Equal temperament

A comparison of some "EDO" equal temperament scales.[1] The graph spans one octave horizontally (please open the image to view the full width), and each shaded rectangle is the width of one step in a scale. The just interval ratios are separated in rows by their prime limits.
12-tone equal temperament chromatic scale on C, one full octave ascending, notated only with sharps.  Play ascending & descending 

An equal temperament is a musical temperament, or a system of tuning, in which every pair of adjacent notes is separated by the same interval. In other words, there are equal ratios of the frequencies of any adjacent pair, and, since pitch is perceived roughly as the logarithm of frequency, equal perceived "distance" from every note to its nearest neighbor.

In equal temperament tunings, the generating interval is often found by dividing some larger desired interval, often the octave (ratio 2:1), into a number of smaller equal steps (equal frequency ratios between successive notes). In classical music and Western music in general, the most common tuning system for the past few hundred years has been and remains twelve-tone equal temperament (also known as 12 equal temperament, 12-TET, or 12-ET), which divides the octave into 12 parts, all of which are equal on a logarithmic scale, with a ratio equal to the 12th root of 2 (12√2 ≅ 1.05946). That resulting smallest interval, 112 the width of an octave, is called a semitone or half step. In modern times, 12TET is usually tuned relative to a standard pitch of 440 Hz, called A440, meaning one note is tuned to A440, and all other notes are some multiple of semitones away from that in either direction. The standard pitch has not always been 440 but has varied and generally risen over the past few hundred years.[2]

Other equal temperaments exist. They divide the octave differently. For example, some music has been written in 19-TET and 31-TET. Arabic music uses 24-TET. In Western countries, when people use the term equal temperament without qualification, they usually mean 12-TET. To avoid ambiguity between equal temperaments that divide the octave and ones that divide some other interval (or that use an arbitrary generator without first dividing a larger interval), the term equal division of the octave, or EDO is preferred for the former. According to this naming system, 12-TET is called 12-EDO, 31-TET is called 31-EDO, and so on.

An example of an equal temperament that finds its smallest interval by dividing an interval other than the octave into equal parts is the equal-tempered version of the Bohlen–Pierce scale, which divides the just interval of an octave and a fifth (ratio 3:1), called a "tritave" or a "pseudo-octave" in that system, into 13 equal parts.

Unfretted string ensembles, which can adjust the tuning of all notes except for open strings, and vocal groups, who have no mechanical tuning limitations, sometimes use a tuning much closer to just intonation for acoustic reasons. Other instruments, such as some wind, keyboard, and fretted instruments, often only approximate equal temperament, where technical limitations prevent exact tunings. Some wind instruments that can easily and spontaneously bend their tone, most notably trombones, use tuning similar to string ensembles and vocal groups.

History

The two figures frequently credited with the achievement of exact calculation of equal temperament are Zhu Zaiyu (also romanized as Chu-Tsaiyu. Chinese: 朱載堉) in 1584 and Simon Stevin in 1585. According to Fritz A. Kuttner, a critic of the theory,[3] 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.[4]

Kenneth Robinson attributes the invention of equal temperament to Zhu Zaiyu[5] and provides textual quotations as evidence.[6] 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."[6] Kuttner disagrees and remarks that his claim "cannot be considered correct without major qualifications."[3] Kuttner proposes that neither Zhu Zaiyu or Simon Stevin achieved equal temperament, and that neither of the two should be treated as inventors.[7]

China

Early history

The origin of the Chinese pentatonic scale is traditionally ascribed to the mythical Ling Lun. Allegedly his writings discussed the equal division of the scale in the 27th century BC.[8] However, evidence of the origins of writing in this period (the early Longshan) in China is limited to rudimentary inscriptions on oracle bones and pottery.[9]

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 5 full 7 note octaves in the key of C Major, including 12 note semi-tones in the middle of the range.[10]

An approximation for equal temperament was described by He Chengtian, a mathematician of Southern and Northern Dynasties around 400 AD.[11]

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

Historically, there was a seven-equal temperament or hepta-equal temperament practice in Chinese tradition.[12][13]

Zhu Zaiyu (朱載堉), a prince of the Ming court, spent thirty years on research based on the equal temperament idea originally postulated by his father. He described his new pitch theory in his Fusion of Music and Calendar 乐律融通 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-TET in his 5,000-page work Complete Compendium of Music and Pitch (Yuelü quan shu 乐律全书) in 1584.[14] An extended account is also given by Joseph Needham.[15] Zhu obtained his result mathematically by dividing the length of string and pipe successively by 122 ≈ 1.059463, and for pipe length by 242,[16] such that after twelve divisions (an octave) the length was divided by a factor of 2:

(122)12 = 2.

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

(122)84 = 27 = 128.

Zhu Zaiyu

According to Gene Cho, Zhu Zaiyu was the first person to solve the equal temperament problem mathematically.[17] Matteo Ricci, a Jesuit in China recorded this work in his personal journal[17] and very likely brought it back to the West.[18] In 1620, Zhu's work was referenced by a European mathematician.[18] 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."[19] The 19th-century German physicist Hermann von Helmholtz wrote in On 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.[20]

Zhu Zaiyu's equal temperament pitch pipes

Zhu Zaiyu illustrated his equal temperament theory by 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.[21]

Europe

Simon Stevin's Van de Spiegheling der singconst c. 1605.

