122edo_1-6-cmt_31-tone

Properties

Notes31
Period1200.0 ¢
JustNo
Source Mailing lists
Referencehttps://yahootuninggroupsultimatebackup.github.io/tuning/topicId_71409.html#71441
Thread3 scales
Tone (¢) Step (¢)
20 20
89 69
108 20
177 69
197 20
216 20
285 69
305 20
325 20
393 69
413 20
482 69
502 20
521 20
590 69
610 20
679 69
698 20
718 20
787 69
807 20
826 20
895 69
915 20
984 69
1003 20
1023 20
1092 69
1111 20
1180 69
1200 20

Similar scales

FileNotesRotationMax diff (¢)
1-6-cmt_31-tone 31 0 0.2
55edo_1-6-cmt_31-tone 31 0 2.9
cbrat31 31 19 23.7
synstargam 31 20 23.7
circle31 31 6 24.0
vala 31 10 24.1
xen18-erlich-meantone-31 31 26 24.7

Parent scales

FileNotesMax diff (¢)
edo-55 55 2.9
xen18-erlich-ripple-35 35 10.3
xen18-erlich-compton-36 36 10.7
edo-67 67 2.3
xen18-erlich-catler-36 36 11.6
xen18-erlich-helmholtz-41 41 10.2
xen18-erlich-passion-37 37 11.9
xen18-erlich-passion-49 49 8.1
tenn41c 41 10.8
xen18-erlich-srutal-34 34 13.8

Child scales

FileNotesMax diff (¢)
xen07-chalmers-sixth-comma 19 0.1
qmean 12 1.7
CD16_17_Morocco 6 2.9
meanqr 12 3.5
xen15-chalmers-triadic-reversed-diamond-33-26 7 3.6
xen15-chalmers-triadic-reversed-diamond-33-28 7 3.6
xen15-chalmers-triadic-reversed-diamond-64-51 7 3.6
xen15-gilson-aristoxenus-diatonic-syntonon 7 3.9
xen15-chalmers-triadic-diamond-64-51 7 3.9
xen15-chalmers-triadic-diamond-13-11 7 4.0
Mailing list post
From: monz (2007-04-24)
Subject: Re: Request for historic tuning

Hi Jon,


--- In [email protected], "Jon Szanto" <jszanto@...> wrote:
>
> --- In [email protected], "Carl Lumma" <clumma@> wrote:
> > Because steampunk is all about what could have happened
> > if technology had taken a different route.  Typically
> > steampunk universes don't feature technology as it
> > actually existed in Victorian times, but rather, tech
> > which is in some sense competitive or better than what
> > we have today.
> 
> I see. Most of my readings have Victoriana as a definite
> jumping off point, and when still situated in a somewhat
> period fashion, retain a lot of those elements. I guess
> I am thinking of a branch of history, yet only a few years
> (or, at best, decades) beyond the branch. This is why
> I wanted to possibly retain a tuning that might have been
> in use or just pre-dated the time, yet with other appendages
> that might have developed 'otherwise'. Yeesh, cryptic again.
> 
> Anyhow, thanks for the suggestion, taking it under advisement.


Wow, the syncronicity is amazing! -- i had just decided to
offer you a couple of Scala .scl files as alternatives to
the real 1/6-comma meantone, and now i read your post about
how your alternate vision of Victoriana is the whole point!

Anyways, here they are ...

First, "historically correct" approximation to 1/6-comma
meantone: 55-edo, which is what Mozart's father taught, with 
9 commas per whole-tone and 5 commas per diatonic-semitone:

------------------------------------------------------
! 55edo_1-6-cmt_31-tone.scl
!

 31
!
 21.81818
 87.27273
 109.09091
 174.54545
 196.36364
 218.18182
 283.63636
 305.45455
 327.27273
 392.72727
 414.54546
 480.00000
 501.81818
 523.63637
 589.09091
 610.90909
 676.36363
 698.18182
 720.00000
 785.45454
 807.27273
 829.09091
 894.54545
 916.36364
 981.81818
 1003.63636
 1025.45455
 1090.90909
 1112.72727
 1178.18182
 2/1
----------------------------------------------------

Next, a really interesting tuning: 122-edo, which is a
much closer approximation to 1/6-comma meantone than 55-edo,
but which also offers a better mapping of prime-factor 5,
which means that you can also use it alternatively as an
approximation to 5-limit JI. The very-close-to-1/6-comma
meantone 5th is 71 degrees of 122, and the meantone mapping
of 5 (i.e., the major-3rd) is 40 degrees -- this mapping
tempers out the syntonic-comma and it really is thus a
meantone tuning. However, the "better" mapping of 5 is
39 degrees, which results in the syntonic-comma mapping
to 1 degree of 122-edo, thus this mapping behaves like JI.

Here's the .scl file for 122-edo as an approximation to
1/6-comma meantone ... compare these cents values with
those i gave in the .scl file for the real 1/6-comma meantone:

-------------------------------------------------------
! 122edo_1-6-cmt_31-tone.scl
!

 31
!
 19.67213
 88.52459
 108.19672
 177.04918
 196.72131
 216.39344
 285.24590
 304.91803
 324.59016
 393.44262
 413.11475
 481.96722
 501.63934
 521.31147
 590.16394
 609.83606
 678.68853
 698.36066
 718.03278
 786.88525
 806.55738
 826.22950
 895.08197
 914.75410
 983.60656
 1003.27869
 1022.95082
 1091.80328
 1111.47541
 1180.32787
 2/1
-------------------------------------------------------


-monz
http://tonalsoft.com
Tonescape microtonal music software
Full thread (38 messages)
From: Jon Szanto (2007-04-24)
Subject: Request for historic tuning

If one were to compose some music that would be a backdrop to
Victorian England, and possible stretching into Edwardian times (let
us just say from 1850 - 1915), what would be a plausible tuning other
than 12tet? One can think of early Elgar and various other composers,
maybe even G&S. I may be writing something like this, and there is no
reason to not use the opportunity to both explore (me), and enlighten
(listeners).

Try, if at all possible, to be succinct and as close to specs as
possible (i.e. no 379 EDO treatises, etc) - give me your favorite
choice, not an entire list. Bonus points if you can post data in .scl
format or give me the name in the Scala tuning archives...

Bestest,
Jon
From: Dave Keenan (2007-04-24)
Subject: Re: Request for historic tuning

--- In [email protected], "Jon Szanto" <jszanto@...> wrote:
>
> If one were to compose some music that would be a backdrop to
> Victorian England, and possible stretching into Edwardian times (let
> us just say from 1850 - 1915), what would be a plausible tuning other
> than 12tet? 

I've got bad news. I don't think any other is very plausible on
fixed-pitch instruments unless you're talking pipe organs. They last a
long time and aren't so easy to retune, so there may have been a few
still around in England in 1/4-comma meantone in that period.

Except of course there's always the Great Highland Bagpipe. It's
_still_ holding out against the 12-equal tide. Hoorah.

