Enharmonic unisons in ups and downs notation

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In any temperament, including any edo, any note or interval can be respelled by adding or subtracting an enharmonic unison, or EU for short. Often there are multiple possible EUs. This article presents the canonical EUs of edos and rank-2 temperaments for ups and downs notation.

EDOs

Overview

Sharp-1 edos, flat-1 edos and 7edo have only one EU. All others have an infinite number of EUs, but only two canonical EUs, which can be combined in various ways to create all the others. The canonical EUs are chosen to be easy to memorize and use. There are a few edos for which a third EU is sometimes useful.

The two canonical EUs are generally the A1 (aug unison) and the d2 (dim 2nd), upped or downed. The number of ups equals the negative sharpness and the positive dodeca-sharpness of the edo respectively. For example, 31edo's EUs are vvA1 and vd2. Some edos also use the downminor 2nd or the dudminor 2nd.

Adding an A1 to a note adds a sharp. So another name for 31edo's dudaug1 is dudsharp. Adding a dudsharp to an interval augments it and lowers it by 2 arrows.

Adding or subtracting a diminished 2nd sounds difficult, but it's what we routinely do when respelling notes in 12edo. For example, what's another name for G♯? Did you have to think very hard to get the answer, A♭? Adding a d2 is that easy!

To add a d2, respell the note as its 12edo equivalent one degree higher. To subtract a d2, respell as one degree lower. Intervals are a little trickier. For diminished intervals, think of the interval as if from B. For augmented intervals, use F. For example, what's a diminished 4th? A perfect 4th from B is E, so a dim 4th must be E♭. And E♭ is also D♯. And B–D♯ is a major 3rd. So d4 = M3.

To simplify a note name or an interval name, first add/subtract the dim2 to reduce sharps/flats and augs/dims, and perhaps to arrive at the desired degree. Then add/subtract the sharp to reduce arrows.

For example, the sum of two upmajor 3rds is a dup-aug 5th. If we're in 41edo, how can we respell that? 41edo's EUs are updim2 and quudsharp. ^^A5 + ^d2 = ^3m6, and ^3m6 + v4A1 = vM6.

19edo's EU is a doubly-diminished 2nd. To add it, add the d2, then flatten. For example, C♯ becomes D♭, which flattens to D𝄫. For intervals, diminish: the aug 4th becomes the dim 5th, which diminishes to the double-dim 5th.

A survey of various edos by category and sharpness

Diatonic edos (except for sharp-1 edos) use the dim2 and the sharp:

  • 12edo has the dim2 (C♯ = D♭, A1 = m2)
  • 17edo has the dudsharp (C = vvC♯, ^1 = vA1) and the updim2 (C♯ = ^D♭)
  • 22edo has the trudsharp (C = vvvC♯) and the dupdim2 (C♯ = ^^D♭) and perhaps the downminor2 (C = vD♭)
  • 24edo has the dudsharp and the dim2
  • 31edo has the dudsharp and the downdim2
  • 41edo has the quudsharp and the updim2

Sharp-1 edos don't use ups or downs, so they have only one EI. Those other than 12edo don't use the dim2:

  • 12edo has the dim2 (C♯ = Db)
  • 19edo has the double-dim2 (C♯ = D𝄫)
  • 26edo has the triple-dim2 (C𝄪 = D𝄫)

Pentatonic edos use the sharp and the minor2.

  • 5edo has the minor2 (C = D♭)
  • 10edo has the dudsharp (C = vvC♯, ^1 = vA1) and the minor2
  • 15edo has the trudsharp (C = vvvC♯, ^^1 = vA1) and the minor2

Sharp-0 edos (perfect edos) use the sharp and the perfect 2nd.

  • 7edo has the sharp (C = C♯, P1 = A1)
  • 14edo has the sharp and the dud2 (C = vvD, ^1 = v2)
  • 21edo has the sharp and the trud2 (C = vvvD, ^1 = vv2)

Superflat edos can be notated two ways. Melodic notation has major wider than minor, and sharp raises the pitch, as usual. Harmonic notation has major narrower than minor and sharp lowers the pitch. Melodic notation makes interval arithmetic very difficult, so it's not recommended. For harmonic notation, the three flat-1 edos use aug2 not dim2.

  • 9edo has the aug2 (C♭ = D, d1 = M2)
  • 16edo has the double-aug2 (C♭ = D♯, d1 = A2)
  • 23edo has the triple-aug2 (C♭ = D𝄪, d1 = AA2)

Flat-2 edos use dup-sharp and major2:

  • 11edo has the dupsharp (C = ^^C♯) and the downmajor2 (C = vD)
  • 18b-edo has the dupsharp (C = ^^C♯) and the dudmajor2 (C = vvD)

Very large eos use quip and quid (> and <) for quintuple arrows.