Early history

One of the earliest discussions of equal temperament occurs in the writing of Aristoxenus in the 4th century BC.

Vincenzo Galilei (father of Galileo 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 + 1 ricercars.[22] He used the 18:17 ratio for fretting the lute (although some adjustment was necessary for pure octaves).[23]

Galilei's countryman and fellow lutenist Giacomo Gorzanis had written music based on equal temperament by 1567.[24][25] 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.[26] In the 17th century lutenist-composer John Wilson wrote a set of 30 preludes including 24 in all the major/minor keys.[27][28]

Henricus Grammateus drew a close approximation to equal temperament in 1518. The first tuning rules in equal temperament were given by Giovani Maria Lanfranco in his "Scintille de musica".[29] Zarlino in his polemic with Galilei initially opposed equal temperament but eventually conceded to it in relation to the lute in his Sopplimenti musicali in 1588.

Simon Stevin

The first mention of equal temperament related to the twelfth root of two in the West appeared in Simon Stevin's manuscript Van De Spiegheling der singconst (ca. 1605), published posthumously nearly three centuries later in 1884.[30] 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.[31] 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.[32]

The following were Simon Stevin's chord length from Vande Spiegheling der singconst:[33]

TONE CHORD 10000 from Simon Stevin RATIO CORRECTED CHORD
semitone 9438 1.0595465 9438.7
whole tone 8909 1.0593781
tone and a half 8404 1.0600904 8409
ditone 7936 1.0594758 7937
ditone and a half 7491 1.0594046 7491.5
tritone 7071 1.0593975 7071.1
tritone and a half 6674 1.0594845 6674.2
four-tone 6298 1.0597014 6299
four-tone and a half 5944 1.0595558 5946
five-tone 5611 1.0593477 5612.3
five-tone and a half 5296 1.0594788 5297.2
full tone 1.0592000

A generation later, French mathematician Marin Mersenne presented several equal tempered chord lengths obtained by Jean Beaugrand, Ismael Bouillaud, and Jean Galle.[34]

In 1630 Johann 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.[35]

Baroque era

From 1450 to about 1800, plucked instrument players (lutenists and guitarists) generally favored equal temperament,[36] and the Brossard lute Manuscript compiled in the last quarter of the 17th century contains a series of 18 preludes attributed to Bocquet written in all keys, including the last prelude, entitled Prelude sur tous les tons, which enharmonically modulates through all keys.[37] Angelo Michele Bartolotti published a series of passacaglias in all keys, with connecting enharmonically modulating passages. Among the 17th-century keyboard composers Girolamo Frescobaldi advocated equal temperament. Some theorists, such as Giuseppe Tartini, were opposed to the adoption of equal temperament; they felt that degrading the purity of each chord degraded the aesthetic appeal of music, although Andreas Werckmeister emphatically advocated equal temperament in his 1707 treatise published posthumously.[38]

J. S. Bach wrote The Well-Tempered Clavier to demonstrate the musical possibilities of well temperament, where in some keys the consonances are even more degraded than in equal temperament. It is possible that when composers and theoreticians of earlier times wrote of the moods and "colors" of the keys, they each described the subtly different dissonances made available within a particular tuning method. However, it is difficult to determine with any exactness the actual tunings used in different places at different times by any composer. (Correspondingly, there is a great deal of variety in the particular opinions of composers about the moods and colors of particular keys.)

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 at the expense of just a little impurity in every interval. This allowed greater expression through enharmonic modulation, which became extremely important in the 18th century in music of such composers as Francesco Geminiani, Wilhelm Friedemann Bach, Carl Philipp Emmanuel Bach and Johann Gottfried Müthel.

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), and it became standard during the Early Romantic era (first decade of the 19th century), 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.)

A precise equal temperament is possible using the 17th-century Sabbatini method of splitting the octave first into three tempered major thirds.[39] 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.[40] Using beat rates, first proposed in 1749, became common after their diffusion by Helmholtz and Ellis in the second half of the 19th century.[41] The ultimate precision was available with 2-decimal tables published by White in 1917.[42]

It is in the environment of equal temperament that the new styles of symmetrical tonality and polytonality, atonal music such as that written with the twelve tone technique or serialism, and jazz (at least its piano component) developed and flourished.

General properties

In an equal temperament, the distance between two adjacent steps of the scale is the same interval. Because the perceived identity of an interval depends on its ratio, this scale in even steps is a geometric sequence of multiplications. (An arithmetic sequence of intervals would not sound evenly spaced, and would not permit transposition to different keys.) Specifically, the smallest interval in an equal-tempered scale is the ratio:

rn = p
r = np

where the ratio r divides the ratio p (typically the octave, which is 2:1) into n equal parts. (See Twelve-tone equal temperament below.)

