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12 equal temperament

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Equal temperament system in music
12-tone equal temperament chromatic scale on C, one full octave ascending, notated only with sharps.Play ascending and descending

12 equal temperament (12-ET)[a] is the musical system that divides theoctave into 12 parts, all of which areequally tempered (equally spaced) on alogarithmic scale, with a ratio equal to the12th root of 2 (212{\textstyle {\sqrt[{12}]{2}}} ≈ 1.05946). That resulting smallest interval,112 the width of an octave, is called asemitone or half step.

Twelve-tone equal temperament is the most widespread system in music today. It has been the predominant tuning system of Western music, starting withclassical music, since the 18th century, and Europe almost exclusively used approximations of it for millennia before that.[citation needed] It has also been used in other cultures.

In modern times, 12-ET is usually tuned relative to astandard pitch of 440 Hz, calledA440, meaning one note,A4 (the A in the 4th octave of a typical 88-keypiano), is tuned to 440hertz and all other notes are defined as some multiple of semitones apart from it, either higher or lower infrequency. The standard pitch has not always been 440 Hz. It has varied and generally risen over the past few hundred years.[1]

History

[edit]

The two figures frequently credited with the achievement of exact calculation of twelve-tone equal temperament areZhu Zaiyu (also romanized as Chu-Tsaiyu. Chinese:朱載堉) in 1584 andSimon Stevin in 1585. According to Fritz A. Kuttner, a critic of the theory,[2] it is known that "Chu-Tsaiyu presented a highly precise, simple and ingenious method for arithmetic calculation of equal temperament mono-chords in 1584" and that "Simon Stevin offered a mathematical definition of equal temperament plus a somewhat less precise computation of the corresponding numerical values in 1585 or later." The developments occurred independently.[3]

Kenneth Robinson attributes the invention of equal temperament to Zhu Zaiyu[4] and provides textual quotations as evidence.[5] Zhu Zaiyu is quoted as saying that, in a text dating from 1584, "I have founded a new system. I establish one foot as the number from which the others are to be extracted, and using proportions I extract them. Altogether one has to find the exact figures for the pitch-pipers in twelve operations."[5] Kuttner disagrees and remarks that his claim "cannot be considered correct without major qualifications."[2] Kuttner proposes that neither Zhu Zaiyu or Simon Stevin achieved equal temperament and that neither of the two should be treated as inventors.[3]

China

[edit]

Early history

[edit]

A complete set of bronze chime bells, among many musical instruments found in the tomb of the Marquis Yi of Zeng (early Warring States,c. 5th century BCE in the Chinese Bronze Age), covers five full 7-note octaves in the key of C Major, including 12 note semi-tones in the middle of the range.[6]

An approximation for equal temperament was described byHe Chengtian [zh], a mathematician of theSouthern and Northern Dynasties who lived from 370 to 447.[7] He came out with the earliest recorded approximate numerical sequence in relation to equal temperament in history: 900 849 802 758 715 677 638 601 570 536 509.5 479 450.[8]

Zhu Zaiyu

[edit]
Prince Zhu Zaiyu constructed 12 string equal temperament tuning instrument, front and back view

Zhu Zaiyu (朱載堉), a prince of theMing court, spent thirty years on research based on the equal temperament idea originally postulated by his father. He described his new pitch theory in hisFusion of Music and Calendar律暦融通 published in 1580. This was followed by the publication of a detailed account of the new theory of the equal temperament with a precise numerical specification for 12-ET in his 5,000-page workComplete Compendium of Music and Pitch (Yuelü quan shu樂律全書) in 1584.[9] An extended account is also given by Joseph Needham.[5] Zhu obtained his result mathematically by dividing the length of string and pipe successively by122 ≈ 1.059463, and for pipe length by242,[10] such that after twelve divisions (an octave) the length was divided by a factor of 2:

(212)12=2{\displaystyle \left({\sqrt[{12}]{2}}\right)^{12}=2}

Similarly, after 84 divisions (7 octaves) the length was divided by a factor of 128:

(212)84=27=128{\displaystyle \left({\sqrt[{12}]{2}}\right)^{84}=2^{7}=128}

Zhu Zaiyu has been credited as the first person to solve the equal temperament problem mathematically.[11] At least one researcher has proposed thatMatteo Ricci, aJesuit in China recorded this work in his personal journal[11][12] and may have transmitted the work back to Europe. (Standard resources on the topic make no mention of any such transfer.[13]) In 1620, Zhu's work was referenced by a European mathematician.[who?][12]Murray Barbour said, "The first known appearance in print of the correct figures for equal temperament was in China, where Prince Tsaiyü's brilliant solution remains an enigma."[14] The 19th-century German physicistHermann von Helmholtz wrote inOn the Sensations of Tone that a Chinese prince (see below) introduced a scale of seven notes, and that the division of the octave into twelve semitones was discovered in China.[15]

Zhu Zaiyu's equal temperament pitch pipes

Zhu Zaiyu illustrated his equal temperament theory by the construction of a set of 36 bamboo tuning pipes ranging in 3 octaves, with instructions of the type of bamboo, color of paint, and detailed specification on their length and inner and outer diameters. He also constructed a 12-string tuning instrument, with a set of tuning pitch pipes hidden inside its bottom cavity. In 1890,Victor-Charles Mahillon, curator of the Conservatoire museum in Brussels, duplicated a set of pitch pipes according to Zhu Zaiyu's specification. He said that the Chinese theory of tones knew more about the length of pitch pipes than its Western counterpart, and that the set of pipes duplicated according to the Zaiyu data proved the accuracy of this theory.

