evolution of tuning systems

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very interesting; nice audio demonstrations.

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I had often wondered where the notion of differnt keys having certain character (not just the Spinal Tap reference) and this offers the best explanation I've come across

I'd also heard in interviews how violin players had to adjust to playing with piano and had a vague notion of what that was about, but this is very clear.

It's not just me, there are historical reasons why most music was written in the keys between 2 flats to 3 sharps

it's also interesting from a science perspective of how we use math as a tool to model the world and in this very observable case, it falls a bit short

makes it even more of a challenge to understand how some concert pianist like to have their concert grand tuning stretched

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wrench45us wrote: it's also interesting from a science perspective of how we use math as a tool to model the world and in this very observable case, it falls a bit short

makes it even more of a challenge to understand how some concert pianist like to have their concert grand tuning stretched
I don't think the article touches at all on stretched tuning, but it is a different example of the simplified model not meshing with reality. We would be taught that the "ideal" string has a harmonic that twice the fundamental, another thrice, another four times, and so on. But a real wire inside a piano has other issues at play which make the overtones a bit sharper than that. Stretched tuning matches the fundamental of one note with the real overtones of the notes that are octaves below it, instead of the simplified model.

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Equal Temperament makes all keys (and their respective chords) to have the same character, since all intervals are identical.

Only the timbre of ideal strings corresponds exactly to the mathematical model of the overtone series, as you would describe it with Fourier's. Real strings have different stiffness, tension, width, etc. Piano strings are somewhat stiff, which results in inharmonicity (shift of the overtones from their ideal positions), so stretching is needed in order to compensate for that and match the overtones thus making the interval in tune.
Last edited by Km7 on Sat Jun 12, 2010 4:16 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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Nystul wrote:
wrench45us wrote: it's also interesting from a science perspective of how we use math as a tool to model the world and in this very observable case, it falls a bit short

makes it even more of a challenge to understand how some concert pianist like to have their concert grand tuning stretched
I don't think the article touches at all on stretched tuning, but it is a different example of the simplified model not meshing with reality. We would be taught that the "ideal" string has a harmonic that twice the fundamental, another thrice, another four times, and so on. But a real wire inside a piano has other issues at play which make the overtones a bit sharper than that. Stretched tuning matches the fundamental of one note with the real overtones of the notes that are octaves below it, instead of the simplified model.
Good work!

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That article is full of fundamental misunderstandings...
if you start with a C at the bottom of a piano keyboard and tune a series of 12 perfect 3:2 fifths up to the top, you discover that where you expect to have returned to a perfect high C...
According to music theory, that would be a B#, so there really is no reason to "expect" to return to C.
The reason for tempering out the difference between these two notes (the pythagorean comma), is simply that we want to play them using the same key. So there is no mysterious anomaly in nature, as the author seems to think - we deliberately detune intervals for purely practical reasons.
in meantone each key had an audible personality
This is wrong - all keys sound exactly the same in meantone.
Since all fifths are tempered by the same amount, all other intervals also sound the same in all keys. So what about the "wolf fifth"? It is not a fifth! It is really a diminished sixth, like G#-Eb. The interesting thing with meantone is that it does not temper out the pythagorean comma (only the syntonic comma) so there actually is a difference between G# and Ab, Eb and D# etc. That means we have to choose between them (or split the keys) and the most common way to tune meantone is to tune the black keys to C#, Eb, F#, G# and Bb. Keys like A flat major will then be unplayable, simply because there is no A flat note, but there will be no difference in character between the usable keys.

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No, that article isn't, your post is.

Meantone does not result in 'all keys have the same intervals'.

you entirely refute yourself in the next paragraph,

Note: 'unplayable'. 'usable keys'
Wait, 'C' etc = playable, with all keys usable. what just happened.

:roll:

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jancivil wrote:No, that article isn't, your post is.

Meantone does not result in 'all keys have the same intervals'.
That you fail to understand my post doesn't make it wrong.
Try to understand that there is no enharmonic equivalence in meantone.

Please, name one major third that is not pure in meantone!

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I didn't even waste my time reading the article, when I saw how long it is, but I am not surprised it isn't entirely correct. Please, don't learn this stuff from articles, but from books. And by the way, jof knows his tuning theory. It's the well temperaments that give different key colours. You could even view 12-TET as a kind of meantone, where the fifth is flattened by a different amount (only 2 cents). Speaking of that, there are different meantone temperaments (1/4, 1/5, 1/6... of the syntonic comma), which results in different purity of the thirds.

To see what's going on in MT, you could proceed as follows:

1. Tune four perfect fifths: 3/2 * 3/2 * 3/2 * 3/2 = 81/16.

2. Divide by 4 (two times by 2) to take it two octaves down to a major third, which gives you 81/64, which is the Pythagorean major third.

3. 5/4 is the pure or just major third. 81/64 : 5/4 = 324/320 = 81/80, which is the syntonic comma, or the difference between a just major third and the sharper Pythagorean major third.

4. 1/4 meantone temperament means to flatten the pure fifth by 1/4 syntonic comma (the 4th root of 81/80), which is approx. 5 (5.4) cents, which gives you approx. 697 (696.6) cents for the fifth (~3 cents flat compared to ET).

5. Now use this fifth to generate the scale.

At this point you are close to understanding (by trying it yourself) why there is no enharmonic equivalence in MT, where the wolf is and which keys are unusable.

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anyone used Scala tuning software?
Makes big difference you read @about@ tuning or you re-tune your instruments in practice. It's like reading @about@ someone's swimming and swimming yourself.
12-ET is just one of the historical systems nowadays :D. Still widespread, and still useful for performing XX century music.
a bit of salo in cold cyberspace
http://www.myspace.com/viktorpushkar

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jof wrote:
jancivil wrote:No, that article isn't, your post is.