Scales are often measured in cents, which divide the octave into 1200 equal intervals (each called a cent). This logarithmic scale makes comparison of different tuning systems easier than comparing ratios, and has considerable use in Ethnomusicology. The basic step in cents for any equal temperament can be found by taking the width of p above in cents (usually the octave, which is 1200 cents wide), called below w, and dividing it into n parts:

c = w/n

In musical analysis, material belonging to an equal temperament is often given an integer notation, meaning a single integer is used to represent each pitch. This simplifies and generalizes discussion of pitch material within the temperament in the same way that taking the logarithm of a multiplication reduces it to addition. Furthermore, by applying the modular arithmetic where the modulus is the number of divisions of the octave (usually 12), these integers can be reduced to pitch classes, which removes the distinction (or acknowledges the similarity) between pitches of the same name, e.g. 'C' is 0 regardless of octave register. The MIDI encoding standard uses integer note designations.

General formulas for the equal-tempered interval

Background theory

Basic concepts:

The logarithm of a number is the exponent to which another fixed number, the base, must be raised to produce that number. For example: . Logarithm of with base is 2, or To compare logarithms, we use some standard base, e.g. 10 or e (mathematical constant). Usually, in mathematical notation "log" means "logarithm with base 10". For example: log = log 1.125 = 0.0511525224473813, and, log = log 1.265625 = 0.1023050448947626. Latter logarithm divided by former yields 2, the exponent as above.

For a given velocity of the wave on the string, length and frequency of the sound produced from a string when it is plucked, are inverse proportional [43] (Equation 2). According to Equation 1, for the same tension in the string, and the same string’s linear density, the velocity of the wave on the string is the same.

Pitch is the distinctive quality of a sound, dependent primarily on the [fundamental] frequency of the sound waves produced by its source.[44]

It was known to Pythagoras [45][46] and perhaps to ancient Chinese philosophers, that our subjective sensation of the difference (interval) in pitch (tone) is inversely proportional to the exponent of the ratio of string (chord) lengths. In modern terms, it is proportional to the logarithm of the ratio of fundamental frequencies of sounds produced by two different lengths of the string.

Example: Consider two pairs of a string's lengths: 90 cm - 80 cm, and, 81 cm - 64 cm. Our subjective sensation of pitch difference (interval) between the sounds produced by string's lengths 81 cm and 64 cm, the ratio , is 2 times of that between 90 cm and 80 cm, the ratio . However pitch of sound from 90 cm is lower than that from 80 cm, and from 81 cm, lower than that from 64 cm. Now consider two pairs of fundamental frequencies (indeed from other lengths): 90 Hz - 80 Hz, and, 81 Hz - 64 Hz. Our subjective sensation of ratio is also 2 times of that of , but sound pitch of 90 Hz is higher than of 80 Hz, and of 81 Hz higher than of 64 Hz. The greater the string's length, the lesser the fundamental frequency, and the lower the pitch.

Let A and B be two periodic sounds with stable fundamental frequencies (the stimuli): ffreqA and ffreqB. Then, the ratio is said ratio interval. Our subjective sensation of the interval between these sounds, is proportional to .

Let C and D be two other periodic sounds with stable fundamental frequencies: ffreqC and ffreqD. Their ratio interval is . Let (see above, logarithms, second example, and below, main formula for d = 1). Then . Our subjective sensation of sound interval A-B (represented by ), is proportional, by proportion m, to our subjective sensation (represented by ) of sound interval C-D. Proportion m is magnitude, and unit for tempered interval A-B.

Indeed, if we multiply in last equation, m by d, , and divide by d, then m' is magnitude and is unit, as with every quantity, e.g. length L = 5 m. If magnitude 5 is multiplied by 100, and m (certain length, serving as unit) divided by 100 that is cm, then L = 500 cm.

Let t(r) tempered interval of ratio interval r. Then we have:

, where m is magnitude and unit of tempered interval. Main formula below is obtained from this one.

In the 2nd Example of the main formula, it is = 3.442..., that means, our subjective sensation of ratio interval (perfect fifth) is 3.442... times our subjective sensation of ratio interval (whole tone). Number 3.442... is magnitude, and tempered interval t () = log unit of tempered interval t () = log. Multiplying by 100 yields 344.2... hundredths of the tempered interval t ().

Note: Pitch depends to a lesser degree on the sound pressure level (loudness, volume) of the tone, especially at frequencies below 1,000 Hz and above 2,000 Hz. The pitch of lower tones gets lower as sound pressure increases. For instance, a tone of 200 Hz that is very loud seems one semitone lower in pitch than if it is just barely audible. Above 2,000 Hz, the pitch gets higher as the sound gets louder. See Pitch and frequency (last paragraph).

Main formula

where m is the magnitude of tempered interval, r the ratio interval, b the base interval (2 for octave) and d the divisor of base interval (1200 for cents).

