MisterShafXen’s 29edo notation
Here’s how I notate 29edo:
A At A#/Bb Bd B Bt B#/Cb Cd C Ct C#/Db Dd D Dt D#/Eb Ed E Et E#/Fb Fd F Ft F#/Gb Gd G Gt G# Ab Ad (A)
An A major chord (EDO steps 0 9 17 for any major chord) would be spelled A Ct Et, and would be called A major (M5), or A for short.
A C# major chord would be spelled C# Fd Ab, and should logically be called C#6sus(db4). However, a Db major chord would make more sense, as it is stacked in 3rds (Db-Fd, Fd-Ab).
An A minor chord (EDO steps 0 8 17 for any minor chord) would be spelled A C Et, and would be called A perfect (M5), or A perf for short.
The subminor chord, 0 6 17, can be spelled (on A) as A Cb Et, and can be called Am(M5), or Am for short.
Other chords
A perfect (A C E, 0 8 16): Kinda sounds diminished, but the 5th is closer to 700 cents than 600.
V • T • EMusical notation | |
---|---|
Universal | Sagittal notation |
Just intonation | Functional Just System • Ben Johnston's notation (Johnston–Copper notation) • Helmholtz–Ellis notation • Color notation |
MOS scales | Diamond-mos notation |
Temperaments | Circle-of-fifths notation • Ups and downs notation (alternative symbols) • Syntonic–rastmic subchroma notation • Extended meantone notation • Fractional sharp notation |
See musical notation for a longer list of systems by category. See Category:Notation for the most complete, comprehensive list, but not sorted by category. |