-- Dave Keenan
From: monz (2007-04-24)
Subject: Re: Request for historic tuning

Hi Jon,


--- In [email protected], "Jon Szanto" <jszanto@...> wrote:
>
> If one were to compose some music that would be a backdrop
> to Victorian England, and possible stretching into Edwardian
> times (let us just say from 1850 - 1915), what would be a
> plausible tuning other than 12tet? One can think of early
> Elgar and various other composers, maybe even G&S. I may
> be writing something like this, and there is no reason to
> not use the opportunity to both explore (me), and enlighten
> (listeners).
> 
> Try, if at all possible, to be succinct and as close to
> specs as possible (i.e. no 379 EDO treatises, etc) - give
> me your favorite choice, not an entire list. Bonus points
> if you can post data in .scl format or give me the name in
> the Scala tuning archives...


Darn, and the first tuning i thought of was 31920-edo!
... ok, just kidding.

Seriously, my choice would be 1/6-comma meantone.
I'm quite convinced by now that this was the standard
of intonation used in practice by orchestral musicians
during the 19th century and on into the first few
decades of the 20th -- more precisely, from c.1760-1930.

I don't have a .scl file of it handy, but over at the
Yahoo Tonescape Den Haag group i *have* posted
the whole set of 1/6-comma tunings for each tonic in
Tonescape .tuning format ... in case you're ready
to start composing with that. ;-)

If this helps, here's 1/6-comma meantone listed by
generator number. I've included all the notes you'd
need for any of the standard keys, from Cb-major on
the flat side (use generators -6 for Gbb to +24 for Ax)
to A#-minor on the sharp side (use generators -23 for 
Gbb to +7 for Ax). 

(use Options|Fixed Width Font to view correctly 
on the stupid Yahoo web interface)

1/6-comma meantone

gen. .. cents

+ 24 . 1160.895
+ 23 .. 462.524
+ 22 .. 964.154
+ 21 .. 265.783
+ 20 .. 767.412
+ 19 ... 69.042
+ 18 .. 570.671
+ 17 . 1072.301
+ 16 .. 373.930
+ 15 .. 875.559
+ 14 .. 177.189
+ 13 .. 678.818
+ 12 . 1180.447
+ 11 .. 482.077
+ 10 .. 983.706
+ 09 .. 285.336
+ 08 .. 786.965
+ 07 ... 88.594
+ 06 .. 590.224
+ 05 . 1091.853
+ 04 .. 393.482
+ 03 .. 895.112
+ 02 .. 196.741
+ 01 .. 698.371
+ 00 .... 0.000
- 01 .. 501.629
- 02 . 1003.259
- 03 .. 304.888
- 04 .. 806.518
- 05 .. 108.147
- 06 .. 609.776
- 07 . 1111.406
- 08 .. 413.035
- 09 .. 914.664
- 10 .. 216.294
- 11 .. 717.923
- 12 ... 19.553
- 13 .. 521.182
- 14 . 1022.811
- 15 .. 324.441
- 16 .. 826.070
- 17 .. 127.699
- 18 .. 629.329
- 19 . 1130.958
- 20 .. 432.588
- 21 .. 934.217
- 22 .. 235.846
- 23 .. 737.476 


-monz
http://tonalsoft.com
Tonescape microtonal music software
From: Jon Szanto (2007-04-24)
Subject: Re: Request for historic tuning

--- In [email protected], "Dave Keenan" <d.keenan@...> wrote:
> I've got bad news. I don't think any other is very plausible on
> fixed-pitch instruments unless you're talking pipe organs.

Hey babe, it's a brand new (old) world. Don't *assume* I'm speaking of
writing for instruments that exist out here, think virtual. I'm emulating.

If it means anything, start from true Victorian-era music and take a
line from there to steampunk. And back.

Maybe I should put it this way, since imagination (and not truly
historical veracity) is the key: how about likely tunings as one
*entered* the Victorian era, before they all dropped away like dead
intonational flies?

Sorry for being cryptic, it isn't on purpose!

All hail Choob Master!!

Jon
From: Charles Lucy (2007-04-24)
Subject: Re: [tuning] Re: Request for historic tuning.  A simple solution for Victorian tuning and easy for you to produce.

They would probably have been using 12edo, but if you want to use a  
meantone and have it be authentically English and in use in UK before  
that period, I have made it very easy for you.

Just go to:

http://www.lucytune.com/midi_and_keyboard/pitch_bend.html

and download the tuning codes for 49 different note assignments to  
LucyTune the most popular professional DAW's, in six different formats.

So you can then use a standard 12edo midi file and get the tuning  
adjusted by selecting which of the 49 options best suit your DAW and  
the sound that you want.




Charles Lucy [email protected]

-----  Promoting global harmony through LucyTuning  -----

For information on LucyTuning go to:  http://www.lucytune.com

LucyTuned Lullabies (from around the world):
http://www.lullabies.co.uk

Skype user = lucytune


On 24 Apr 2007, at 04:30, Dave Keenan wrote:

> --- In [email protected], "Jon Szanto" <jszanto@...> wrote:
> >
> > If one were to compose some music that would be a backdrop to
> > Victorian England, and possible stretching into Edwardian times (let
> > us just say from 1850 - 1915), what would be a plausible tuning  
> other
> > than 12tet?
>
> I've got bad news. I don't think any other is very plausible on
> fixed-pitch instruments unless you're talking pipe organs. They last a
> long time and aren't so easy to retune, so there may have been a few
> still around in England in 1/4-comma meantone in that period.
>
> Except of course there's always the Great Highland Bagpipe. It's
> _still_ holding out against the 12-equal tide. Hoorah.
>
> -- Dave Keenan
>
>
>
From: Gene Ward Smith (2007-04-24)
Subject: Re: Request for historic tuning

--- In [email protected], "Jon Szanto" <jszanto@...> wrote:
>
> --- In [email protected], "Dave Keenan" <d.keenan@> wrote:
> > I've got bad news. I don't think any other is very plausible on
> > fixed-pitch instruments unless you're talking pipe organs.
> 
> Hey babe, it's a brand new (old) world. Don't *assume* I'm speaking of
> writing for instruments that exist out here, think virtual. I'm 
emulating.

In that case, Monz's suggestion of 1/6-comma meantone
is a good one. Yse 55-et instead if that would be more
convenient.
From: Jon Szanto (2007-04-24)
Subject: Re: Request for historic tuning.  A simple solution for Victorian tuning and eas

Hi Charles,

--- In [email protected], Charles Lucy <lucy@...> wrote:
> I have made it very easy for you.

Geez, I know you mean well, but that is completely useless to me. I
don't use any of those DAWs, or any of those software instruments. And
I emphatically do NOT retune my music using pitch bends.

So thanks for the thought, I do appreciate the reply, just won't work
for me. And I realize that it is probably that non-12EDO tunings were
on their way out, but I'm also making a fantasy of a music where they
*didn't* succumb to 12E, and wonder what might be a likely starting point.

Ta,
Jon
From: Jon Szanto (2007-04-24)
Subject: Re: Request for historic tuning

Gene,

--- In [email protected], "Gene Ward Smith" <genewardsmith@...>
wrote:
> In that case, Monz's suggestion of 1/6-comma meantone
> is a good one.