Let see some examples of the formula:

1st Example: ratio interval , and unit cent (b = 2 and d = 1200), then m = 701.955... and t () = 701.955 cents.
2nd Example: ratio interval , and unit hundredth of the whole tone ( and d = 100), then m = 344.247... and t () = 344.247 hundredths of the whole tone.
3rd Example: ratio interval r = 2 (octave) and unit hundredth of the whole tone (b = and d = 100), then m = 588.4949... and t (2) = 588.4949 hundredths of the whole tone.
4th Example: ratio interval r = 2 (octave), and unit hundredth of Pythagorean limma (b = and d = 100), then m = 1330 and t (2) = 1330 hundredths of Pythagorean limma.
5th Example: ratio interval (idiosyncratic of Byzantine Music), and unit tenth of Pythagorean comma ( and d = 10), then m = 68.58... and t () = 68.58 tenths of Pythagorean comma.
6th Example: ratio interval (Pythagorean limma), and unit hundredth of the fourth ( and d = 100), then m = 18.1158... and t(r) = 18.1158 undredths of the fourth.
7th Example: ratio interval (whole tone), and unit hundredth of the fourth ( and d = 100), then m = 40.942... and t () = 40.942 hundredths of the fourth.
8th Example: ratio interval r = 1.359 (1 plus decimal part random number 359), and unit cent (b = 2 and d = 1200), then m = 531.05... and t (1.359) = 531.05 cents.
9th Example: ratio interval r = 0.052 (random decimal part), and unit cent (b = 2 and d = 1200), then m = -5118 and t (0.052) = -5118 cents.
10th Example: ratio interval r = 1, and unit cent (b = 2 and d = 1200), then m = 0 and t (1) = 0 cents.

Derived formula

where r, b, d, m, are as in the main formula, above. This can be obtained by taking the exponent of each side in the main formula.

1st Example: When b = 2 (octave), d = 1200, m = 100 (tempered semitone), then r = 1.0594630943592953, ratio interval of tempered semitone.
2nd Example: When b = (whole tone), d = 100, m = 344.247..., then r = 1.5 = (perfect fifth). Compare 2nd example in the main formula.
3rd Example: When b = , d = 100, m = 226, then r = 1.125 = (whole tone).
4th Example: When b = , d = 100, m = 1330, then r = 2 (octave). Compare 4th Example in the main formula.
5th Example: When b = , d = 100, m = 655 (random number), then r = 1.406859... = .
6th Example: When t(r) = -351 (random) cents (b = 2, d = 1200), then r = 0.816485969595 = .
7th Example: Let note NH = 250 Hz, and we need some note's frequency NH plus , plus , minus (yphesis) of t (tempered pythagorean lemma). Calculation is following:
Desired frequency = 250 Hz * * * = 250 Hz * 1.125 * 1.097393681 * 0.982778 = 303.3 Hz.

Notes

1. Magnitude (m) could be any real number.
2. Ratio interval (r) should be positive number: r > 0.
3. Base interval (b) should be greater than unit: b > 1.
4. Divisor (d) should be natural number: d = 1, 2, 3, ... .
When r < 0 <1, then m < 0.
When r = 1, then m = 0.
When r > 1, then m > 0.
As with logarithms in general.

Twelve-tone equal temperament

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

122 = 2112 ≈ 1.059463

This interval is divided into 100 cents.

Calculating absolute frequencies

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

Pn = Pa(122)(na)

In this formula Pn refers to the pitch, or frequency (usually in hertz), you are trying to find. Pa refers to the frequency of a reference pitch (usually 440Hz). n and a 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 to 440 Hz), and C4 (middle C) is the 40th key. These numbers can be used to find the frequency of C4:

P40 = 440(122)(40 − 49) ≈ 261.626 Hz

Historical comparison

[47]

YEAR NAME RATIO CENTS
400 He Chengtian 1.060070671 101.0
1580 Vincenzo Galilei 18:17 [1.058823529] 99.0
1581 Zhu Zaiyu 1.059463094 100.0
1585 Simon Stevin 1.059546514 100.1
1630 Marin Mersenne 1.059322034 99.8
1630 Johann Faulhaber 1.059490385 100.0

Comparison to just intonation

The intervals of 12-TET closely approximate some intervals in just intonation. The fifths and fourths are almost indistinguishably close to just.

In the following table the sizes of various just intervals are compared against their equal-tempered counterparts, given as a ratio as well as cents.

Name Exact value in 12-TET Decimal value in 12-TET Cents Just intonation interval Cents in just intonation Error
Unison (C) 1.000000 0 = 1.0000000 0.00 0
Minor second (C/D) 1.059463 100 = 1.06666… 111.73 −11.73
Major second (D) 1.122462 200 = 1.1250000 203.91 −3.91
Minor third (D/E) 1.189207 300 = 1.2000000 315.64 −15.64
Major third (E) 1.259921 400 = 1.2500000 386.31 +13.69
Perfect fourth (F) 1.334840 500 = 1.33333… 498.04 +1.96
Tritone (F/G) 1.414214 600 = 1.4000000 582.51 +17.49
Perfect fifth (G) 1.498307 700 = 1.5000000 701.96 −1.96
Minor sixth (G/A) 1.587401 800 = 1.6000000 813.69 −13.69
Major sixth (A) 1.681793 900 = 1.66666… 884.36 +15.64
Minor seventh (A/B) 1.781797 1000 = 1.77777… 996.09 +3.91
Major seventh (B) 1.887749 1100 = 1.8750000 1088.27 +11.73
Octave (C) 2.000000 1200 = 2.0000000 1200.00 0

Seven-tone equal division of the fifth

Violins, violas and cellos are tuned in perfect fifths (G – D – A – E, for violins, and C – G – D – A, for violas and cellos), which suggests that their semi-tone ratio is slightly higher than in the conventional twelve-tone equal temperament. Because a perfect fifth is in 3:2 relation with its base tone, and this interval is covered in 7 steps, each tone is in the ratio of 732 to the next (100.28 cents), which provides for a perfect fifth with ratio of 3:2 but a slightly widened octave with a ratio of ≈ 517:258 or ≈ 2.00388:1 rather than the usual 2:1 ratio, because twelve perfect fifths do not equal seven octaves.[48] During actual play, however, the violinist chooses pitches by ear, and only the four unstopped pitches of the strings are guaranteed to exhibit this 3:2 ratio.