  • 159edo has triplequidsharp and trupdim2

Canonical EUs for edos 5-55

EDO Written Spoken 3rd EU
5 m2 minor2
6 (12edo subset notation)
7 A1 sharp
8 (24edo subset notation)
9 A2 aug2
10 vvA1 m2 dudsharp minor2
11 ^^A1 vM2 dupsharp downmajor2
12 d2 dim2
13b ^3A1 vM2 trupsharp downmajor2
14 A1 vv2 sharp dud2
15 v3A1 m2 trudsharp minor2
16 AA2 dubaug2
17 vvA1 ^d2 dudsharp updim2
18b ^^A1 vvM2 dupsharp dudmajor2
19 dd2 dubdim2
20 v4A1 m2 quudsharp minor2
21 A1 v32 sharp trud2
22 v3A1 ^^d2 trudsharp dupdim2 vm2 downminor2
23 A32 tripaug2
24 vvA1 d2 dudsharp dim2
25 <A1 m2 quidsharp minor2
26 d32 tripdim2
27 v4A1 ^3d2 quudsharp trupdim2 vm2 downminor2
28 A1 v42 sharp quud2
29 v3A1 ^d2 trudsharp updim2
30 v<A1 m2 downquidsharp minor2
31 vvA1 vd2 dudsharp downdim2
32 <A1 ^4d2 quidsharp quupdim2 vm2 downminor2
33 d42 quaddim2
34 v4A1 ^^d2 quudsharp dupdim2 vvm2 dudminor2
35 A1 <2 sharp quid2
36 v3A1 d2 trudsharp dim2
37 v<A1 >d2 downquidsharp quipdim2 vm2 downminor2
38 vvA1 vvd2 dudsharp duddim2
39 <A1 ^3d2 quidsharp trupdim2 vvm2 dudminor2
40 d52 quindim2
41 v4A1 ^d2 quudsharp updim2
42 vv<A1 ^>d2 dudquidsharp upquipdim2 vm2 downminor2
43 v3A1 vd2 trudsharp downdim2
44 v<A1 ^4d2 downquidsharp quupdim2 vvm2 dudminor2
45 vvA1 v3d2 dudsharp truddim2
46 <A1 ^^d2 quidsharp dupdim2
47 d62
48 v4A1 d2 quudsharp dim2
49 vv<A1 >d2 dudquidsharp quipdim2 vvm2 dudminor2
50 v3A1 vvd2 trudsharp duddim2
51 v<A1 ^3d2 downquidsharp trupdim2
52 vvA1 v4d2 dudsharp quuddim2
53 <A1 ^d2 quidsharp updim2
54 v3<A1 ^>d2 trudquidsharp upquipdim2 vvm2 dudminor2
55 v4A1 vd2 quudsharp downdim2

Pergens

Overview

While most edos have two EUs, single-pair pergen notations have just one.

Some EUs are "tippy", meaning their direction can reverse depending on the tuning. Any EU that uses the dim 2nd is tippy. For example, (P8/2, P5) has ^^d2 if P5 > 700¢, but vvd2 if P5 < 700¢.

Some pergens use slashes (lifts and drops) as well as arrows, and thus have two EUs. Some pergens don't need slashes, but add them anyway, for flexibility of interval naming and chord naming.

Some pergens have multiple notations, each with its own set of EUs.

Canonical EUs for various pergens

Pergen Written Spoken
(P8, P5) (none)
(P8/2, P5) ^^d2 dupdim2
(P8, P4/2) vvm2 dudminor2
(P8, P5/2) vvA1 dudsharp
(P8/3, P5) ^3d2 trupdim2
(P8, P4/3) v3A1 trudsharp
(P8, P5/3) v3m2 trudminor2
(P8, P11/3) ^3dd2 trupdubdim2
" v3M2 trudmajor2
(P8/4, P5) v4d2 quuddim2
(P8, P4/4) ^4dd2 quupdubdim2
(P8, P5/4) v4A1 quudsharp
(P8, P11/4) (double-pair notation)
(P8, P12/4) v4m2 quudminor2
(P8/5, P5) <m2 quidminor2
(P8, P4/5) >d2 quipdim2
(P8, P5/5) <A2 quidaug2
(P8, P11/5) <A1 quidsharp
(P8, P12/5) >dd2 quipdubdim2
(P8, ccP4/5) <M2 quidmajor2