Thanks, I'll look into that...

Cheers,
Jon
From: monz (2007-04-24)
Subject: Re: Request for historic tuning

Hi Jon,


--- In [email protected], "Jon Szanto" <jszanto@...> wrote:
>
> Gene,
> 
> --- In [email protected], "Gene Ward Smith" <genewardsmith@>
> wrote:
> > In that case, Monz's suggestion of 1/6-comma meantone
> > is a good one.
> 
> Thanks, I'll look into that...


I've made the Scale .scl file for you, using "A" as
the 1/1. Copy and paste everything between the horiztonal
lines below to a plain text file and save it with the name
i gave at the top or whatever other name makes sense to you.

-------------------------------------------------------
! 1-6-cmt_31-tone.scl
!

 31
!
 19.55257
 88.59433
 108.14690
 177.18867
 196.74124
 216.29381
 285.33557
 304.88814
 324.44071
 393.48248
 413.03505
 482.07681
 501.62938
 521.18195
 590.22371
 609.77629
 678.81805
 698.37062
 717.92319
 786.96495
 806.51752
 826.07010
 895.11186
 914.66443
 983.70619
 1003.25876
 1022.81133
 1091.85310
 1111.40567
 1180.44743
 2/1
---------------------------------------------------------

Since the pure .scl file doesn't have the note-names,
here's a list of them:

  0:          1/1           A          unison, perfect prime
  1:         19.553 cents   Bbb
  2:         88.594 cents   A#
  3:        108.147 cents   Bb
  4:        177.189 cents   B
  5:        196.741 cents   B
  6:        216.294 cents   Cb
  7:        285.336 cents   B#
  8:        304.888 cents   C
  9:        324.441 cents   C
 10:        393.482 cents   C#
 11:        413.035 cents   Db
 12:        482.077 cents   Cx
 13:        501.629 cents   D
 14:        521.182 cents   D
 15:        590.224 cents   D#
 16:        609.776 cents   Eb
 17:        678.818 cents   E
 18:        698.371 cents   E
 19:        717.923 cents   Fb
 20:        786.965 cents   E#
 21:        806.518 cents   F
 22:        826.070 cents   F
 23:        895.112 cents   F#
 24:        914.664 cents   Gb
 25:        983.706 cents   Fx
 26:       1003.259 cents   G
 27:       1022.811 cents   G
 28:       1091.853 cents   G#
 29:       1111.406 cents   Ab
 30:       1180.447 cents   Gx
 31:          2/1           A          octave

You'll be able to get Scala to show you this if you
choose the "Options" button and select "P31" notation,
and set "A" as the 1/1.


I personally much prefer playing with this in Tonescape,
but that's just me ... ;-)


-monz
http://tonalsoft.com
Tonescape microtonal music software
From: monz (2007-04-24)
Subject: Re: Request for historic tuning

Hi Jon,

--- In [email protected], "monz" <monz@...> wrote:

> Since the pure .scl file doesn't have the note-names,
> here's a list of them:
>
> <snip>
>
> You'll be able to get Scala to show you this if you
> choose the "Options" button and select "P31" notation,
> and set "A" as the 1/1.


Oops, my bad ... of course you should use "P55" notation,
and the toolbar button is marked "Opts". Sorry about that.

I randomly chose a Tolerance of 0.18 and it worked fine.
Here's the correct list of note names:

  0:          1/1           A         unison, perfect prime
  1:         19.553 cents   Bbb
  2:         88.594 cents   A#
  3:        108.147 cents   Bb
  4:        177.189 cents   Ax
  5:        196.741 cents   B
  6:        216.294 cents   Cb
  7:        285.336 cents   B#
  8:        304.888 cents   C
  9:        324.441 cents   Dbb
 10:        393.482 cents   C#
 11:        413.035 cents   Db
 12:        482.077 cents   Cx
 13:        501.629 cents   D
 14:        521.182 cents   Ebb
 15:        590.224 cents   D#
 16:        609.776 cents   Eb
 17:        678.818 cents   Dx
 18:        698.371 cents   E
 19:        717.923 cents   Fb
 20:        786.965 cents   E#
 21:        806.518 cents   F
 22:        826.070 cents   Gbb
 23:        895.112 cents   F#
 24:        914.664 cents   Gb
 25:        983.706 cents   Fx
 26:       1003.259 cents   G
 27:       1022.811 cents   Abb
 28:       1091.853 cents   G#
 29:       1111.406 cents   Ab
 30:       1180.447 cents   Gx
 31:          2/1           A         octave


-monz
http://tonalsoft.com
Tonescape microtonal music software
From: monz (2007-04-24)
Subject: Re: Request for historic tuning

--- In [email protected], "monz" <monz@...> wrote:
>
> Hi Jon,

> Here's the correct list of note names:
> 
>   0:          1/1           A         unison, perfect prime
>   1:         19.553 cents   Bbb
> <etc. - snip>


Of course, to see both the .scl file and this table
correctly on the stupid Yahoo web interface, you have
to click the Option|Use Fixed Width Font links.


-monz
http://tonalsoft.com
Tonescape microtonal music software
From: Tom Dent (2007-04-24)
Subject: Re: Request for historic tuning

You are (for me) pretty darn cryptic. What would be the point of
supposedly historical tuning if you don't intend to use any other
historical method of music-making? 

The historical method would be to take a 19th century piano, or not,
depending on whether you wanted it, get it tuned entirely by ear, take
string, woodwind and brass instruments likewise, put players behind
them and get them to use their ears. 

The result would NOT be describable by any mathematical system short
of specifying the individual frequency of each separate note in the piece.

I happened to look at an article by the violinist Roentgen in a late
19th century German musicology journal - he was pointing out that even
in the absence of a keyboard people often didn't play pure thirds like
Helmholtz said they oughtta, and also people played different pitches
for the same nominal in different musical contexts. 

Two examples: the first one was a perfect cadence prepared by a
suspension, C-B-C in the tenor over G-G-C in the bass. In that case he
said people commonly take a sharp leading note and G-B is impure. The
second was an imperfect cadence with G-C-B in the soprano over C-A-G
in the bass: in this case he said the final major third might well be
pure, as a point of rest.

So the tuning of each interval and each note *depends on the immediate
musical context*. Adaptive, but not always adaptive in the direction
of producing pure intervals. The easiest way to get that sort of
tuning is to use several musicians playing traditional instruments.

One thing I know is that Edward Elgar (and his father before him) did
a lot of piano tuning - that would have been in the 1860s onwards, and
probably some by-ear method of approximating 12ET, though one would
have to look at real historical evidence to see exactly what sort of
method. The big Jorgensen book has some evidence, though what he says
about Ellis' researches is seriously flawed (basically he massages the
numbers to fit his preconceptions of what a historical piano tuning
ought to have been) and his 'Broadwood' temperaments are pure fiction.