Other equal temperaments

See also: Sonido 13

5 and 7 tone temperaments in ethnomusicology

Five and seven tone equal temperament (5-TET  Play  and 7-TET Play  ), with 240  Play  and 171  Play  cent steps respectively, are fairly common. A Thai xylophone measured by Morton (1974) "varied only plus or minus 5 cents," from 7-TET. A Ugandan Chopi xylophone measured by Haddon (1952) was also tuned to this system. According to Morton, "Thai instruments of fixed pitch are tuned to an equidistant system of seven pitches per octave ... As in Western traditional music, however, all pitches of the tuning system are not used in one mode (often referred to as 'scale'); in the Thai system five of the seven are used in principal pitches in any mode, thus establishing a pattern of nonequidistant intervals for the mode."[49]  Play  Indonesian gamelans are tuned to 5-TET according to Kunst (1949), but according to Hood (1966) and McPhee (1966) their tuning varies widely, and according to Tenzer (2000) they contain stretched octaves. It is now well-accepted that of the two primary tuning systems in gamelan music, slendro and pelog, only slendro somewhat resembles five-tone equal temperament while pelog is highly unequal; however, Surjodiningrat et al. (1972) has analyzed pelog as a seven-note subset of nine-tone equal temperament (133 cent steps  Play ). A South American Indian scale from a preinstrumental culture measured by Boiles (1969) featured 175 cent seven tone equal temperament, which stretches the octave slightly as with instrumental gamelan music.

5-TET and 7-TET mark the endpoints of the syntonic temperament's valid tuning range, as shown in Figure 1.

Various Western equal temperaments

Easley Blackwood's notation system for 16 equal temperament: intervals are notated similarly to those they approximate and there are fewer enharmonic equivalents.[50]  Play 
Comparison of equal temperaments from 9 to 25 (after Sethares (2005), p.58).[1]

24-EDO, the quarter tone scale (or 24-TET), was a popular microtonal tuning In the 20th century probably because it represented a convenient access point for composers conditioned on standard Western 12-EDO pitch and notation practices who were also interested in microtonality. Because 24-EDO contains all of the pitches of 12-EDO plus new pitches halfway between each adjacent pair of 12-EDO pitches, they could employ the additional colors without losing any tactics available in 12-tone harmony. The fact that 24 is a multiple of 12 also made 24-EDO easy to achieve instrumentally by employing two traditional 12-EDO instruments purposely tuned a quarter-tone apart, such as two pianos, which also allowed each performer (or one performer playing a different piano with each hand) to read familiar 12-tone notation. Various composers including Charles Ives experimented with music for quarter-tone pianos.

29-TET is the lowest number of equal divisions of the octave that produces a better perfect fifth than 12-TET. Its major third is roughly as inaccurate as 12-TET; however, it is tuned 14 cents flat rather than 14 cents sharp.

31 tone equal temperament was advocated by Christiaan Huygens and Adriaan Fokker. 31-TET has a slightly less accurate fifth than 12-TET, but provides near-just major thirds, and provides decent matches for harmonics up to at least 13, of which the seventh harmonic is particularly accurate.

34 EDO gives slightly less total combined errors of approximation to the 5-limit just ratios 3:2, 5:4, 6:5, and their inversions than 31 EDO does, although the approximation of 5:4 is worse. 34 EDO doesn't approximate ratios involving prime 7 well. It contains a 600-cent tritone, since it is an even-numbered EDO.

41-TET is the second lowest number of equal divisions that produces a better perfect fifth than 12-TET. Its major third is more accurate than 12-ET and 29-ET, about 6 cents flat.

53-TET is better at approximating the traditional just consonances than 12, 19 or 31-TET, but has had only occasional use. Its extremely good perfect fifths make it interchangeable with an extended Pythagorean tuning, but it also accommodates schismatic temperament, and is sometimes used in Turkish music theory. It does not, however, fit the requirements of meantone temperaments, which put good thirds within easy reach via the cycle of fifths. In 53-TET the very consonant thirds would be reached instead by strange enharmonic relationships like C-F, as it is an example of schismatic temperament. A consequence of this is that chord progressions like I-vi-ii-V-I won't land you back where you started in 53-TET, but rather one 53-tone step flat (unless the motion by I-vi wasn't by the 5-limit minor third).

72-TET approximates many just intonation intervals well, even into the 7-limit and 11-limit, such as 7:4, 9:7, 11:5, 11:6 and 11:7. 72-TET has been taught, written and performed in practice by Joe Maneri and his students (whose atonal inclinations interestingly typically avoid any reference to just intonation whatsoever). It can be considered an extension of 12 EDO because 72 is a multiple of 12. 72 EDO has a smallest interval that is six times smaller than the smallest interval of 12 EDO and therefore contains six copies of 12 EDO starting on different pitches. It also contains three copies of 24 EDO and two copies of 36 EDO, which are themselves multiples of 12 EDO.