Europe

[edit]
Simon Stevin'sVan de Spiegheling der singconstc. 1605

Early history

[edit]

One of the earliest discussions of equal temperament occurs in the writing ofAristoxenus in the 4th century BC.[16]

Vincenzo Galilei (father ofGalileo Galilei) was one of the first practical advocates of twelve-tone equal temperament. He composed a set of dance suites on each of the 12 notes of the chromatic scale in all the "transposition keys", and published also, in his 1584 "Fronimo", 24 + 1ricercars.[17] He used the 18:17 ratio for fretting the lute (although some adjustment was necessary for pure octaves).[18]

Galilei's countryman and fellowlutenistGiacomo Gorzanis had written music based on equal temperament by 1567.[19] Gorzanis was not the only lutenist to explore all modes or keys:Francesco Spinacino wrote a"Recercare de tutti li Toni" (Ricercar in all the Tones) as early as 1507.[20] In the 17th century lutenist-composerJohn Wilson wrote a set of 30 preludes including 24 in all the major/minor keys.[21][22]Henricus Grammateus drew a close approximation to equal temperament in 1518. The first tuning rules in equal temperament were given byGiovani Maria Lanfranco in his "Scintille de musica".[23]Zarlino in hispolemic with Galilei initially opposed equal temperament but eventually conceded to it in relation to thelute in hisSopplimenti musicali in 1588.

Simon Stevin

[edit]

The first mention of equal temperament related to thetwelfth root of two in the West appeared inSimon Stevin's manuscriptVan De Spiegheling der singconst (c. 1605), published posthumously nearly three centuries later in 1884.[24] However, due to insufficient accuracy of his calculation, many of the chord length numbers he obtained were off by one or two units from the correct values.[13] As a result, the frequency ratios of Simon Stevin's chords has no unified ratio, but one ratio per tone, which is claimed by Gene Cho as incorrect.[25]

The following were Simon Stevin's chord length fromVan de Spiegheling der singconst:[26]

ToneChord 10000 from Simon StevinRatioCorrected chord
semitone94381.05954659438.7
whole tone89091.0593781
tone and a half84041.06009048409
ditone79361.05947587937
ditone and a half74911.05940467491.5
tritone70711.05939757071.1
tritone and a half66741.05948456674.2
four-tone62981.05970146299
four-tone and a half59441.05955585946
five-tone56111.05934775612.3
five-tone and a half52961.05947885297.2
full tone1.0592000

A generation later, French mathematicianMarin Mersenne presented several equal temperedchord lengths obtained by Jean Beaugrand, Ismael Bouillaud, and Jean Galle.[27]

In 1630Johann Faulhaber published a 100-cent monochord table, which contained several errors due to his use of logarithmic tables. He did not explain how he obtained his results.[28]

Baroque era

[edit]

From 1450 to about 1800, plucked instrument players (lutenists and guitarists) generally favored equal temperament,[29] and the Brossard lute manuscript compiled in the last quarter of the 17th century contains a series of 18 preludes attributed toBocquet written in all keys, including the last prelude, entitledPrélude sur tous les tons, which enharmonically modulates through all keys.[30][clarification needed]Angelo Michele Bartolotti published a series ofpassacaglias in all keys, with connecting enharmonically modulating passages. Among the 17th-century keyboard composersGirolamo Frescobaldi advocated equal temperament. Some theorists, such asGiuseppe Tartini, were opposed to the adoption of equal temperament; they felt that degrading the purity of each chord degraded the aesthetic appeal of music, althoughAndreas Werckmeister emphatically advocated equal temperament in his 1707 treatise published posthumously.[31]

Twelve-tone equal temperament took hold for a variety of reasons. It was a convenient fit for the existing keyboard design, and permitted total harmonic freedom with the burden of moderate impurity in every interval, particularly imperfect consonances. This allowed greater expression throughenharmonic modulation, which became extremely important in the 18th century in music of such composers asFrancesco Geminiani,Wilhelm Friedemann Bach,Carl Philipp Emmanuel Bach, andJohann Gottfried Müthel.[citation needed] Twelve-tone equal temperament did have some disadvantages, such as imperfect thirds, but as Europe switched to equal temperament, it changed the music that it wrote in order to accommodate the system and minimize dissonance.[b]

The progress of equal temperament from the mid-18th century on is described with detail in quite a few modern scholarly publications: It was already the temperament of choice during the Classical era (second half of the 18th century),[citation needed] and it became standard during the Early Romantic era (first decade of the 19th century),[citation needed] except for organs that switched to it more gradually, completing only in the second decade of the 19th century. (In England, some cathedral organists and choirmasters held out against it even after that date;Samuel Sebastian Wesley, for instance, opposed it all along. He died in 1876.)[citation needed]

A precise equal temperament is possible using the 17th century Sabbatini method of splitting the octave first into three tempered major thirds.[32] This was also proposed by several writers during the Classical era. Tuning without beat rates but employing several checks, achieving virtually modern accuracy, was already done in the first decades of the 19th century.[33] Using beat rates, first proposed in 1749, became common after their diffusion by Helmholtz and Ellis in the second half of the 19th century.[34] The ultimate precision was available with 2 decimal tables published by White in 1917.[35]

It is in the environment of equal temperament that the new styles of symmetrical tonality andpolytonality,atonal music such as that written with thetwelve tone technique orserialism, andjazz (at least its piano component) developed and flourished.