Try looking at 'Tuner's Guide #2' or 'Tuner's Guide #3' - based on
historical instructions from 1840 and basically quite close
approximations to 12ET. 
http://rollingball.com/images/TunersGuide2.gif

Basically if you want something to sound 'Victorian' then I can't see
how temperament can be much of a factor. What you might like to
consider are: timbre, use of vibrato (less) or portamento (more) in
string playing, amount of octave stretch (less) in piano tuning,
dichords rather than trichords, rubato ...

(Or you could go for the gambit of a randomly out-of-tune piano, which
should suggest 'olden days' in that most old pianos are indeed
randomly out-of-tune due to neglect and decay... but you'd have to be
quite shameless.)

~~~T~~~


--- In [email protected], "Jon Szanto" <jszanto@...> wrote:
>
> --- In [email protected], "Dave Keenan" <d.keenan@> wrote:
> > I've got bad news. I don't think any other is very plausible on
> > fixed-pitch instruments unless you're talking pipe organs.
> 
> Hey babe, it's a brand new (old) world. Don't *assume* I'm speaking of
> writing for instruments that exist out here, think virtual. I'm
emulating.
> 
> If it means anything, start from true Victorian-era music and take a
> line from there to steampunk. And back.
> 
> Maybe I should put it this way, since imagination (and not truly
> historical veracity) is the key: how about likely tunings as one
> *entered* the Victorian era, before they all dropped away like dead
> intonational flies?
> 
> Sorry for being cryptic, it isn't on purpose!
> 
> All hail Choob Master!!
> 
> Jon
From: Tom Dent (2007-04-24)
Subject: Re: Request for historic tuning

--- In [email protected], "Gene Ward Smith" <genewardsmith@...>
wrote:
>
> --- In [email protected], "Jon Szanto" <jszanto@> wrote:
> >
> > --- In [email protected], "Dave Keenan" <d.keenan@> wrote:
> > > I've got bad news. I don't think any other is very plausible on
> > > fixed-pitch instruments unless you're talking pipe organs.
> > 
> > Hey babe, it's a brand new (old) world. Don't *assume* I'm speaking of
> > writing for instruments that exist out here, think virtual. I'm 
> emulating.
> 
> In that case, Monz's suggestion of 1/6-comma meantone
> is a good one. Yse 55-et instead if that would be more
> convenient.
>

Wouldn't get you anywhere if you wanted to 'emulate' the expressively
adaptive aspect of tuning which is allowed by an artistically aware
choice of intervals anywhere between 5-limit and Pythagorean (which is
what Roentgen's article as a whole implies) and was almost certainly
used by string players and singers.

It's a myth that anyone, except players of fixed-pitch instruments,
ever 'succumbed to 12ET'. (A corollary of the range of choice in
intonation is that no-one 'succumbed' to 55ET either.)

Another article in the same journal is by Max Planck, who reports from
personal experience that unaccompanied choirs singing a particular
piece by Schuetz as purely as possible are subject to comma drift.
Draw your own conclusions.

~~~T~~~
From: Carl Lumma (2007-04-24)
Subject: Re: Request for historic tuning

> It's a myth that anyone, except players of fixed-pitch instruments,
> ever 'succumbed to 12ET'. (A corollary of the range of choice in
> intonation is that no-one 'succumbed' to 55ET either.)

I couldn't agree more.

-Carl
From: monz (2007-04-24)
Subject: Re: Request for historic tuning

Hi Tom,


--- In [email protected], "Tom Dent" <stringph@...> wrote:
>
> --- In [email protected], "Gene Ward Smith" <genewardsmith@>
> wrote:
> >
> > In that case, Monz's suggestion of 1/6-comma meantone
> > is a good one. Yse 55-et instead if that would be more
> > convenient.
> >
> 
> Wouldn't get you anywhere if you wanted to 'emulate' the
> expressively adaptive aspect of tuning which is allowed
> by an artistically aware choice of intervals anywhere
> between 5-limit and Pythagorean (which is what Roentgen's
> article as a whole implies) and was almost certainly
> used by string players and singers.
> 
> It's a myth that anyone, except players of fixed-pitch
> instruments, ever 'succumbed to 12ET'. (A corollary of
> the range of choice in intonation is that no-one
> 'succumbed' to 55ET either.)
> 
> Another article in the same journal is by Max Planck,
> who reports from personal experience that unaccompanied
> choirs singing a particular piece by Schuetz as purely
> as possible are subject to comma drift.
> Draw your own conclusions.


Everything you say is true. And for sure, any
_a capella_ choir singing music based on triadic harmony
and trying to make their intonation "pure" is going
to tend to drift downward in pitch -- it's a natural
result of moving from the II chord to the V chord in
a major key.

However, it is also true that orchestral musicians during
this period were often taught during their training that
the whole-tone was to be divided into 9 "commas", and
that there were two different sizes of semitones: the
chromatic-semitone of 4 commas, and the diatonic-semitone
of 5 commas. Assuming octave-equivalence and that the
octave is comprised of 5 whole-tones and 2 diatonic-semitones,
that is a total of (5*9)+(2*5) = 45+10 = 55 commas per
octave, which means 55-edo.

Our standard notational system uses a chain-of-5ths
that runs from Gbb to Ax, which is a total of 31 different
notes. So no composer during the "common-practice" period
ever used the entire 55-edo -- only at most a 31-tone
subset of it, and actually usually a far smaller subset.

I've discovered that in every Beethoven orchestral piece 
that i've so far made into a Tonescape file, he used
a 15-tone set of notated pitches, with 3 pairs of
enharmonic equivalents along with the 9 other individual
notes -- and they all follow the same Lattice structure.
This leads me to believe that there's something to this.

And i wish to emphasize one phrase i wrote above:
"orchestral musicians during this period were often taught
during their training". As a trained musician -- but one
who learned 12-edo instead of 55-edo -- i can testify to
how ingrained this kind of thinking becomes. If musicians
during this period were taught 55-edo, then believe me,
that's what they tended to play. 

Of course the "expressive intonation" was also taught,
and that would tend to bend some pitches toward the
pythagorean version of the notated pitch. So indeed
the intonational system would be quite messy and chaotic,
as you describe. But for this period, a 55-edo basis
is far preferred to 12-edo for orchestral instruments
(or their digital emulations).


In case you haven't seen it, i have a webpage about this:

http://tonalsoft.com/enc/number/55edo/55edo.htm

It's quite sloppy and badly needs to be edited, but
knowing your penchant for scholarship, i'd like to 
direct you to the last part of it, which quotes Mozart's
actual teaching of intonation, and it is indeed meantone.
Altho Mozart himself never specified the 55-edo sizes
in this notebook, his father Leopold did teach exactly
that in his violin method.


-monz
http://tonalsoft.com
Tonescape microtonal music software
From: Jon Szanto (2007-04-24)
Subject: Re: Request for historic tuning

Monz,

--- In [email protected], "monz" <monz@...> wrote:
> I've made the Scale .scl file for you...

Thanks so much, you are a dear. This, along with the corrections, will
go in the (very small) hopper of things I'm collecting for this
project. I will, naturally, post any musical results down the road,
and give some due credit. However, this one is going to have a long
genesis, so it will be a while.

