cx1

First 10/4 scale = erlich11 <10 16 23 28| epimorphic

Properties

Notes10
Period1200.0 ¢
Just7-limit
Source Mailing lists
Referencehttps://yahootuninggroupsultimatebackup.github.io/tuning/topicId_65608.html#65610
Thread2 scales
Tone Tone (¢) Step Step (¢)
15/14 119 15/14 119
7/6 267 49/45 147
5/4 386 15/14 119
4/3 498 16/15 112
10/7 617 15/14 119
3/2 702 21/20 84
5/3 884 10/9 182
7/4 969 21/20 84
15/8 1088 15/14 119
2 1200 16/15 112

Similar scales

FileNotesRotationMax diff (¢)
xen17-erlich-dynamic-symmetrical-major 10 0 17.5
xen17-erlich-dynamic-symmetrical-minor 10 3 17.5
xen17-erlich-static-symmetrical-major 10 1 17.5
xen17-erlich-static-symmetrical-minor 10 2 17.5
jubilee10asym1 10 1 17.8
jubilee10sym1 10 1 17.8
xen18-erlich-pajara-10 10 1 19.0
xen18-erlich-srutal-10 10 6 20.9
vines_ovovo10eb5w6w7_0_D 10 2 24.9

Parent scales

FileNotesMax diff (¢)
diab17ascl 17 0.7
steldia 18 0.0
cpak19a 19 0.0
cpak19b 19 0.0
hahn19 19 0.0
metdia 19 0.0
meandia 21 0.0
diam7pluswoo 17 3.9
cpak22 22 0.0
xen18-schulter-didymic-1-4-17 17 5.4

Child scales

FileNotesMax diff (¢)
raven-JI 7 0.0
xen03-wilson-acute-05 5 0.0
xen07-harrison-thoughts-5 5 0.0
met24-quasi_5-EDO_F 5 2.3
xen10-wilson-purvi-02b-06 7 7.7
mavchrome3 7 7.7
xen10-wilson-purvi-02b-05 7 7.7
archytas8 8 11.6
Ethiopia_Anchihoye 5 15.6
xen18-erlich-negrisept-06 6 17.2
Mailing list post
From: Gene Ward Smith (2006-03-20)
Subject: Re: Boogie Woogie Tuning

--- In [email protected], "Paul G Hjelmstad" <paul.hjelmstad@...>
wrote:

> All from the simple boogie woogie!

Here it is in Scala format:

! boogie.scl
Paul Hjelmstad's boogie woogie scale
10
!
9/8
5/4
21/16
45/32
3/2
27/16
7/4
15/8
63/32
2

Three otonal tetrads, no utonal tetrads, not CS or epimorphic,
superparticular ratios as noted.

I found a number of ten-note seven limit epimorphic scales with four 
tetrads; here's one Paul Erlich found first:

! cx1.scl
First 10/4 scale = erlich11 <10 16 23 28| epimorphic
10
!
15/14
7/6
5/4
4/3
10/7
3/2
5/3
7/4
15/8
2
! [0, -1, -1], [0, -1, 0], [0, 0, 0], [0, 0, 1]

Quite a lot of musical possibilities in these relatively small 7-limit
JI scales, I think.
Full thread (9 messages)
From: Paul G Hjelmstad (2006-03-20)
Subject: Boogie Woogie Tuning

Take the standard 12-bar boogie-woogie. Let's use F major:

F A C Eb
Bb D F Ab
C E G Bb

Tune to the seven-limit and keep fifths. You get

12 15 18 21
4 5 6 7
36 45 54 63

Fit into one octave (F, G, Ab,A,Bb,C,D,Eb,E)
24, 27,28,30,32,36,40,42,45 and 63 (extra Bb)

Taking all the ratios, we find that they are all superparticular (n/n-
1)
9/8, 28/27, 15/14, 16/15, 9/8, 10/9, 21/20, 15/14, 16/15 (and the 
schisma for Bb/Bb 64/63)

You also get 8/7, 7/6,  6/5, 4/3, 3/2, 1/1, with multiple scale 
steps..

The first seven triangular numbers are used; 1/1, 3/2, 6/5, 10/9, 
15/14, 21/20, 28/27
Five of the squares are used: 1/1, 4/3, 9/8, 16/15 and 64/63

8/7 and 7/6 are the only ratios which are not squared or triangular 
superparticular ratios but they are still superparticular!

All from the simple boogie woogie!
From: Gene Ward Smith (2006-03-20)
Subject: Re: Boogie Woogie Tuning

--- In [email protected], "Paul G Hjelmstad" <paul.hjelmstad@...>
wrote:

> All from the simple boogie woogie!