Comparison of historical approximations of the semitone

[edit]
YearNameRatio[36]Cents
400He Chengtian1.060070671101.0
1580Vincenzo Galilei18:17 [1.058823529]99.0
1581Zhu Zaiyu1.059463094100.0
1585Simon Stevin1.059546514100.1
1630Marin Mersenne1.05932203499.8
1630Johann Faulhaber1.059490385100.0

Mathematical properties

[edit]
One octave of 12-ET on a monochord

In twelve-tone equal temperament, which divides the octave into 12 equal parts, the width of asemitone, i.e. thefrequency ratio of the interval between two adjacent notes, is thetwelfth root of two:

212=21121.059463{\displaystyle {\sqrt[{12}]{2}}=2^{\frac {1}{12}}\approx 1.059463}

This interval is divided into 100cents.

Calculating absolute frequencies

[edit]
See also:Piano key frequencies

To find the frequency,Pn, of a note in 12-ET, the following definition may be used:

Pn=Pa(212)(na){\displaystyle P_{n}=P_{a}\left({\sqrt[{12}]{2}}\right)^{(n-a)}}

In this formulaPn refers to the pitch, or frequency (usually inhertz), you are trying to find.Pa refers to the frequency of a reference pitch.n anda refer to numbers assigned to the desired pitch and the reference pitch, respectively. These two numbers are from a list of consecutive integers assigned to consecutive semitones. For example, A4 (the reference pitch) is the 49th key from the left end of a piano (tuned to440 Hz), and C4 (middle C), and F#4 are the 40th and 46th key respectively. These numbers can be used to find the frequency of C4 and F#4:

P40=440(212)(4049)261.626 HzP46=440(212)(4649)369.994 Hz{\displaystyle {\begin{alignedat}{3}P_{40}&=440\left({\sqrt[{12}]{2}}\right)^{(40-49)}&&\approx 261.626\ \mathrm {Hz} \\P_{46}&=440\left({\sqrt[{12}]{2}}\right)^{(46-49)}&&\approx 369.994\ \mathrm {Hz} \end{alignedat}}}

Just intervals

[edit]
5-Limit just intervals approximated in 12-ET

The intervals of 12-ET closely approximate some intervals injust intonation.[37]

By limit

[edit]

12 ET is very accurate in the 3 limit, but as one increases prime limits to 11, it gradually gets worse by about a sixth of a semitone each time. Its eleventh and thirteenth harmonics are extremely inaccurate. 12 ET's seventeenth and nineteenth harmonics are almost as accurate as its third harmonic, but by this point, the prime limit has gotten too high to sound consonant to most people.[citation needed]

3 limit

[edit]
See also:Pythagorean tuning

12 ET has a very good approximation of the perfect fifth( 3 /2) and itsinversion, the perfect fourth( 4 /3), especially for the division of the octave into a relatively small number of tones. Specifically, a just perfect fifth is only one fifty-first of a semitone sharper than the equally-tempered approximation. Because the major tone( 9 /8) is simply two perfect fifths minus an octave, and its inversion, the Pythagorean minor seventh( 16 /9), is simply two perfect fourths combined, they, for the most part, retain the accuracy of their predecessors; the error is doubled, but it remains small – so small, in fact, that humans cannot perceive it. One can continue to use fractions with higher powers of three, the next two being 27 /16 and 32 /27, but as the terms of the fractions grow larger, they become less pleasing to the ear.[citation needed]

5 limit

[edit]
See also:Five-limit tuning

12 ET's approximation of the fifth harmonic ( 5 /4) is approximately one-seventh of a semitone off. Because intervals that are less than a quarter of a scale step off still sound in tune, other five-limit intervals in 12 ET, such as 5 /3 and 8 /5, have similarly sized errors. Themajor triad, therefore, sounds in tune as its frequency ratio is approximately 4:5:6, further, merged with its first inversion, and two sub-octave tonics, it is 1:2:3:4:5:6, all six lowest natural harmonics of the bass tone.[citation needed]

7 limit

[edit]
See also:7-limit tuning

12 ET's approximation of the seventh harmonic ( 7 /4) is about one-third of a semitone off. Because the error is greater than a quarter of a semitone, seven-limit intervals in 12 ET tend to sound out of tune. In the tritone fractions 7 /5 and 10 /7, the errors of the fifth and seventh harmonics partially cancel each other out so that the just fractions are within a quarter of a semitone of their equally-tempered equivalents.[citation needed]

11 and 13 limits

[edit]