Thanks again Monz,
Jon
From: Jon Szanto (2007-04-24)
Subject: Re: Request for historic tuning

Hi Tom,

--- In [email protected], "Tom Dent" <stringph@...> wrote:
> You are (for me) pretty darn cryptic. What would be the point of
> supposedly historical tuning if you don't intend to use any other
> historical method of music-making? 

Note the last line in my post:
> > Sorry for being cryptic, it isn't on purpose!

Hey, don't want to cause consternation. There are still a few people
around here who know me, and I'm sorry that my odd post was a problem
for you. I assure you I'm not up to no good (or that I'm actually up
to good)! The closest parallel I can think of is the "steampunk"
culture/aesthetic: if one could imagine that, at some juncture in the
early Victorian period, technology, society, and culture took a very
different course, what would be the end-products of this time? So I am
very much creating an imaginary musical situation, but one that would
branch out of an actual period in history. Therefore, I asked the
patient and knowledgeable staff of Ye Olde Tuning List for
recommendations on tunings that might be likely candidates as a
"jumping off point".

I could sure as hell just write stuff either in 12EDO, or just
completely at random throw a tuning in there that had no connection
whatsoever. But that doesn't interest me. Which means that:

> (Or you could go for the gambit of a randomly out-of-tune piano, 
> which should suggest 'olden days' in that most old pianos are 
> indeed randomly out-of-tune due to neglect and decay... but 
> you'd have to be quite shameless.)

I'm not shameless. I just have a bit of a sense of humor, coupled with
a sense of adventure. And I was hoping maybe a couple souls could wrap
their head around that concept.

Cheers,
Jon
From: Jon Szanto (2007-04-24)
Subject: Re: Request for historic tuning

One last point,

--- In [email protected], "Tom Dent" <stringph@...> wrote:
> It's a myth that anyone, except players of fixed-pitch instruments,
> ever 'succumbed to 12ET'.

Uh, since Carl decided to play "pile on" with that comment, I simply
threw out that wording to look at the end result of our slightly more
recent continuum: at one point, there were many tunings, and at some
point Western classical music (and popular, I suppose) boiled down to
pretty much only 12EDO. Hope that makes it more clear, it is a broad
generalization, but does (I believe) reflect the reality. It wasn't
meant as a strong statement of a historic event or movement.

J
From: Charles Lucy (2007-04-24)
Subject: Re: [tuning] Re: Request for historic tuning - the difference from consonant.

I see that Monz has used a different format for you:


Here would be  the LucyTuned equivalents

0: 1/1 A unison, perfect prime
1: 54.084 cents Bbb
2: 68.451 cents A#
3: 122.535 cents Bb
4: 136.902 cents Ax
5: 190.986 cents B
6: 245.071 cents Cb
7: 259.436 cents B#
8: 313.521 cents C
9: 367.606 cents Dbb
10: 381.972 cents C#
11: 436.056 cents Db
12: 450.423 cents Cx
13: 504.507 cents D
14: 558.591 cents Ebb
15: 572.958 cents D#
16: 627.042 cents Eb
17: 641.409 cents Dx
18: 695.493 cents E
19: 749.577 cents Fb
20: 763.944 cents E#
21: 818.028 cents F
22: 872.113 cents Gbb
23: 886.479 cents F#
24: 940.563 cents Gb
25: 954.930 cents Fx
26: 1009.014 cents G
27: 1063.098 cents Abb
28: 1077.465 cents G#
29: 1131.549 cents Ab
30: 1145.916 cents Gx
31: 2/1 A octave

You will notice a wide divergence.

But then I suppose his choice will make more sense for your  
unpleasant "outta tune" intentions;-)

Charles Lucy [email protected]

-----  Promoting global harmony through LucyTuning  -----

For information on LucyTuning go to:  http://www.lucytune.com

LucyTuned Lullabies (from around the world):
http://www.lullabies.co.uk

Skype user = lucytune


On 24 Apr 2007, at 08:35, monz wrote:

> Hi Jon,
>
> --- In [email protected], "monz" <monz@...> wrote:
>
> > Since the pure .scl file doesn't have the note-names,
> > here's a list of them:
> >
> > <snip>
> >
> > You'll be able to get Scala to show you this if you
> > choose the "Options" button and select "P31" notation,
> > and set "A" as the 1/1.
>
> Oops, my bad ... of course you should use "P55" notation,
> and the toolbar button is marked "Opts". Sorry about that.
>
> I randomly chose a Tolerance of 0.18 and it worked fine.
> Here's the correct list of note names:
>
> 0: 1/1 A unison, perfect prime
> 1: 19.553 cents Bbb
> 2: 88.594 cents A#
> 3: 108.147 cents Bb
> 4: 177.189 cents Ax
> 5: 196.741 cents B
> 6: 216.294 cents Cb
> 7: 285.336 cents B#
> 8: 304.888 cents C
> 9: 324.441 cents Dbb
> 10: 393.482 cents C#
> 11: 413.035 cents Db
> 12: 482.077 cents Cx
> 13: 501.629 cents D
> 14: 521.182 cents Ebb
> 15: 590.224 cents D#
> 16: 609.776 cents Eb
> 17: 678.818 cents Dx
> 18: 698.371 cents E
> 19: 717.923 cents Fb
> 20: 786.965 cents E#
> 21: 806.518 cents F
> 22: 826.070 cents Gbb
> 23: 895.112 cents F#
> 24: 914.664 cents Gb
> 25: 983.706 cents Fx
> 26: 1003.259 cents G
> 27: 1022.811 cents Abb
> 28: 1091.853 cents G#
> 29: 1111.406 cents Ab
> 30: 1180.447 cents Gx
> 31: 2/1 A octave
>
>
>
>
From: Jon Szanto (2007-04-24)
Subject: Re: Request for historic tuning - the difference from consonant.

Hi Charles,

--- In [email protected], Charles Lucy <lucy@...> wrote:
> Here would be  the LucyTuned equivalents

Duly noted.

> You will notice a wide divergence.

Indeed.

> But then I suppose his choice will make more sense for your  
> unpleasant "outta tune" intentions;-)

I have NO such intentions, my good fellow! :)

Cheers,
Jon
From: Gene Ward Smith (2007-04-24)
Subject: Re: Request for historic tuning

--- In [email protected], "Tom Dent" <stringph@...> wrote:
>
> --- In [email protected], "Gene Ward Smith" <genewardsmith@>
> wrote:

> > In that case, Monz's suggestion of 1/6-comma meantone
> > is a good one. Yse 55-et instead if that would be more
> > convenient.
 
> Wouldn't get you anywhere if you wanted to 'emulate' the expressively
> adaptive aspect of tuning...

That isn't what Jon proposed to do.
From: Carl Lumma (2007-04-24)
Subject: Re: Request for historic tuning

I can't think of a better tuning for steampunk
than extended JI.

-Carl
From: Jon Szanto (2007-04-24)
Subject: Re: Request for historic tuning

Carl,

--- In [email protected], "Carl Lumma" <clumma@...> wrote:
> I can't think of a better tuning for steampunk
> than extended JI.

