 | [-6 0 1 0 0 1⟩ | 26.84 | Thoyo | Wilsorma |
13 | 91/90 | [-1 -2 -1 1 0 1⟩ | 19.13 | Thozogu | Superleap comma, biome comma |
13 | 105/104 | [-3 1 1 1 0 -1⟩ | 16.57 | Thuzoyo | Animist comma |
13 | 275/273 | [0 -1 2 -1 1 -1⟩ | 12.64 | Thuloruyoyo | Gassorma |
13 | 352/351 | [5 -3 0 0 1 -1⟩ | 4.93 | Thulo | Minor minthma |
- ↑ Ratios longer than 10 digits are presented by placeholders with informative hints
Rank-2 temperaments
Periods per 8ve |
Generator* | Cents* | Associated ratio* |
Temperament |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 2\29 | 82.8 | 21/20 | Nautilus |
1 | 3\29 | 124.1 | 14/13 | Negri / negril / negroni |
1 | 4\29 | 165.5 | 11/10 | Porky / coendou |
1 | 5\29 | 206.9 | 9/8 | Baldy |
1 | 6\29 | 248.3 | 15/13 | Immunity / immune Hemigari |
1 | 7\29 | 289.7 | 13/11 | Gariberttet |
1 | 8\29 | 331.034 | 23/19 | Rarity |
1 | 9\29 | 372.4 | 5/4 | Sephiroth |
1 | 10\29 | 413.8 | 9/7 | Roman |
1 | 11\29 | 455.2 | 13/10 | Ammonite |
1 | 12\29 | 496.6 | 4/3 | Garibaldi / andromeda Leapday |
1 | 13\29 | 537.9 | 15/11 | Wilsec |
1 | 14\29 | 579.3 | 7/5 | Tritonic |
* octave-reduced form, reduced to the first half-octave
The Tetradecatonic System
A variant of porcupine supported in 29edo is nautilus, which splits the porcupine generator in half (tempering out 49:48 in the process), thus resulting in a different mapping for 7 than standard porcupine. Nautilus also extends to the 13-limit much more easily than does standard porcupine.
The mos Nautilus[14] contains both "even" tetrads (approximating 4:5:6:7 or its inverse) as well as "odd" tetrads (approximating the "Bohlen-Pierce-like" chord 9:11:13:15, or its inverse). Both types are recognizable and consonant, if somewhat heavily tempered. Moreover, one of the four types of tetrads may be built on each scale degree of Nautilus[14], thus there are as many chords as there are notes, so Nautilus[14] has a "circulating" quality to it with as much freedom of modulation as possible. To be exact, there are 4 "major-even", 4 "minor-even", 3 "major-odd", and 3 "minor-odd" chords.
Nautilus[14] scale (Lsssssssssssss) in 29edo
14-note mosses are worth looking at because taking every other note of them gives a heptatonic, and in many cases diatonic-like, scale. Nautilus[14] is no exception; although the resulting porcupine "diatonic" scale sounds somewhat different from diatonic scales generated from fifths, it can still provide some degree of familiarity. Furthermore, every diatonic chord progression will have at least one loose analogue in Nautilus[14], although the chord types might change (for instance, it is possible to have a I–IV–V chord progression where the I is major-odd, and the IV and V are both major-even; the V in this case being on a narrow or "odd" fifth rather than a perfect or "even" fifth).
The fact that the generator size is also a step size means that nautilus makes a good candidate for a generalized keyboard; the fingering of Nautilus[14] becomes very simple as a result, perhaps even simpler than with traditional keyboards, despite there being more notes.
If one can tolerate the tuning error (which is roughly equal to that of 12edo, albeit in the opposite direction for the 5- and 7-limits), this tetradecatonic scale is worth exploring. 29edo is often neglected since it falls so close to the much more popular and well-studied 31edo, but 29 does have its own advantages, and this is one of them.
Nicetone
29edo is not a meantone system, but it could nonetheless be used as a basis for common-practice music if one considers the superfourth as a consonant, alternative type of fourth, and the 11:13:16 as an alternative type of consonant "doubly minor" triad. We can then use a diatonic scale such as 5435453 (which resembles Didymus' 5-limit JI diatonic scale, but with the syntonic comma being exaggerated in size). This scale has a very similar harmonic structure to a meantone diatonic scale, except that one of its minor triads is doubly-minor.
Such a scale could be called "Nicetone" as a play on meantone. Since it preserves most of the same 5-limit relationships, nicetone is only slightly xenharmonic (in contrast to superpyth, which is quite blatantly so). The fact that 29edo's superfourth is within a cent of 15:11, and its 13:11 is within half a cent of a just 13:11, are both happy accidents. One just has to make sure that one is using a timbre that allows these higher-limit harmonic relationships to sound apparent and consonant enough to substitute for their simpler counterparts. The nicetone scale is also the cradle of the superdiatonic scales 522352253 and 3243324323 in between the leapfrog diatonic and chromatic scales.