The eleventh harmonic ( 11 /8), at 551.32 cents, falls almost exactly halfway between the nearest two equally-tempered intervals in 12 ET and therefore is not approximated by either. In fact, 11 /8 is almost as far from any equally-tempered approximation as possible in 12 ET. The thirteenth harmonic ( 13 /8), at two-fifths of a semitone sharper than a minor sixth, is almost as inaccurate. Although this means that the fraction 13 /11 and also its inversion ( 22 /13) are accurately approximated (specifically, by three semitones), since the errors of the eleventh and thirteenth harmonics mostly cancel out, most people who are not familiar withquarter tones or microtonality will not be familiar with the eleventh and thirteenth harmonics. Similarly, while the error of the eleventh or thirteenth harmonic could be mostly canceled out by the error of the seventh harmonic, most Western musicians would not find the resulting fractions consonant since 12 ET does not approximate them accurately.[citation needed]

17 and 19 limits

[edit]

The seventeenth harmonic ( 17 /16) is only about 5 cents sharper than one semitone in 12 ET. It can be combined with 12 ET's approximation of the third harmonic in order to yield 17 /12, which is, as the nextPell approximation after 7 /5, only about three cents away from the equally-tempered tritone (the square root of two), and 17 /9, which is only one cent away from 12 ET's major seventh. The nineteenth harmonic is only about 2.5 cents flatter than three of 12 ET's semitones, so it can likewise be combined with the third harmonic to yield 19 /12, which is about 4.5 cents flatter than an equally-tempered minor sixth, and 19 /18, which is about 6.5 cents flatter than a semitone. However, because 17 and 19 are rather large for consonant ratios and most people are unfamiliar with 17 limit and 19 limit intervals, 17 limit and 19 limit intervals are not useful for most purposes, so they can likely not be judged as playing a part in any consonances of 12 ET.[citation needed]

Table

[edit]

In the following table the sizes of various just intervals are compared against their equal-tempered counterparts, given as a ratio as well ascents. Differences of less than six cents cannot be noticed by most people, and intervals that are more than a quarter of a step; which in this case is 25 cents, off sound out of tune.[citation needed]

Number of stepsNote going up from CExact value in 12-ETDecimal value in 12-ETEqually-tempered audioCentsJust intonation interval nameJust intonation interval fractionJustly-intoned audioCents in just intonationDifference
0C2012 = 11play0Unison11 = 1play00
1C orD2112 =212{\displaystyle {\sqrt[{12}]{2}}}1.05946...play100Septimal third tone2827 = 1.03703...play62.96−37.04
Just chromatic semitone2524 = 1.04166...Play70.67−29.33
Undecimal semitone2221 = 1.04761...play80.54−19.46
Septimal chromatic semitone 21 20 = 1.05play84.47−15.53
Novendecimal chromatic semitone 20 19 = 1.05263...play88.80−11.20
Pythagorean diatonic semitone 256 243 = 1.05349...play90.22xwx−9.78
Larger chromatic semitone 135 128 = 1.05468...play92.18−7.82
Novendecimal diatonic semitone 19 18 = 1.05555...play93.60−6.40
Septadecimal chromatic semitone 18 17 = 1.05882...play98.95−1.05
Seventeenth harmonic 17 16 = 1.0625...play104.96+4.96
Just diatonic semitone 16 15 = 1.06666...play111.73+11.73
Pythagorean chromatic semitone 2187 2048 = 1.06787...play113.69+13.69
Septimal diatonic semitone 15 14 = 1.07142...play119.44+19.44
Lesser tridecimal 2/3-tone 14 13 = 1.07692...play128.30+28.30
Major diatonic semitone 27 25 = 1.08play133.24+33.24
2 D2 2 12 =26{\displaystyle {\sqrt[{6}]{2}}}1.12246...play200Pythagorean diminished third 65536 59049 = 1.10985...play180.45−19.55
Minor tone 10 9 = 1.11111...play182.40−17.60
Major tone 9 8 = 1.125play203.91+3.91
Septimal whole tone 8 7 = 1.14285...play231.17+31.17
3 D or E2 3 12 =24{\displaystyle {\sqrt[{4}]{2}}}1.18920...play300Septimal minor third 7 6 = 1.16666...play266.87−33.13
Tridecimal minor third 13 11 = 1.18181...play289.21−10.79
Pythagorean minor third 32 27 = 1.18518...play294.13−5.87
Nineteenth harmonic 19 16 = 1.1875play297.51−2.49
Just minor third 6 5 = 1.2play315.64+15.64
Pythagorean augmented second 19683 16384 = 1.20135...play317.60+17.60
4 E2 4 12 =23{\displaystyle {\sqrt[{3}]{2}}}1.25992...play400Pythagorean diminished fourth 8192 6561 = 1.24859...play384.36−15.64
Just major third 5 4 = 1.25play386.31−13.69
Pythagorean major third 81 64 = 1.265625play407.82+7.82
Undecimal major third 14 11 = 1.27272...Play417.51+17.51
Septimal major third 9 7 = 1.28571...play435.08+35.08
5 F2 5 12 =3212{\displaystyle {\sqrt[{12}]{32}}}1.33484...play500Just perfect fourth 4 3 = 1.33333...play498.04−1.96
Pythagorean augmented third 177147 131072 = 1.35152...play521.51+21.51
6 F or G2 6 12 =2{\displaystyle {\sqrt {2}}}1.41421...play600Classic augmented fourth 25 18 = 1.38888...play568.72−31.28
Huygens' tritone 7 5 = 1.4play582.51−17.49
Pythagorean diminished fifth 1024 729 = 1.40466...play588.27−11.73
Just augmented fourth 45 32 = 1.40625Play590.22−9.78
Just diminished fifth 64 45 = 1.42222...play609.78+9.78
Pythagorean augmented fourth 729 512 = 1.42382...play611.73+11.73
Euler's tritone 10 7 = 1.42857...Play617.49+17.49
Classic diminished fifth 36 25 = 1.44play631.28+31.28
7 G2 7 12 =12812{\displaystyle {\sqrt[{12}]{128}}}1.49830...play700Pythagorean diminished sixth 262144 177147 = 1.47981...play678.49−21.51
Just perfect fifth 3 2 = 1.5play701.96+1.96
8 G or A2 8 12 =43{\displaystyle {\sqrt[{3}]{4}}}1.58740...play800Septimal minor sixth 14 9 = 1.55555...play764.92−35.08
Undecimal minor sixth 11 7 = 1.57142...play782.49−17.51
Pythagorean minor sixth 128 81 = 1.58024...play792.18−7.82
Just minor sixth 8 5 = 1.6play813.69+13.69
Pythagorean augmented fifth 6561 4096 = 1.60180...play815.64+15.64
9 A2 9 12 =84{\displaystyle {\sqrt[{4}]{8}}}1.68179...play900Pythagorean diminished seventh 32768 19683 = 1.66478...play882.40−17.60
Just major sixth 5 3 = 1.66666...play884.36−15.64
Nineteenth subharmonic 32 19 = 1.68421...play902.49+2.49
Pythagorean major sixth 27 16 = 1.6875play905.87+5.87
Septimal major sixth 12 7 = 1.71428...Play933.13+33.13
10 A or B2 10 12 =326{\displaystyle {\sqrt[{6}]{32}}}1.78179...play1000Harmonic seventh 7 4 = 1.75play968.83−31.17
Pythagorean minor seventh 16 9 = 1.77777...play996.09−3.91
Large minor seventh 9 5 = 1.8play1017.60+17.60
Pythagorean augmented sixth 59049 32768 = 1.80203...play1019.55+19.55
11 B2 11 12 =204812{\displaystyle {\sqrt[{12}]{2048}}}1.88774...play1100Tridecimal neutral seventh 13 7 = 1.85714...play1071.70−28.30
Pythagorean diminished octave 4096 2187 = 1.87288...play1086.31−13.69
Just major seventh 15 8 = 1.875play1088.27−11.73
Seventeenth subharmonic 32 17 = 1.88235...play1095.04−4.96
Pythagorean major seventh 243 128 = 1.89843...play1109.78+9.78
Septimal major seventh 27 14 = 1.92857...play1137.04+37.04
12 C2 12 12 = 22play1200Octave 2 1 = 2play1200.000