Because...?
From: monz (2007-04-24)
Subject: Re: Request for historic tuning

--- In [email protected], "monz" <monz@...> wrote:
>
> Hi Tom,
>
> <snip>
>
> However, it is also true that orchestral musicians during
> this period were often taught during their training that
> the whole-tone was to be divided into 9 "commas", and
> that there were two different sizes of semitones: the
> chromatic-semitone of 4 commas, and the diatonic-semitone
> of 5 commas. Assuming octave-equivalence and that the
> octave is comprised of 5 whole-tones and 2 diatonic-semitones,
> that is a total of (5*9)+(2*5) = 45+10 = 55 commas per
> octave, which means 55-edo.
> 
> <snip>
>
> In case you haven't seen it, i have a webpage about this:
> 
> http://tonalsoft.com/enc/number/55edo/55edo.htm
> 
> It's quite sloppy and badly needs to be edited, but
> knowing your penchant for scholarship, i'd like to 
> direct you to the last part of it, which quotes Mozart's
> actual teaching of intonation, and it is indeed meantone.
> Altho Mozart himself never specified the 55-edo sizes
> in this notebook, his father Leopold did teach exactly
> that in his violin method.


I did just add some things to the part of that page which
quotes Attwood's [Mozart's student] notebook: an English
translation of Mozart's explanation of where the semitones
are in the major-scale, and English translations of all of
Mozart's Italian interval names in the table he gives, and
an expanded example illustrating his description of each one.
 
 
-monz
http://tonalsoft.com
Tonescape microtonal music software
>
From: Carl Lumma (2007-04-24)
Subject: Re: Request for historic tuning

--- In [email protected], "Jon Szanto" <jszanto@...> wrote:
>
> Carl,
> 
> --- In [email protected], "Carl Lumma" <clumma@> wrote:
> > I can't think of a better tuning for steampunk
> > than extended JI.
> 
> Because...?

Because steampunk is all about what could have happened
if technology had taken a different route.  Typically
steampunk universes don't feature technology as it
actually existed in Victorian times, but rather, tech
which is in some sense competitive or better than what
we have today.

-Carl
From: Jon Szanto (2007-04-24)
Subject: Re: Request for historic tuning

--- In [email protected], "Carl Lumma" <clumma@...> wrote:
> Because steampunk is all about what could have happened
> if technology had taken a different route.  Typically
> steampunk universes don't feature technology as it
> actually existed in Victorian times, but rather, tech
> which is in some sense competitive or better than what
> we have today.

I see. Most of my readings have Victoriana as a definite jumping off
point, and when still situated in a somewhat period fashion, retain a
lot of those elements. I guess I am thinking of a branch of history,
yet only a few years (or, at best, decades) beyond the branch. This is
why I wanted to possibly retain a tuning that might have been in use
or just pre-dated the time, yet with other appendages that might have
developed 'otherwise'. Yeesh, cryptic again.

Anyhow, thanks for the suggestion, taking it under advisement.

Cheers,
Jon
From: monz (2007-04-24)
Subject: Re: Request for historic tuning

Hi Jon,


--- In [email protected], "Jon Szanto" <jszanto@...> wrote:
>
> --- In [email protected], "Carl Lumma" <clumma@> wrote:
> > Because steampunk is all about what could have happened
> > if technology had taken a different route.  Typically
> > steampunk universes don't feature technology as it
> > actually existed in Victorian times, but rather, tech
> > which is in some sense competitive or better than what
> > we have today.
> 
> I see. Most of my readings have Victoriana as a definite
> jumping off point, and when still situated in a somewhat
> period fashion, retain a lot of those elements. I guess
> I am thinking of a branch of history, yet only a few years
> (or, at best, decades) beyond the branch. This is why
> I wanted to possibly retain a tuning that might have been
> in use or just pre-dated the time, yet with other appendages
> that might have developed 'otherwise'. Yeesh, cryptic again.
> 
> Anyhow, thanks for the suggestion, taking it under advisement.


Wow, the syncronicity is amazing! -- i had just decided to
offer you a couple of Scala .scl files as alternatives to
the real 1/6-comma meantone, and now i read your post about
how your alternate vision of Victoriana is the whole point!

Anyways, here they are ...

First, "historically correct" approximation to 1/6-comma
meantone: 55-edo, which is what Mozart's father taught, with 
9 commas per whole-tone and 5 commas per diatonic-semitone:

------------------------------------------------------
! 55edo_1-6-cmt_31-tone.scl
!

 31
!
 21.81818
 87.27273
 109.09091
 174.54545
 196.36364
 218.18182
 283.63636
 305.45455
 327.27273
 392.72727
 414.54546
 480.00000
 501.81818
 523.63637
 589.09091
 610.90909
 676.36363
 698.18182
 720.00000
 785.45454
 807.27273
 829.09091
 894.54545
 916.36364
 981.81818
 1003.63636
 1025.45455
 1090.90909
 1112.72727
 1178.18182
 2/1
----------------------------------------------------

Next, a really interesting tuning: 122-edo, which is a
much closer approximation to 1/6-comma meantone than 55-edo,
but which also offers a better mapping of prime-factor 5,
which means that you can also use it alternatively as an
approximation to 5-limit JI. The very-close-to-1/6-comma
meantone 5th is 71 degrees of 122, and the meantone mapping
of 5 (i.e., the major-3rd) is 40 degrees -- this mapping
tempers out the syntonic-comma and it really is thus a
meantone tuning. However, the "better" mapping of 5 is
39 degrees, which results in the syntonic-comma mapping
to 1 degree of 122-edo, thus this mapping behaves like JI.

Here's the .scl file for 122-edo as an approximation to
1/6-comma meantone ... compare these cents values with
those i gave in the .scl file for the real 1/6-comma meantone:

-------------------------------------------------------
! 122edo_1-6-cmt_31-tone.scl
!

 31
!
 19.67213
 88.52459
 108.19672
 177.04918
 196.72131
 216.39344
 285.24590
 304.91803
 324.59016
 393.44262
 413.11475
 481.96722
 501.63934
 521.31147
 590.16394
 609.83606
 678.68853
 698.36066
 718.03278
 786.88525
 806.55738
 826.22950
 895.08197
 914.75410
 983.60656
 1003.27869
 1022.95082
 1091.80328
 1111.47541
 1180.32787
 2/1
-------------------------------------------------------


-monz
http://tonalsoft.com
Tonescape microtonal music software
From: Carl Lumma (2007-04-25)
Subject: Re: Request for historic tuning

> I see. Most of my readings have Victoriana as a definite jumping off
> point, and when still situated in a somewhat period fashion, retain a
> lot of those elements. I guess I am thinking of a branch of history,
> yet only a few years (or, at best, decades) beyond the branch. This is
> why I wanted to possibly retain a tuning that might have been in use
> or just pre-dated the time, yet with other appendages that might have
> developed 'otherwise'. Yeesh, cryptic again.

Sure, there are all sorts of ways to slice and dice it.  The
only drawback to being closer to the branch, as it were, is
the music will sound basically the same tuning-wise as what
we have today.