Other equal divisions of the octave that have found occasional use include, 15-TET, 17-TET, 19-TET and 22-TET.

2, 5, 12, 41, 53, 306, 665 and 15601 are denominators of first convergents of log2(3), so 2, 5, 12, 41, 53, 306, 665 and 15601 twelfths (and fifths), being in correspondent equal temperaments equal to an integer number of octaves, are better approximation of 2, 5, 12, 41, 53, 306, 665 and 15601 just twelfths/fifths than for any equal temperaments with less tones.[51][52]

1, 2, 3, 5, 7, 12, 29, 41, 53, 200... (sequence A060528 in the OEIS) is the sequence of divisions of octave that provide better and better approximations of the perfect fifth. Related sequences contain divisions approximating other just intervals.[53] It is noteworthy that many elements of this sequences are sums of previous elements.

This application: calculates the frequencies, approximate cents, and MIDI Pitch Bend values for any systems of Equal Division of the Octave. Note that 'rounded' and 'floored' produce the same MIDI Pitch Bend value.

Equal temperaments of non-octave intervals

The equal-tempered version of the Bohlen–Pierce scale consists of the ratio 3:1, 1902 cents, conventionally a perfect fifth and an octave, called in this theory a tritave ( play ), and split into a thirteen equal parts. This provides a very close match to justly tuned ratios consisting only of odd numbers. Each step is 146.3 cents ( play ), or 133.

Wendy Carlos created three unusual equal temperaments after a thorough study of the properties of possible temperaments having a step size between 30 and 120 cents. These were called alpha, beta, and gamma. They can be considered as equal divisions of the perfect fifth. Each of them provides a very good approximation of several just intervals.[54] Their step sizes:

Alpha and Beta may be heard on the title track of her 1986 album Beauty in the Beast.

Proportions between semitone and whole tone

In this section, semitone and whole tone may not have their usual 12-EDO meanings, as it discusses how they may be tempered in different ways from their just versions to produce desired relationships. Let the number of steps in a semitone be s, and the number of steps in a tone be t.

There is exactly one family of equal temperaments that fixes the semitone to any proper fraction of a whole tone, while keeping the notes in the right order (meaning that, for example, C, D, E, F, and F are in ascending order if they preserve their usual relationships to C). That is, fixing q to a proper fraction in the relationship qs = t also defines a unique family of one equal temperament and its multiples that fulfill this relationship.

For example, where k is an integer, 12k-EDO sets q = 12, and 19k-EDO sets q = 13. The smallest multiples in these families (e.g. 12 and 19 above) has the additional property of having no notes outside the circle of fifths. (This is not true in general; in 24-EDO, the half-sharps and half-flats are not in the circle of fifths generated starting from C.) The extreme cases are 5k-EDO, where q = 0 and the semitone becomes a unison, and 7k-EDO, where q = 1 and the semitone and tone are the same interval.

Once one knows how many steps a semitone and a tone are in this equal temperament, one can find the number of steps it has in the octave. An equal temperament fulfilling the above properties (including having no notes outside the circle of fifths) divides the octave into 7t − 2s steps, and the perfect fifth into 4ts steps. If there are notes outside the circle of fifths, one must then multiply these results by n, which is the number of nonoverlapping circles of fifths required to generate all the notes (e.g. two in 24-EDO, six in 72-EDO). (One must take the small semitone for this purpose: 19-EDO has two semitones, one being 13 tone and the other being 23.)

The smallest of these families is 12k-EDO, and in particular 12-EDO is the smallest equal temperament that has the above properties. Additionally, it also makes the semitone exactly half a whole tone, the simplest possible relationship. These are some of the reasons why 12-EDO has become the most commonly used equal temperament. (Another reason is that 12-EDO is the smallest equal temperament to closely approximate 5-limit harmony, the next-smallest being 19-EDO.)

Each choice of fraction q for the relationship results in exactly one equal temperament family, but the converse is not true: 47-EDO has two different semitones, where one is 17 tone and the other is 89, which are not complements of each other like in 19-EDO (13 and 23). Taking each semitone results in a different choice of perfect fifth.

Related tuning systems

Regular diatonic tunings

Figure 1: The regular diatonic tunings continuum, which include many notable "equal temperament" tunings (Milne 2007).[55]

The diatonic tuning in twelve equal can be generalized to any regular diatonic tuning dividing the octave as a sequence of steps TTSTTTS (or a rotation of it) with all the T's and all the S's the same size and the S's smaller than the T's. In twelve equal the S is the semitone and is exactly half the size of the tone T. When the S's reduce to zero the result is TTTTT or a five tone equal temperament, As the semitones get larger, eventually the steps are all the same size, and the result is in seven tone equal temperament. These two end points are not included as regular diatonic tunings.