Commas

[edit]

12-ET tempers out severalcommas, meaning that there are several fractions close to 1 /1 that are treated as 1 /1 by 12-ET due to its mapping of different fractions to the same equally-tempered interval. For example,729/512 ( 36/29) and 1024 /729 ( 210/36) are each mapped to the tritone, so they are treated as nominally the same interval; therefore, their quotient,531441/ 524288  ( 312/219) is mapped to/treated as unison. This is thePythagorean comma, and it is 12-ET's only 3-limit comma. However, as one increases the prime limit and includes more intervals, the number of commas increases. 12-ET's most important five-limit comma is81/ 80  (34/ 24 × 51), which is known as thesyntonic comma and is the factor between Pythagorean thirds and sixths and their just counterparts. 12-ET's other 5-limit commas include:

  • Schisma:32805/ 32768  = 38 × 51/215 = (531441/ 524288 )1 × (81/ 80 )−1
  • Diaschisma:2048/ 2025  =211/ 34 × 52 = (531441/ 524288 )−1 × (81/ 80 )2
  • Lesser diesis:128/ 125  = 27/53 = (531441/ 524288 )−1 × (81/ 80 )3
  • Greater diesis:648/ 625  = 23 × 34/54=(531441/ 524288 )−1 × (81/ 80 )4

One of the 7-limit commas that 12-ET tempers out is theseptimal kleisma, which is equal to225/ 224 , or 32×52/25×71. 12-ET's other 7-limit commas include:

  • Septimal semicomma:126/ 125  = 21 × 32 × 71/53 = (81/ 80 )1 × (225/ 224 )−1
  • Archytas' comma:64/ 63  =26/ 32 × 71 =(531441/ 524288 )−1 × (81/ 80 )2 × (225/ 224 )1
  • Septimal quarter tone:36/ 35  = 22 × 32/51 ×v71 = (531441/ 524288 )−1 × (81/80)3 × (225/ 224 )1
  • Jubilisma:50/ 49  = 21 × 52/72 = (531441/ 524288 )−1 × (81/ 80 )2 ×(225/ 224 )2

Scale diagram

[edit]
Circle of fifths in 12-EDO showing major and minor keys

Modes

[edit]

Ionian mode (major scale)