-Carl
From: Jon Szanto (2007-04-25)
Subject: Re: Request for historic tuning

--- In [email protected], "Carl Lumma" <clumma@...> wrote:
> The only drawback to being closer to the branch, as it were, is
> the music will sound basically the same tuning-wise as what
> we have today.

If you are saying that a performance in 1850 would "sound basically
the same tuning-wise as what we have today", well, hmmm, ok.
Nonetheless, while the tuning (as always) is just one component, it
seemed something interesting to look into. Which I've just done by
posting to the list.

Cheers,
Jon
From: Kraig Grady (2007-04-25)
Subject: Re: Request for historic tuning

I am always amazed at the difference in intonation practice even in 
my/our own life time.
 If one listens to a recording from the 40's  Orchestras have change 
very significantly.
 Even Jazz, maybe for the worse.
 Yesterday i listened to the earliest recording of Woody Herman and his 
herd playing the Ebony Concerto of Stravinsky
8/19/1946. It is the best version ever


      Posted by: "Jon Szanto"



Cheers,
Jon
If you are saying that a performance in 1850 would "sound basically
the same tuning-wise as what we have today", well, hmmm, ok.
Nonetheless, while the tuning (as always) is just one component, it
seemed something interesting to look into. Which I've just done by
posting to the list.

Cheers,
Jon
-- 
Kraig Grady
North American Embassy of Anaphoria Island <http://anaphoria.com/index.html>
The Wandering Medicine Show
KXLU <http://www.kxlu.com/main/index.asp> 88.9 FM Wed 8-9 pm Los Angeles
From: threesixesinarow (2007-04-25)
Subject: Re: Request for historic tuning

--- In [email protected], "Jon Szanto" <jszanto@...> wrote:
>
> --- In [email protected], "Carl Lumma" <clumma@> wrote:
> > Because steampunk is all about what could have happened
> > if technology had taken a different route.  Typically
> > steampunk universes don't feature technology as it
> > actually existed in Victorian times, but rather, tech
> > which is in some sense competitive or better than what
> > we have today.
> 
> I see. Most of my readings have Victoriana as a definite 
> jumping off point, and when still situated in a somewhat 
> period fashion, retain a lot of those elements. I guess 
> I am thinking of a branch of history, yet only a few years 
> (or, at best, decades) beyond the branch. This is why I 
> wanted to possibly retain a tuning that might have been 
> in use or just pre-dated the time, yet with other 
> appendages that might have developed 'otherwise'...

Earlier, but what about Farey's literal interpretation of 
Broadwood's outline from the Monthly Magazine, dividing the 
major semitone into 40 equal parts (reproduced in the 
Edinburgh Encyclopedia): "'with your hammer,' says Mr. 
Broadwood, 'lower down, or flatten C by the smallest 
possible gradations, until it becomes unison with B ; with 
a tolerably steady hand, and a few trials, you will be 
enabled to enumerate forty gradations of sound, which I 
call commas.'"

Clark
From: Andreas Sparschuh (2007-04-25)
Subject: A modern neoVictorian attempt, was: Re: Request for historic tuning

--- In [email protected], "Jon Szanto"  wrote:
>
> If one were to compose some music that would be a backdrop to
> Victorian England....
Just try that modern trial of attempting to remake that style:

in 5ths:
-6: _ _ _ Ab 415 Hz < 416 208 204 102
-5: _ _ _ Eb 312 156 78
-4: _ _ _ Bb 234 117
-3: 351 > F_ 350 175
-2: 525 > C_ 524 262 131
-1: _ _ _ G_ 393 > 392 196 98
00: _ _ _ D_ 294 147
+1: 441 > A_ 440 220 110
+2: 330 > E_ 329 > 328 164 82
+3: _ _ _ B_ 246 123
+4: 369 > F# 368 184 92
+5: _ _ _ C# 276 138
+6: 414 > G# 415 Hz

yields recombined in ascending order:

+1: A3 220 Hz
-4: Bb 234
+3: B3 246
-2: C4 262 'middle-C'
+5: C# 276 
00: D4 294
-5: Eb 312
+2: E4 329
-3: F4 350
+4: F# 368
-1: G4 393
+6: G# 415
+1: A4 440 Hz

> Bonus points if you can post data in .scl
> format or give me the name in the Scala tuning archives...
> 
!neoVictorian.scl
!
middle-C4 = 262 Hz or A4 = 440 Hz
!
12
!
138/131 ! C#
147/131 ! D
156/131 ! Eb
329/262 ! E
415/262 ! F
393/262 ! F#
415/262 ! G
220/131 ! A
234/131 ! Bb
246/131 ! B
2/1
!
!

sharpnesses of the 3rds 
on the empty violin strings: 
1:G 2:D 3:A 4:E

1: G < B < < Eb < G.
absolute pitches:
G_ 393 = 131*3
5*131*3= 3*655 < 656*3 328*3 164*3 82*3 41*3 = B 123 < 124 62 31
5 * 31 = 155 < Eb 156 78 = 26*3
5*26*3 = 3*130 < 131*3 = G 393.

That results in the relative diesis 128/125 subdistribution:
G 656/655 B 69.333.../68.333... Eb 131/130 G.

2: D < F# < Bb < D.
abs:
D 147
5*147 = 735 < F# 736 368 ... 46 23
5* 23 = 115 < B 117 = 39*3
5*39*3= 3*195 < 196*3 98*3 49*3 = D 147.
rel: 
D 736/735 F# 58.5/57.5 B 196/195 D.

3: A < C# < < F < A.
abs:
A 55
5* 55 = 275 < C# 276 139 69 < 70 35
5* 35 = 175 < F 176 88 44 22 11
5* 11 = A 55.
rel:
A 276/275 C# 70/69 F 176/175 A.

4: E < < G# < C < E.
abs:
E 329 < 330 165 < 166 83
5*83 = G# 415 < 416 208 ... 52 26
5*26 = 130 < C 131
5*131= 655 < E 658 329.
rel:
E 110.666../109.666.. G# (17/21+99)/(98+17/21) C 219.333../218.333.. E

~Cents approx. distribution of the 4 diesises 
represented as 3rds sharpnesses:

1: G<3C#
Attend:
7*Eb/C# is barely 92/91 ~18.9Cents sharp
-still yet used in Victorian era -
instead ~32.2C in 12-EDO.

have a lot of fun with that
A.S.
From: Brad Lehman (2007-04-25)
Subject: Re: Request for historic tuning

>     The historical method would be to take a 19th century piano, or not,
>     depending on whether you wanted it, get it tuned entirely by ear, take
>     string, woodwind and brass instruments likewise, put players behind
>     them and get them to use their ears.
> 
>     The result would NOT be describable by any mathematical system short
>     of specifying the individual frequency of each separate note in the
>     piece.

I concur!

In this olden book from c1908 (IIRC - a cheap Dover paperback reprint 
that my local library has),
http://www.amazon.com/Piano-Tuning-Simple-Accurate-Amateurs/dp/0486232670

the author presses the model of equal temperament, done by ear, 
obviously...but an interesting remark (to me) is that he has a complaint 
against some of the other contemporary tuners.  He says that some of 
them do too much favoring of the flat keys, and it's therefore not equal 
enough for him.  [NB: His complaint is theoretical, not about the 
musical results or the usefulness of temperaments so nuanced.]