Nicetone scale 5435453 and cadence in 29edo
Scales
MOS scales
Important MOSes include:
- Leapfrog diatonic 5L 2s 5552552 (17\29, 1\1)
- Leapfrog chromatic 5L 7s 3232323223232322 (17\29, 1\1)
- Leapfrog hyperchromatic 12L 5s 21221221221222122122122 (17\29, 1\1)
- Porcupine 1L 6s 4444445 (4\29, 1\1)
- Porcupine 7L 1s 44444441 (4\29, 1\1)
- Porcupine 7L 8s 313131313131311 (4\29, 1\1)
- Porcupine 7L 15s 2112112112112112112111 (4\29, 1\1)
- Negri 1L 8s 333333335 (3\29, 1\1)
- Negri 9L 1s 3333333332 (3\29, 1\1)
- Negri 10L 9s 2212121212121212121 (3\29 1\1)
- Semaphore 4L 1s 56666 (6\29, 1\1)
- Semaphore 5L 4s 551515151 (6\29, 1\1)
- Semaphore 5L 9s 41411411411411 (6\29, 1\1)
- Semaphore 5L 14s 3113111311131113111 (6\29, 1\1)
- Pathological semaphore 5L 19s 211121111211112111121111 (6\29, 1\1)
- Nautilus 1L 13s 22222222222223 (2\29, 1\1)
- Nautilus 14L 1s 222222222222221 (2\29, 1\1)
Well temperaments
Approximations of 12edo scales
- Akebono I: 5 2 10 5 7
- Blues Aeolian Hexatonic: 7 5 3 2 2 10
- Blues Aeolian Pentatonic I: 7 5 5 2 10
- Blues Aeolian Pentatonic II: 7 10 2 5 5
- Blues Dorian Hexatonic: 7 5 5 5 2 6
- Blues Dorian Pentatonic: 7 10 5 2 5
- Blues Dorian Septatonic: 7 5 3 2 5 2 5
- Blues Pentachordal: 5 2 5 3 2 12
- Dominant Pentatonic: 5 5 7 7 5
- Dorian: 5 2 5 5 5 2 5
- Double Harmonic: 2 8 2 5 2 8 2
- Hirajoshi: 5 2 10 2 10
- Locrian (modified): 2 5 5 3 4 5 5
- Lydian: 5 5 5 2 5 5 2
- Major: 5 5 2 5 5 5 2
- Minor: 5 2 5 5 2 5 5
- Minor Harmonic: 5 2 5 5 2 8 2
- Minor Hexatonic: 5 2 5 5 7 5
- Minor Melodic: 5 2 5 5 5 5 2
- Minor Pentatonic: 7 5 5 7 5
- Mixolydian: 5 5 2 5 5 2 5
- Mixolydian Pentatonic: 10 2 5 7 5
- Phrygian: 2 5 5 5 2 5 5
- Phrygian Dominant: 2 8 2 5 2 5 5
- Phrygian Dominant Hexatonic: 2 8 2 5 7 5
- Phrygian Dominant Pentatonic: 10 2 5 2 10
- Phrygian Pentatonic: 2 5 10 2 10
- Picardy Pentatonic: 5 5 5 2 10
Other notable scales
- Bridgetown9
- Bridgetown14
- Escala Tonal de 17 tonos - Charles Loli
- 5-limit / Pinetone major pentatonic: 5 4 8 4 8
- 5-limit / Pinetone minor pentatonic: 8 4 5 8 4
- Palace (subset of Porky[22]): 4 3 5 5 4 3 5
- Marvel augmented hexatonic (subset of Negri[9]): 6 3 8 3 6 3
- Marvel double harmonic hexatonic (subset of Negri[9]): 3 6 3 8 6 3, 3 6 8 3 6 3
- Marvel double harmonic major (subset of Negri[9]): 3 6 3 5 3 6 3
- Nicetone, Zarlino/Ptolemy, "JI" major: 5 4 3 5 4 5 3
- Nicetone, inverse of Zarlino/Ptolemy, "JI" minor: 5 3 4 5 3 5 4
- 5-limit melodic minor: 5 3 4 5 4 5 3
- 5-limit harmonic minor: 5 3 4 5 3 6 3
- 5-limit harmonic major (inverse of 5-limit harmonic major): 5 4 3 5 3 6 3
- tetrachordal 5-limit major: 5 4 3 5 5 4 3
- tetrachordal 5-limit minor (inverse of tetrachordal 5-limit major): 5 3 4 5 5 3 4
- chromatic tetrachord octave species: 2 8 2 5 2 8 2, 8 2 2 5 8 2 2, 2 2 8 5 2 2 8
- Blackdye / syntonic dipentatonic: 1 4 3 4 1 4 3 4 1 4
- Blackville / Marvel dipentatonic: 2 3 4 3 2 3 4 3 2 3]
Instruments
Guitar 29EDO from Peru - Charles Loli and Antonio Huamani
Bass 29EDO from Peru - Charles Loli and Antonio Huamani
External image: https://fbcdn-sphotos-c-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-prn1/r90/550502_538613626155939_2005925977_n.jpg
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Music
Modern renderings
- "Contrapunctus 4" from The Art of Fugue, BWV 1080 (1742–1749) – rendered by Claudi Meneghin (2024)
- "Contrapunctus 11" from The Art of Fugue, BWV 1080 (1742–1749) – rendered by Claudi Meneghin (2024)
- Prelude in E Minor "The Great" – rendered by Claudi Meneghin (2023)
- Prelude in E Minor "The Little" – rendered by Claudi Meneghin (2024)
21st century
- Charles Loli A. (site [dead link])
- Toy Shoppe (2024)
- Minnow (2024)
- Glass Animals - Life Itself (2023)
- microtonal improvisation in 29edo (2023)
- Gen 28: Musicbox (2024)
- Glaukos Circuit (2019) – chiptune
- Submerged (2024)
- Edolian - Chamber (2020)
- The Crowning Song [dead link]
- Nine Days Later [dead link]
- Stranded at Sea [dead link]
- 29 EDO Fugue in Negri 9 Lssssssss "Austro-Hungarian Minor"
- Fugue for 29EDO Piano in Porcupine 7 ssLssss "Zebrian"
- "Nodal Plane" from Micro Biological (2019) – Spotify | Bandcamp | YouTube – in part, the other part being in 22edo
- "Microclusters" from Microtonal Allsorts (2023) – Spotify | Bandcamp | YouTube