[edit]
Key signatureScaleNumber of

sharps

Key signatureScaleNumber of

flats

C majorCDEFGAB0Ddouble flatmajorDdouble flatEdouble flatFGdouble flatAdouble flatBdouble flatC12
G majorGABCDEF1Adouble flatmajorAdouble flatBdouble flatCDdouble flatEdouble flatFG11
D majorDEFGABC2Edouble flatmajorEdouble flatFGAdouble flatBdouble flatCD10
A majorABCDEFG3Bdouble flatmajorBdouble flatCDEdouble flatFGA9
E majorEFGABCD4F majorFGABdouble flatCDE8
B majorBCDEFGA5C majorCDEFGAB7
F majorFGABCDE6G majorGABCDEF6
C majorCDEFGAB7D majorDEFGABC5
G majorGABCDEFdouble sharp8A majorABCDEFG4
D majorDEFdouble sharpGABCdouble sharp9E majorEFGABCD3
A majorABCdouble sharpDEFdouble sharpGdouble sharp10B majorBCDEFGA2
E majorEFdouble sharpGdouble sharpABCdouble sharpDdouble sharp11F majorFGABCDE1
B majorBCdouble sharpDdouble sharpEFdouble sharpGdouble sharpAdouble sharp12C majorCDEFGAB0

Dorian mode

[edit]
Key signatureScaleNumber of

sharps

Key signatureScaleNumber of

flats

D DorianDEFGABC0Edouble flat DorianEdouble flatFGdouble flatAdouble flatBdouble flatCDdouble flat12
A DorianABCDEFG1Bdouble flat DorianBdouble flatCDdouble flatEdouble flatFGAdouble flat11
E DorianEFGABCD2F DorianFGAdouble flatBdouble flatCDEdouble flat10
B DorianBCDEFGA3C DorianCDEdouble flatFGABdouble flat9
F DorianFGABCDE4G DorianGABdouble flatCDEF8
C DorianCDEFGAB5D DorianDEFGABC7
G DorianGABCDEF6A DorianABCDEFG6
D DorianDEFGABC7E DorianEFGABCD5
A DorianABCDEFdouble sharpG8B DorianBCDEFGA4
E DorianEFdouble sharpGABCdouble sharpD9F DorianFGABCDE3
B DorianBCdouble sharpDEFdouble sharpGdouble sharpA10C DorianCDEFGAB2
Fdouble sharp DorianFdouble sharpGdouble sharpABCdouble sharpDdouble sharpE11G DorianGABCDEF1
Cdouble sharp DorianCdouble sharpDdouble sharpEFdouble sharpGdouble sharpAdouble sharpB12D DorianDEFGABC0

Phrygian mode

[edit]
Key signatureScaleNumber of

sharps

Key signatureScaleNumber of

flats

E PhrygianEFGABCD0F PhrygianFGdouble flatAdouble flatBdouble flatCDdouble flatEdouble flat12
B PhrygianBCDEFGA1C PhrygianCDdouble flatEdouble flatFGAdouble flatBdouble flat11
F PhrygianFGABCDE2G PhrygianGAdouble flatBdouble flatCDEdouble flatF10
C PhrygianCDEFGAB3D PhrygianDEdouble flatFGABdouble flatC9
G PhrygianGABCDEF4A PhrygianABdouble flatCDEFG8
D PhrygianDEFGABC5E PhrygianEFGABCD7
A PhrygianABCDEFG6B PhrygianBCDEFGA6
E PhrygianEFGABCD7F PhrygianFGABCDE5
B PhrygianBCDEFdouble sharpGA8C PhrygianCDEFGAB4
Fdouble sharp PhrygianFdouble sharpGABCdouble sharpDE9G PhrygianGABCDEF3
Cdouble sharp PhrygianCdouble sharpDEFdouble sharpGdouble sharpAB10D PhrygianDEFGABC2
Gdouble sharp PhrygianGdouble sharpABCdouble sharpDdouble sharpEFdouble sharp11A PhrygianABCDEFG1
Ddouble sharp PhrygianDdouble sharpEFdouble sharpGdouble sharpAdouble sharpBCdouble sharp12E PhrygianEFGABCD0

Lydian mode

[edit]
Key signatureScaleNumber of

sharps

Key signatureScaleNumber of

flats

F LydianFGABCDE0Gdouble flat LydianGdouble flatAdouble flatBdouble flatCDdouble flatEdouble flatF12
C LydianCDEFGAB1Ddouble flat LydianDdouble flatEdouble flatFGAdouble flatBdouble flatC11
G LydianGABCDEF2Adouble flat LydianAdouble flatBdouble flatCDEdouble flatFG10
D LydianDEFGABC3Edouble flat LydianEdouble flatFGABdouble flatCD9
A LydianABCDEFG4Bdouble flat LydianBdouble flatCDEFGA8
E LydianEFGABCD5F LydianFGABCDE7
B LydianBCDEFGA6C LydianCDEFGAB6
F LydianFGABCDE7G LydianGABCDEF5
C LydianCDEFdouble sharpGAB8D LydianDEFGABC4
G LydianGABCdouble sharpDEFdouble sharp9A LydianABCDEFG3
D LydianDEFdouble sharpGdouble sharpABCdouble sharp10E LydianEFGABCD2
A LydianABCdouble sharpDdouble sharpEFdouble sharpGdouble sharp11B LydianBCDEFGA1
E LydianEFdouble sharpGdouble sharpAdouble sharpBCdouble sharpDdouble sharp12F LydianFGABCDE0