To me, this suggests that some of those Victorian piano tuners, *using 
their own good taste for their customers' repertoire*, were doing 
something sort of like:

-  1/6 to 1/8 comma 5ths among the naturals;

- having the sharps rise rapidly (maybe with several pure or nearly-pure 
5ths starting somewhere around B-F#-C#ish);

- having the flats fall off with less tempering than that, around the 
region of C-F-Bb-Eb-Ab.  Maybe something like 1/8 to 1/12 comma, in 
those several 5ths generating the flats.


I've been testing this notion, empirically, by playing a bunch of Grieg 
and Brahms and Joplin (et al) on our church's piano, which I've had set 
up in a similar temperament for the past two years.  Tightest tempering 
is downtown in the naturals, and sharps rising quickly, and flats 
falling off less quickly.  Sure enough, it makes the keys of 1 to 6 
flats sound especially mellow and "favored", with a warm and rich sound. 
  It's barely unequal enough that an equal-temperament polemicist might 
notice and then complain about it.

I noticed the same type of thing (vis-a-vis key character) by taking 
Peter Watchorn's harpsichord recording of the WTC
http://www.musicaomnia.org/bachharpsichord.asp
and burning myself a CD of only the preludes, rearranged to be in 
circle-of-5ths order.  Whenever we get to the music in flats, going 
around the circle in either direction, the instrument sounds warmest and 
gentlest.

That circle of 5ths, in Heinichen's formulation from 1728:
http://www-personal.umich.edu/~bpl/larips/heinichen-circle.gif


Brad Lehman
From: Tom Dent (2007-04-25)
Subject: Re: Request for historic tuning

> In this olden book from c1908 (IIRC - a cheap Dover paperback reprint 
> that my local library has),
>
http://www.amazon.com/Piano-Tuning-Simple-Accurate-Amateurs/dp/0486232670
> 
> the author presses the model of equal temperament, done by ear, 
> obviously...but an interesting remark (to me) is that he has a
complaint 
> against some of the other contemporary tuners.  He says that some of 
> them do too much favoring of the flat keys, 

hmm, you'd need to work out what 'favouring' means here.

Could be: flat keys have better *fifths*, because the tempering was
mostly used up in tuning through the naturals and sharps

Could be: flat keys have better thirds than *both* the central keys
and the sharps. 

We need some context, it's suspicious when someone reads an apparently
vaguely worded historical source and interprets it in a way that just
happens to exactly fit their own favourite theory.

Using Amazon's sneak preview feature: the author says 
'some tuners even now will try to favour the flat keys because they
are used more by the mass of players who play little but popular
music, which is mostly written in keys having flats in the signature.
(Is this true? You'd need to check with an expert in historical
American popular music.)

In any case, the obvious implication is that the unequal tuners, if
they knew which side their bread was buttered, made the flat keys the
*best*, which is nothing to do with the sort of tuning that Brad is
promoting.

A lot of Noel Coward is in E flat major, but I'm not sure that means
much...

~~~T~~~
From: Brad Lehman (2007-04-25)
Subject: Re: Request for historic tuning

> http://www.amazon.com/Piano-Tuning-Simple-Accurate-
Amateurs/dp/0486232670
> > 
> > the author presses the model of equal temperament, done by ear, 
> > obviously...but an interesting remark (to me) is that he has a
> complaint 
> > against some of the other contemporary tuners.  He says that some 
of 
> > them do too much favoring of the flat keys, 
> 
> hmm, you'd need to work out what 'favouring' means here.
> 
> Could be: flat keys have better *fifths*, because the tempering was
> mostly used up in tuning through the naturals and sharps
> 
> Could be: flat keys have better thirds than *both* the central keys
> and the sharps. 

Good point.  Could also be: that "favouring" to him meant that the 
flat keys sounded MOST LIKE the character of equal temperament (his 
ideal/standard).

Who's to say that "better thirds" [presumably *major* thirds, and 
presumably "better" meaning "nearer to 5:4 pure"] would imply that 
the whole "flat key" as a scale is better?  Better for what?

What we do have -- whatever it means -- is that writer's complaint 
that some of his contemporary tuners "favoured" the flats.  It's 
evidence of *something* unequal, at least; and perhaps evidence of 
more, if we could only figure out his aesthetic sense and his 
expectations.

So, what is it that you think that writer was complaining about, in 
his quip against favouring the flat keys?  Some screwball inside-out 
(or rotated) system where the flat-generated 5ths got the most 
tempering, and the natural 5ths got the least or none?  Like anti-
Vallotti?


Brad Lehman
From: Gene Ward Smith (2007-04-25)
Subject: Re: Request for historic tuning

--- In [email protected], "Brad Lehman" <bpl@...> wrote:

> So, what is it that you think that writer was complaining about, in 
> his quip against favouring the flat keys?

It's impossible to say, but clearly the most likely
possibility is that flat keys had better thirds than
sharp keys.
From: Jon Szanto (2007-04-25)
Subject: A modern neoVictorian attempt, was: Re: Request for historic tuning

Dear Andreas,

> > If one were to compose some music that would be a backdrop to
> > Victorian England....
> Just try that modern trial of attempting to remake that style:

Thank you for all that work! I didn't mean for anyone to go to so much
trouble, but I will see if this approach bears any fruit.

Appreciation,
Jon
From: Charles Lucy (2007-04-25)
Subject: Re: [tuning] Re: Request for historic tuning - Flat or sharp instruments.

The key which instruments are easiest to play seems to follow a  
general pattern influenced by their physical form:

Stringed instruments usually have sharp (key) open strings; e.g.  
guitar, violin family, bass, etc.
Keyboard layout tends to be easier to play for flat keys.

It is a matter of ergonomics.

Noel Coward prolly wrote on keyboards.

Charles Lucy [email protected]

-----  Promoting global harmony through LucyTuning  -----

For information on LucyTuning go to:  http://www.lucytune.com

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Skype user = lucytune


On 25 Apr 2007, at 19:25, Tom Dent wrote:

>
>
> > In this olden book from c1908 (IIRC - a cheap Dover paperback  
> reprint
> > that my local library has),
> >
> http://www.amazon.com/Piano-Tuning-Simple-Accurate-Amateurs/dp/ 
> 0486232670
> >
> > the author presses the model of equal temperament, done by ear,
> > obviously...but an interesting remark (to me) is that he has a
> complaint
> > against some of the other contemporary tuners. He says that some of
> > them do too much favoring of the flat keys,
>
> hmm, you'd need to work out what 'favouring' means here.
>
> Could be: flat keys have better *fifths*, because the tempering was
> mostly used up in tuning through the naturals and sharps
>
> Could be: flat keys have better thirds than *both* the central keys
> and the sharps.
>
>
> A lot of Noel Coward is in E flat major, but I'm not sure that means
> much...
>

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