The notes in a regular diatonic tuning are connected together by a cycle of seven tempered fifths. The twelve tone system similarly generalizes to a sequence CDCDDCDCDCDD (or a rotation of it) of chromatic and diatonic semitones connected together in a cycle of twelve fifths. In this case, seven equal is obtained in the limit as the size of C tends to zero and five equal is the limit as D tends to zero while twelve equal is of course the case C = D.

Some of the intermediate sizes of tones and semitones can also be generated in equal temperament systems. For instance if the diatonic semitone is double the size of the chromatic semitone, i.e. D = 2*C the result is nineteen equal with one step for the chromatic semitone, two steps for the diatonic semitone and three steps for the tone and the total number of steps 5*T + 2*S = 15 + 4 = 19 steps. The resulting twelve tone system closely approximates to the historically important 1/3 comma meantone.

If the chromatic semitone is two thirds of the size of the diatonic semitone, i.e. C = (2/3)*D, the result is thirty one equal, with two steps for the chromatic semitone, three steps for the diatonic semitone, and five steps for the tone where 5*T + 2*S = 25 + 6 = 31 steps. The resulting twelve tone system closely approximates to the historically important 1/4 comma meantone.

See also

References

Citations

  1. 1 2 Sethares compares several equal temperament scales in a graph with axes reversed from the axes here. (fig. 4.6, p. 58)
  2. The History of Musical Pitch in Europe p493-511 Herman Helmholtz, Alexander J. Ellis On The Sensations of Tone, Dover Publications, Inc., New York
  3. 1 2 Fritz A. Kuttner. p. 163.
  4. Fritz A. Kuttner. "Prince Chu Tsai-Yü's Life and Work: A Re-Evaluation of His Contribution to Equal Temperament Theory", p.200, Ethnomusicology, Vol. 19, No. 2 (May, 1975), pp. 163–206.
  5. Kenneth Robinson: A critical study of Chu Tsai-yü's contribution to the theory of equal temperament in Chinese music. (Sinologica Coloniensia, Bd. 9.) x, 136 pp. Wiesbaden: Franz Steiner Verlag GmbH, 1980. DM 36. p.vii "Chu-Tsaiyu the first formulator of the mathematics of "equal temperament" anywhere in the world
  6. 1 2 Robinson, Kenneth G., and Joseph Needham. 1962. "Physics and Physical Technology". In Science and Civilisation in China, vol. 4: "Physics and Physical Technology", Part 1: "Physics", edited by Joseph Needham. Cambridge: University Press. p. 221.
  7. Fritz A. Kuttner. p. 200.
  8. Owen Henry Jorgensen, Tuning (East Lansing: Michigan State University Press, 1991)
  9. The Formation of Chinese Civilization: An Archaeological Perspective, Zhang Zhongpei, Shao Wangping and others, Yale (New Haven Conn)and New World Press (Beijing),2005
  10. The Formation of Chinese Civilization, 2005 (opt cit), the Eastern Zhou and the Growth of Regionalism, Lu Liancheng, pp 140 ff
  11. J. Murray Barbour Tuning and Temperament p55-56, Michigan State University Press 1951
  12. 有关"七平均律"新文献著作的发现 [Findings of new literatures concerning the hepta – equal temperament] (in Chinese). Archived from the original on 27 October 2007. 'Hepta-equal temperament' in our folk music has always been a controversial issue.
  13. 七平均律"琐谈--兼及旧式均孔曲笛制作与转调 [abstract of About "Seven- equal- tuning System"] (in Chinese). From the flute for two thousand years of the production process, and the Japanese shakuhachi remaining in the production of Sui and Tang Dynasties and the actual temperament, identification of people using the so-called 'Seven Laws' at least two thousand years of history; and decided that this law system associated with the flute law.
  14. "Quantifying Ritual: Political Cosmology, Courtly Music, and Precision Mathematics in Seventeenth-Century China Roger Hart Departments of History and Asian Studies, University of Texas, Austin". Uts.cc.utexas.edu. Retrieved 2012-03-20.
  15. Science and Civilisation in China, Vol IV:1 (Physics), Joseph Needham, Cambridge University Press, 1962–2004, pp 220 ff
  16. The Shorter Science & Civilisation in China, An abridgement by Colin Ronan of Joseph Needham's original text, p385
  17. 1 2 Gene J. Cho "The Significance of the Discovery of the Musical Equal Temperament In the Cultural History," http://en.cnki.com.cn/Article_en/CJFDTOTAL-XHYY201002002.htm
  18. 1 2 "EQUAL TEMPERAMENT". University of Houston. Retrieved October 5, 2014.
  19. J. Murray Barbour, Tuning and Temperament Michigan University Press, 1951 p7