Mixolydian mode

[edit]
Key signatureScaleNumber of

sharps

Key signatureScaleNumber of

flats

G MixolydianGABCDEF0Adouble flat MixolydianAdouble flatBdouble flatCDdouble flatEdouble flatFGdouble flat12
D MixolydianDEFGABC1Edouble flat MixolydianEdouble flatFGAdouble flatBdouble flatCDdouble flat11
A MixolydianABCDEFG2Bdouble flat MixolydianBdouble flatCDEdouble flatFGAdouble flat10
E MixolydianEFGABCD3F MixolydianFGABdouble flatCDEdouble flat9
B MixolydianBCDEFGA4C MixolydianCDEFGABdouble flat8
F MixolydianFGABCDE5G MixolydianGABCDEF7
C MixolydianCDEFGAB6D MixolydianDEFGABC6
G MixolydianGABCDEF7A MixolydianABCDEFG5
D MixolydianDEFdouble sharpGABC8E MixolydianEFGABCD4
A MixolydianABCdouble sharpDEFdouble sharpG9B MixolydianBCDEFGA3
E MixolydianEFdouble sharpGdouble sharpABCdouble sharpD10F MixolydianFGABCDE2
B MixolydianBCdouble sharpDdouble sharpEFdouble sharpGdouble sharpA11C MixolydianCDEFGAB1
Fdouble sharp MixolydianFdouble sharpGdouble sharpAdouble sharpBCdouble sharpDdouble sharpE12G MixolydianGABCDEF0

Aeolian mode (natural minor scale)

[edit]
Key signatureScaleNumber of

sharps

Key signatureScaleNumber of

flats

A minorABCDEFG0Bdouble flat minorBdouble flatCDdouble flatEdouble flatFGdouble flatAdouble flat12
E minorEFGABCD1F minorFGAdouble flatBdouble flatCDdouble flatEdouble flat11
B minorBCDEFGA2C minorCDEdouble flatFGAdouble flatBdouble flat10
F minorFGABCDE3G minorGABdouble flatCDEdouble flatF9
C minorCDEFGAB4D minorDEFGABdouble flatC8
G minorGABCDEF5A minorABCDEFG7
D minorDEFGABC6E minorEFGABCD6
A minorABCDEFG7B minorBCDEFGA5
E minorEFdouble sharpGABCD8F minorFGABCDE4
B minorBCdouble sharpDEFdouble sharpGA9C minorCDEFGAB3
Fdouble sharp minorFdouble sharpGdouble sharpABCdouble sharpDE10G minorGABCDEF2
Cdouble sharp minorCdouble sharpDdouble sharpEFdouble sharpGdouble sharpAB11D minorDEFGABC1
Gdouble sharp minorGdouble sharpAdouble sharpBCdouble sharpDdouble sharpEFdouble sharp12A minorABCDEFG0

Locrian mode

[edit]
Key signatureScaleNumber of

sharps

Key signatureScaleNumber of

flats

B LocrianBCDEFGA0C LocrianCDdouble flatEdouble flatFGdouble flatAdouble flatBdouble flat12
F LocrianFGABCDE1G LocrianGAdouble flatBdouble flatCDdouble flatEdouble flatF11
C LocrianCDEFGAB2D LocrianDEdouble flatFGAdouble flatBdouble flatC10
G LocrianGABCDEF3A LocrianABdouble flatCDEdouble flatFG9
D LocrianDEFGABC4E LocrianEFGABdouble flatCD8
A LocrianABCDEFG5B LocrianBCDEFGA7
E LocrianEFGABCD6F LocrianFGABCDE6
B LocrianBCDEFGA7C LocrianCDEFGAB5
Fdouble sharpLocrianFdouble sharpGABCDE8G LocrianGABCDEF4
Cdouble sharpLocrianCdouble sharpDEFdouble sharpGAB9D LocrianDEFGABC3
Gdouble sharpLocrianGdouble sharpABCdouble sharpDEFdouble sharp10A LocrianABCDEFG2
Ddouble sharpLocrianDdouble sharpEFdouble sharpGdouble sharpABCdouble sharp11E LocrianEFGABCD1
Adouble sharpLocrianAdouble sharpBCdouble sharpDdouble sharpEFdouble sharpGdouble sharp12B LocrianBCDEFGA0

See also

[edit]

Similar tuning systems

[edit]

