lemba
Lemba temperament (4 down, 3 up)
Properties
| Notes | 8 |
| Period | 601.70049 ¢ |
| Just | No |
| Source |
Mailing lists
|
| Reference | https://yahootuninggroupsultimatebackup.github.io/tuning/topicId_56285.html#56285 |
| Thread | 1 scale |
| Tone (¢) |
Step (¢) |
| 91 |
91 |
| 140 |
49 |
| 231 |
91 |
| 280 |
49 |
| 371 |
91 |
| 462 |
91 |
| 511 |
49 |
| 602 |
91 |
Parent scales
Mailing list post
From: Herman Miller (2004-11-22)
Subject: New lemba example
I was playing around with the "lemba" tuning again (the <<6, -2, -2,
-17, -20, 1]] temperament, with TOP tuning P=601.7004928, G=230.8749260)
and came up with a little melody that sounded interesting, so I started
writing it down before I could forget it. By the time I got to the part
where it modulates to G, I'd forgotten the rest of it. But I've got a
few days vacation this week, so maybe I'll have time to figure out how
it goes.
I did a crude MIDI rendition of it and put it up on my web site:
http://www.io.com/~hmiller/midi/lemba2.mid
http://www.io.com/~hmiller/mp3/lemba2.mp3
One interesting thing is that most of these parallel sixths are actually
parallel octaves on the keyboard, since I'm using the 16-note per octave
DE scale (i.e., two 8-note MOS per octave).
Here's the Scala files I used to tune this, first the scl file:
! lemba.scl
!
Lemba temperament (4 down, 3 up)
8
!
90.92429
139.95064
230.87493
279.90128
370.82557
461.74985
510.77621
601.70049
and the kbm file to set it in the key of D:
! Linear mapping with D = 290 Hz
! Size:
0
! First MIDI note number to retune:
0
! Last MIDI note number to retune:
127
! Middle note where scale degree 0 is mapped to:
62
! Reference note for which frequency is given:
62
! Frequency to tune the above note to (floating point e.g. 440.0):
290.0
! Scale degree to consider as formal octave:
0
Full thread (1 messages)
From: Herman Miller (2004-11-22)
Subject: New lemba example
I was playing around with the "lemba" tuning again (the <<6, -2, -2,
-17, -20, 1]] temperament, with TOP tuning P=601.7004928, G=230.8749260)
and came up with a little melody that sounded interesting, so I started
writing it down before I could forget it. By the time I got to the part
where it modulates to G, I'd forgotten the rest of it. But I've got a
few days vacation this week, so maybe I'll have time to figure out how
it goes.
I did a crude MIDI rendition of it and put it up on my web site:
http://www.io.com/~hmiller/midi/lemba2.mid
http://www.io.com/~hmiller/mp3/lemba2.mp3
One interesting thing is that most of these parallel sixths are actually
parallel octaves on the keyboard, since I'm using the 16-note per octave
DE scale (i.e., two 8-note MOS per octave).
Here's the Scala files I used to tune this, first the scl file:
! lemba.scl
!
Lemba temperament (4 down, 3 up)
8
!
90.92429
139.95064
230.87493
279.90128
370.82557
461.74985
510.77621
601.70049
and the kbm file to set it in the key of D:
! Linear mapping with D = 290 Hz
! Size:
0
! First MIDI note number to retune:
0
! Last MIDI note number to retune:
127
! Middle note where scale degree 0 is mapped to:
62
! Reference note for which frequency is given:
62
! Frequency to tune the above note to (floating point e.g. 440.0):
290.0
! Scale degree to consider as formal octave:
0
Raw file
! lemba.scl
!
Lemba temperament (4 down, 3 up)
8
!
90.92429
139.95064
230.87493
279.90128
370.82557
461.74985
510.77621
601.70049
!
! https://yahootuninggroupsultimatebackup.github.io/tuning/topicId_56285.html#56285
!
! [info]
! source = Mailing lists
! file = tuning/messages/yahoo_tuning_messages_api_raw_55190-71650.json
! topic_id = 56285
! msg_id = 56285