  20. "The division of Octave into twelve Semitones, and the transposition of scales have also been discovered by this intelligent and skillful nation" Hermann von Helmholtz On the Sensations of Tone as a Physiological basis for the theory of music, p 258, 3rd edition, Longmans, Green and Co, London, 1895
  21. Lau Hanson, Abacus and Practical Mathematics p389 (in Chinese 劳汉生 《珠算与实用数学》 389页)
  22. Galilei, V. (1584). Il Fronimo... Dialogo sopra l'arte del bene intavolare. G. Scotto: Venice, ff. 80–89.
  23. J. Murray Barbour Tuning and Temperament p8 1951 Michigan State University Press
  24. "Resound – Corruption of Music". Philresound.co.uk. Retrieved 2012-03-20.
  25. Giacomo Gorzanis, c. 1525 - c. 1575 Intabolatura di liuto. Geneva, 1982
  26. "Spinacino 1507a: Thematic Index". Appalachian State University. Archived from the original on 2011-07-25. Retrieved 14 June 2012.
  27. John Wilson, 26 Preludes, Diapason press (DP49, Utrecht)
  28. in "English Song, 1600–1675, Facsimile of Twenty-six Manuscripts and an Edition of the Texts" vol. 7, Manuscripts at Oxford, Part II. introduction by Elise Bickfoer Jorgens, Garland Publishing Inc., New York and London, 1987
  29. "Scintille de musica", (Brescia, 1533), p. 132
  30. "Van de Spiegheling der singconst, ed by Rudolf Rasch, The Diapason Press". Diapason.xentonic.org. 2009-06-30. Retrieved 2012-03-20.
  31. Thomas S. Christensen, The Cambridge history of western music theory p205, Cambridge University Press
  32. Gene Cho, The discovery of musical equal temperament in China and Europe – Page 223, Mellen Press
  33. Gene Cho, The discovery of musical equal temperament in China and Europe – Page 222, Mellen Press
  34. Thomas S. Christensen, The Cambridge history of western music theory p207, Cambridge University Press
  35. Thomas S. Christensen, The Cambridge history of western music theory p.78, Cambridge University Press
  36. "Lutes, Viols, Temperaments" Mark Lindley ISBN 978-0-521-28883-5
  37. Vm7 6214
  38. Andreas Werckmeister: Musicalische Paradoxal-Discourse, 1707
  39. Di Veroli, Claudio. Unequal Temperaments: Theory, History and Practice. 2nd edition, Bray Baroque, Bray, Ireland 2009, pp. 140, 142 and 256.
  40. Moody, Richard. “Early Equal Temperament, An Aural Perspective: Claude Montal 1836” in Piano Technicians Journal. Kansas City, USA, Feb. 2003.
  41. Helmholtz, Hermann L.F. Lehre von den Tonempfindungen… Heidelberg 1862. English edition: On the Sensations of Tone, Longmans, London, 1885, p.548.
  42. White, William Braid. Piano Tuning and Allied Arts. 1917, 5th enlarged edition, Tuners Supply Co., Boston 1946, p.68.
  43. Standing Waves on a String (Equations: 2 and 1)
  44. n. 8a
  45. Musical Ratio and Musical Proportion
  46. Mathematics & Music, after Pythagoras
  47. Date,name,ratio,cents: from equal temperament monochord tables p55-p78; J. Murray Barbour Tuning and Temperament, Michigan State University Press 1951
  48. Cordier, Serge. "Le tempérament égal à quintes justes" (in French). Association pour la Recherche et le Développement de la Musique. Retrieved 2 June 2010.
  49. Morton, David (1980). "The Music of Thailand", Musics of Many Cultures, p.70. May, Elizabeth, ed. ISBN 0-520-04778-8.
  50. Myles Leigh Skinner (2007). Toward a Quarter-tone Syntax: Analyses of Selected Works by Blackwood, Haba, Ives, and Wyschnegradsky, p.55. ISBN 9780542998478.
  51. "665edo". xenoharmonic (microtonal wiki). Retrieved 2014-06-18.
  52. "convergents(log2(3), 10)". WolframAlpha. Retrieved 2014-06-18.
  53. 3/2 and 4/3, 5/4 and 8/5, 6/5 and 5/3 (A054540);
    3/2 and 4/3, 5/4 and 8/5 (A060525);
    3/2 and 4/3, 5/4 and 8/5, 7/4 and 8/7 (A060526);
    3/2 and 4/3, 5/4 and 8/5, 7/4 and 8/7, 16/11 and 11/8 (A060527);
    4/3 and 3/2, 5/4 and 8/5, 6/5 and 5/3, 7/4 and 8/7, 16/11 and 11/8, 16/13 and 13/8 (A060233);
    3/2 and 4/3, 5/4 and 8/5, 6/5 and 5/3, 9/8 and 16/9, 10/9 and 9/5, 16/15 and 15/8, 45/32 and 64/45 (A061920);
    3/2 and 4/3, 5/4 and 8/5, 6/5 and 5/3, 9/8 and 16/9, 10/9 and 9/5, 16/15 and 15/8, 45/32 and 64/45, 27/20 and 40/27, 32/27 and 27/16, 81/64 and 128/81, 256/243 and 243/128 (A061921);
    5/4 and 8/5 (A061918);
    6/5 and 5/3 (A061919);
    6/5 and 5/3, 7/5 and 10/7, 7/6 and 12/7 (A060529);
    11/8 and 16/11 (A061416)
  54. Carlos, Wendy. "Three Asymmetric Divisions of the Octave". www.wendycarlos.com. Serendip LLC. Retrieved 1 September 2016.
  55. Milne, A., Sethares, W.A. and Plamondon, J.,"Isomorphic Controllers and Dynamic Tuning: Invariant Fingerings Across a Tuning Continuum", Computer Music Journal, Winter 2007, Vol. 31, No. 4, Pages 15-32.

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