Historically, multiple tuning systems have been used that can be seen as slight variations of 12-TEDO, with twelve notes per octave but with some variation among interval sizes so that the notes are not quite equally-spaced. One example of this a three-limit scale where equally-tempered perfect fifths of 700 cents are replaced with justly-intoned perfect fifths of 701.955 cents. Because the two intervals differ by less than 2 cents, or1600 of an octave, the two scales are very similar. In fact, the Chinese developed3-limit just intonation at least a century before He Chengtian created the sequence of 12-TEDO.[38] Likewise, Pythagorean tuning, which was developed by ancient Greeks, was the predominant system in Europe until during the Renaissance, when Europeans realized that dissonant intervals such as8164[39] could be made more consonant by tempering them to simpler ratios like54, resulting in Europe developing a series ofmeantone temperaments that slightly modified the interval sizes but could still be viewed as an approximate of 12-TEDO. Due to meantone temperaments' tendency to concentrate error onto one enharmonic perfect fifth, making itvery dissonant, European music theorists, such as Andreas Werckmeister, Johann Philipp Kirnberger, Francesco Antonio Vallotti, and Thomas Young, created variouswell temperaments with the goal of dividing up the commas in order to reduce the dissonance of the worst-affected intervals. Werckmeister and Kirnberger were each dissatisfied with his first temperament and therefore created multiple temperaments, the latter temperaments more closely approximating equal temperament than the former temperaments. Likewise, Europe as a whole gradually transitioned from meantone and well temperaments to 12-TEDO, the system that it still uses today.

Subsets

[edit]
See also:Scale (music)

While some types of music, such asserialism, use all twelve notes of 12-TEDO, most music only uses notes from a particular subset of 12-TEDO known as a scale. Many different types of scales exist.

The most popular type of scale in 12-TEDO is meantone. Meantone refers to any scale where all of its notes are consecutive on the circle of fifths. Meantone scales of different sizes exist, and some meantone scales used includefive-note meantone,seven-note meantone, andnine-note meantone. Meantone is present in the design of Western instruments. For example, the keys of a piano and its predecessors are structured so that the white keys form a seven-note meantone scale and the black keys form a five-note meantone scale. Another example is that guitars and other string instruments with at least five strings are typically tuned so that their open strings form a five-note meantone scale.

Other scales used in 12-TEDO include theascending melodic minor scale, theharmonic minor, theharmonic major, thediminished scale, and thein scale.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]

Footnotes

[edit]
  1. ^Also known astwelve-tone equal temperament (12-TET),12-tone equal division of the octave (12-TEDO),12 equal division of 2/1 (12-ED2),12 equal division of the octave (12-EDO); informally abbreviated totwelve equal or referred to asequal temperament without qualification inWestern countries.
  2. ^It is probably not an accident that as tuning in European music became increasingly close to 12ET, the style of the music changed so that the defects of 12ET appeared less evident, though it should be borne in mind that in actual performance these are often reduced by the tuning adaptations of the performers.[citation needed]

Citations

[edit]
  1. ^von Helmholtz & Ellis 1885, pp. 493–511.
  2. ^abKuttner 1975, p. 163.
  3. ^abKuttner 1975, p. 200.
  4. ^Robinson 1980, p. vii: Chu-Tsaiyu the first formulator of the mathematics of "equal temperament" anywhere in the world
  5. ^abcNeedham, Ling & Robinson 1962, p. 221.
  6. ^Kwang-chih Chang, Pingfang Xu & Liancheng Lu 2005, p. 140.
  7. ^Goodman, Howard L.; Lien, Y. Edmund (April 2009). "A Third Century AD Chinese System of Di-Flute Temperament: Matching Ancient Pitch-Standards and Confronting Modal Practice".The Galpin Society Journal.62. Galpin Society: 7.JSTOR 20753625.
  8. ^Barbour 2004, pp. 55–56.
  9. ^Hart 1998.
  10. ^Needham & Ronan 1978, p. 385.
  11. ^abCho 2010.
  12. ^abLienhard 1997.
  13. ^abChristensen 2002, p. 205.
  14. ^Barbour 2004, p. 7.
  15. ^von Helmholtz & Ellis 1885, p. 258.
  16. ^True 2018, pp. 61–74.
  17. ^Galilei 1584, pp. 80–89.
  18. ^Barbour 2004, p. 8.
  19. ^de Gorzanis 1981.
  20. ^"Spinacino 1507a: Thematic Index". Appalachian State University. Archived fromthe original on 2011-07-25. Retrieved2012-06-14.
  21. ^Wilson 1997.
  22. ^Jorgens 1986.
  23. ^"Scintille de musica", (Brescia, 1533), p. 132
  24. ^Cohen 1987, pp. 471–488.
  25. ^Cho 2003, p. 223.
  26. ^Cho 2003, p. 222.
  27. ^Christensen 2002, p. 207.
  28. ^Christensen 2002, p. 78.
  29. ^Lindley, Mark.Lutes, Viols, Temperaments.ISBN 978-0-521-28883-5
  30. ^Vm7 6214
  31. ^Andreas Werckmeister (1707),Musicalische Paradoxal-Discourse
  32. ^Di Veroli 2009, pp. 140, 142 and 256.
  33. ^Moody 2003.
  34. ^von Helmholtz & Ellis 1885, p. 548.
  35. ^White, William Braid (1946) [1917].Piano Tuning and Allied Arts (5th enlarged ed.). Boston, Massachusetts: Tuners Supply Co. p. 68.
  36. ^Barbour 2004, pp. 55–78.
  37. ^Partch 1979, p. 134.
  38. ^Needham, Ling & Robinson 1962, pp. 170–171.
  39. ^Benward & Saker 2003, p. 56.

Sources

[edit]

Further reading

[edit]

External links

[edit]
Measurement
Just intonation
Temperaments
Equal
Linear
Irregular
Traditional
non-Western
Non-octave
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