Meantone does not result in 'all keys have the same intervals'.
That you fail to understand my post doesn't make it wrong.
Try to understand that there is no enharmonic equivalence in meantone.

Please, name one major third that is not pure in meantone!
'No enharmonic equivalence' means the same thing as "all keys have the same intervals'???. I quoted you. Thirds are not the end-all of intervals in a key. Do the math. Do a proof of concept.

"Note: 'unplayable'. 'usable keys'
Wait, 'C' etc = playable, with all keys usable. what just happened."
Whether or not you know your stuff doesn't fix that one.

I am quite aware of the difference between all of the various temperaments of that era vs ET, thank you very much.

There are obvious factual problems in that post. That you failed to convey accurately your idea isn't my fault.

I don't do that critique to sound good or impress some people, I do it to clarify some mud.

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jancivil wrote:I quoted you.
No, you didn't. Your "quotes" are made up and now you are quoting yourself...
jancivil wrote: Thirds are not the end-all of intervals in a key. Do the math. Do a proof of concept.
What I'm saying is that all major thirds are pure, all fifths and minor thirds are 1/4 comma narrow and so on. Every interval has the same size in all keys.
That some keys are "unusable" doesn't mean that the intervals have different sizes in those keys; it means that some thirds are missing.
This is where enharmonic equivalence is important: in ET, you can use the same key to play both G# and Ab, but in meantone these notes have different pitches. Because of this, you can never play both the E-G# and Ab-C major thirds in meantone, unless you have two black keys between G and A. With only one black key, you will have one major third (E-G# or Ab-C) an one diminished fourth (G#-C or E-Ab, respectively). It is possible to play in any tonality if you add enough keys and every tonality will have the same character; that's my point.

The math is simple - here is a formula you can cut-and-paste into GNU Octave:
sort(1200*mod(log2((3/2/(81/80)^(1/4)).^[-15:19]),1))
It will give you a table of the pitches (in cents) of all nominals, flats, sharps, double flats and double sharps in one octave.
This is the same table made with Scala, where you can easily see that every interval has the same size in all tonalities:

Code: Select all

 0:          1/1               0.000 C		unison, perfect prime
  1:         34.990 cents      34.990 B##
  2:        128/125            41.059 Dbb	minor diesis, diesis
  3:         76.049 cents      76.049 C#
  4:        117.108 cents     117.108 Db
  5:        152.098 cents     152.098 C##
  6:        193.157 cents     193.157 D
  7:        234.216 cents     234.216 Ebb
  8:        269.206 cents     269.206 D#
  9:        310.265 cents     310.265 Eb
 10:        625/512           345.255 D##
 11:        351.324 cents     351.324 Fbb
 12:          5/4             386.314 E		major third
 13:         32/25            427.373 Fb	classic diminished fourth
 14:        462.363 cents     462.363 E#
 15:        503.422 cents     503.422 F
 16:        538.412 cents     538.412 E##
 17:        544.480 cents     544.480 Gbb
 18:        579.471 cents     579.471 F#
 19:        620.529 cents     620.529 Gb
 20:        655.520 cents     655.520 F##
 21:        696.578 cents     696.578 G
 22:        737.637 cents     737.637 Abb
 23:         25/16            772.627 G#	classic augmented fifth
 24:          8/5             813.686 Ab	minor sixth
 25:        848.676 cents     848.676 G##
 26:        889.735 cents     889.735 A
 27:        930.794 cents     930.794 Bbb
 28:        965.784 cents     965.784 A#
 29:       1006.843 cents    1006.843 Bb
 30:       1041.833 cents    1041.833 A##
 31:       1047.902 cents    1047.902 Cbb
 32:       1082.892 cents    1082.892 B
 33:       1123.951 cents    1123.951 Cb
 34:        125/64           1158.941 B#	classic augmented seventh
 35:          2/1            1200.000 C		octave
jancivil wrote: I am quite aware of the difference between all of the various temperaments of that era vs ET, thank you very much.

There are obvious factual problems in that post. That you failed to convey accurately your idea isn't my fault.
Funny how arrogant know-it-alls don't understand me, when people like Km7, who obviously know the math, understand me without clarifications...

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jof wrote: Funny how arrogant know-it-alls don't understand me, when people like Km7, who obviously know the math, understand me without clarifications...
[mod voice]no reason to start calling names..keep it civil[/mod voice]

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here's some reality then -
EG: *Werckmeister III*:

Note Exact frequency relation Value in cents
C \frac{1}{1} 0
C♯ \frac{8}{9} \sqrt[4]{2} 96
D \frac{9}{8} 204
D♯ \sqrt[4]{2} 300
E \frac{8}{9} \sqrt{2} 396
F \frac{9}{8} \sqrt[4]{2} 504
F♯ \sqrt{2} 600
G \frac{3}{2} 702
G♯ \frac{128}{81} 792
A \sqrt[4]{8} 900
B♭ \frac{3}{\sqrt[4]{8}} 1002
B \frac{4}{3} \sqrt{2} 1098

Give me a transposition of this, a single one, which prooves the concept.
Enharmonic equivalance is about naming. It means nothing real to point to that concept, as if it's the same as 'all intervals are...' It's not actually even true that all (major) thirds will be as pure in every case in all 'well temperaments'; give me the proof of concept.


It's quite absurd to claim all intervals in all keys are the same, outside of actual equal temperament; in fact, ET would never have been necessary if this were true.

You may wish to pretend you did not make these claims, but that won't get it.

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