Here it is in Scala format:

! boogie.scl
Paul Hjelmstad's boogie woogie scale
10
!
9/8
5/4
21/16
45/32
3/2
27/16
7/4
15/8
63/32
2

Three otonal tetrads, no utonal tetrads, not CS or epimorphic,
superparticular ratios as noted.

I found a number of ten-note seven limit epimorphic scales with four 
tetrads; here's one Paul Erlich found first:

! cx1.scl
First 10/4 scale = erlich11 <10 16 23 28| epimorphic
10
!
15/14
7/6
5/4
4/3
10/7
3/2
5/3
7/4
15/8
2
! [0, -1, -1], [0, -1, 0], [0, 0, 0], [0, 0, 1]

Quite a lot of musical possibilities in these relatively small 7-limit
JI scales, I think.
From: Paul G Hjelmstad (2006-03-20)
Subject: Re: Boogie Woogie Tuning

--- In [email protected], "Gene Ward Smith" <genewardsmith@...> 
wrote:
>
> --- In [email protected], "Paul G Hjelmstad" <paul.hjelmstad@>
> wrote:
> 
> > All from the simple boogie woogie!
> 
> Here it is in Scala format:
> 
> ! boogie.scl
> Paul Hjelmstad's boogie woogie scale
> 10
> !
> 9/8
> 5/4
> 21/16
> 45/32
> 3/2
> 27/16
> 7/4
> 15/8
> 63/32
> 2
> 
> Three otonal tetrads, no utonal tetrads, not CS or epimorphic,
> superparticular ratios as noted.
> 
> I found a number of ten-note seven limit epimorphic scales with 
four 
> tetrads; here's one Paul Erlich found first:
> 
> ! cx1.scl
> First 10/4 scale = erlich11 <10 16 23 28| epimorphic
> 10
> !
> 15/14
> 7/6
> 5/4
> 4/3
> 10/7
> 3/2
> 5/3
> 7/4
> 15/8
> 2
> ! [0, -1, -1], [0, -1, 0], [0, 0, 0], [0, 0, 1]
> 
> Quite a lot of musical possibilities in these relatively small 7-
limit
> JI scales, I think.
>
Thanks Gene. I think there is definitely a connection between
African tribal music that is in the 7-limit, and the roots
of jazz and blues, which is so definitely based on dominant seventh
chords. Your use of the <10 16 23 28| val is interesting - I take
it that epimorphic scales don't have to be equi-tempered?
From: Carl Lumma (2006-03-20)
Subject: Re: Boogie Woogie Tuning

> Thanks Gene. I think there is definitely a connection between
> African tribal music that is in the 7-limit, and the roots
> of jazz and blues, which is so definitely based on dominant seventh
> chords.

Hiya Paul- can you tell us what African music you're thinking of?

-Carl
From: Paul G Hjelmstad (2006-03-20)
Subject: Re: Boogie Woogie Tuning

--- In [email protected], "Carl Lumma" <clumma@...> wrote:
>
> > Thanks Gene. I think there is definitely a connection between
> > African tribal music that is in the 7-limit, and the roots
> > of jazz and blues, which is so definitely based on dominant 
seventh
> > chords.
> 
> Hiya Paul- can you tell us what African music you're thinking of?
> 
> -Carl
>
It was actually just a few posts back, even though I have
studied African music which goes as high as the 11-limit
and other completely different African music that believe it or not, 
uses 7-ET temperament. 


Here it is -

Message 65494

I don't know if this is what you meant but I can highly recommend 
listening to Tanzanian folk music, especially the way it was 
performed by the "Master Musicians of Tanzania" with their lead 
singer Hukwe Zawose. Almost everything they sang and played was in 
the simple 5-tone scale of 6:7:8:9:10:12.

Notice also that (6/5)/(7/6)=(8/7)/(10/9)=(9/7)/(5/4)=36/35
From: Gene Ward Smith (2006-03-20)
Subject: Re: Boogie Woogie Tuning

--- In [email protected], "Paul G Hjelmstad" <paul.hjelmstad@...>
wrote:

> Thanks Gene. I think there is definitely a connection between
> African tribal music that is in the 7-limit, and the roots
> of jazz and blues, which is so definitely based on dominant seventh
> chords. Your use of the <10 16 23 28| val is interesting - I take
> it that epimorphic scales don't have to be equi-tempered?

No, they simply have to map to something equi-tempered; it's closely
related to Constant Structure. If a scale has this property there is
more of an underlying logic in how the interval classes relate.
From: Carl Lumma (2006-03-21)
Subject: Re: Boogie Woogie Tuning

> > > Thanks Gene. I think there is definitely a connection between
> > > African tribal music that is in the 7-limit, and the roots
> > > of jazz and blues, which is so definitely based on dominant
> > > seventh chords.
> > 
> > Hiya Paul- can you tell us what African music you're thinking of?
> > 
> > -Carl
> >
> It was actually just a few posts back, even though I have
> studied African music which goes as high as the 11-limit
> and other completely different African music that believe it
> or not, uses 7-ET temperament. 
> 
> Here it is -
> 
> Message 65494
> 
> I don't know if this is what you meant but I can highly recommend 
> listening to Tanzanian folk music, especially the way it was 
> performed by the "Master Musicians of Tanzania" with their lead 
> singer Hukwe Zawose. Almost everything they sang and played was
> in the simple 5-tone scale of 6:7:8:9:10:12.

Oh yes.  But, and I could be wrong, I hardly think this is
tribal music.  I think it's a 20th-century thing, with
practioners who live in a more-or-less Western way.  Is that
wrong?

7-ET, yes, this is well established, and this is, if not tribal,
certainly pretty old.

11-limit?  Which music is that!?

-Carl
From: Paul G Hjelmstad (2006-03-21)
Subject: Re: Boogie Woogie Tuning

--- In [email protected], "Carl Lumma" <clumma@...> wrote:
>
> > > > Thanks Gene. I think there is definitely a connection between
> > > > African tribal music that is in the 7-limit, and the roots
> > > > of jazz and blues, which is so definitely based on dominant
> > > > seventh chords.
> > > 
> > > Hiya Paul- can you tell us what African music you're thinking 
of?
> > > 
> > > -Carl
> > >
> > It was actually just a few posts back, even though I have
> > studied African music which goes as high as the 11-limit
> > and other completely different African music that believe it
> > or not, uses 7-ET temperament. 
> > 
> > Here it is -
> > 
> > Message 65494
> > 
> > I don't know if this is what you meant but I can highly recommend 
> > listening to Tanzanian folk music, especially the way it was 
> > performed by the "Master Musicians of Tanzania" with their lead 
> > singer Hukwe Zawose. Almost everything they sang and played was
> > in the simple 5-tone scale of 6:7:8:9:10:12.
> 
> Oh yes.  But, and I could be wrong, I hardly think this is
> tribal music.  I think it's a 20th-century thing, with
> practioners who live in a more-or-less Western way.  Is that
> wrong?

I think one would have to ask an Ethnomusicologist about that.
It seems pretty tribal to me - think how flat 7 is to our ears.

> 
> 7-ET, yes, this is well established, and this is, if not tribal,
> certainly pretty old.
> 
> 11-limit?  Which music is that!?
> 
> -Carl
>

The 11-limit music is no longer is use. I read it in Encyclopedia
Britannica. I'll can look it up when I get home if you want.
From: Carl Lumma (2006-03-21)
Subject: Re: Boogie Woogie Tuning

> > > listening to Tanzanian folk music, especially the way it was 
> > > performed by the "Master Musicians of Tanzania" with their lead 
> > > singer Hukwe Zawose. Almost everything they sang and played was
> > > in the simple 5-tone scale of 6:7:8:9:10:12.
> > 
> > Oh yes.  But, and I could be wrong, I hardly think this is
> > tribal music.  I think it's a 20th-century thing, with
> > practioners who live in a more-or-less Western way.  Is that
> > wrong?
> 
> I think one would have to ask an Ethnomusicologist about that.
> It seems pretty tribal to me - think how flat 7 is to our ears.

Maybe our very own Daniel Wolf has something to add....

> > 11-limit?  Which music is that!?
> 
> The 11-limit music is no longer is use. I read it in Encyclopedia
> Britannica. I'll can look it up when I get home if you want.

Thanks!

-Carl

Raw file

! cx1.scl
First 10/4 scale = erlich11 <10 16 23 28| epimorphic
10
!
15/14
7/6
5/4
4/3
10/7
3/2
5/3
7/4
15/8
2
! [0, -1, -1], [0, -1, 0], [0, 0, 0], [0, 0, 1]
!
! https://yahootuninggroupsultimatebackup.github.io/tuning/topicId_65608.html#65610
!
! [info]
! source = Mailing lists
! file = tuning/messages/yahoo_tuning_messages_api_raw_55190-71650.json
! topic_id = 65608
! msg_id = 65610