ri17isha

Rational intonation (RI) scale with some "17-ish" features (24 notes)

Properties

Notes24
Period1200.0 ¢
Just31-limit
Source Mailing lists
Referencehttps://yahootuninggroupsultimatebackup.github.io/tuning/topicId_20224.html#20224
Thread1 scale
Tone Tone (¢) Step Step (¢)
32/31 55 32/31 55
243/224 141 7533/7168 86
243/217 196 32/31 55
26/23 212 5642/5589 16
7/6 267 161/156 55
20/17 281 120/119 14
17/14 336 289/280 55
23/18 424 161/153 88
368/279 479 32/31 55
11160261/8388608 494 3113712819/3087007744 15
11160261/8126464 549 32/31 55
13/9 637 105644032/100442349 87
416/279 692 32/31 55
16777216/11160261 706 16252928/16120377 14
26040609/16777216 761 290619993038949/281474976710656 55
31/19 848 520093696/494771571 86
32/19 902 32/31 55
17/10 919 323/320 16
561/320 972 33/32 53
23/13 988 7360/7293 16
736/403 1043 32/31 55
48/25 1129 1209/1150 87
119/60 1186 595/576 56
2/1 1200 120/119 14

Similar scales

FileNotesRotationMax diff (¢)
reg705_24 24 0 8.9
neogeb24 24 0 10.7
lin76-34 24 0 14.2
peprmint 24 0 14.8
peprmintA 24 6 14.8
peprmint_key1 24 23 14.8
xen18-schulter-pure-11-14-24 24 12 14.9
simplemint24 24 0 15.5
O3-ri24 24 0 16.4
O3-24 24 0 16.7

Parent scales

FileNotesMax diff (¢)
17x2_55 34 1.3
secor29tolerant 29 13.1
Tolerant-Secor-29 29 14.5
septenarian29 29 15.2
htct29b 29 15.4
edo-68 68 3.3
edo-51 51 9.2
rodan41 41 13.7
xen03-wilson-partch 41 13.8
edo-45 45 12.4

Child scales

FileNotesMax diff (¢)
xen15-chalmers-triadic-reversed-diamond-33-28 7 3.8
xen03-wilson-acute-05 5 3.8
xen07-harrison-thoughts-5 5 3.8
xen18-secor-13-limit-2-tempered 7 3.9
pentatonic-proper_5-prime 5 3.9
met24-pentatonic-proper_5-prime_F 5 3.9
met24-quasi_5-EDO_F 5 3.9
CD07_16_bayati_Egypt 6 4.8
met24-pentatonic-5prime_A 5 4.9
79MOS_Suz-i_Dilara 7 5.5
Mailing list post
From: M. Schulter (2001-03-16)
Subject: Re: A 17-ish tuning

Hello, there, everyone, and in view of some recent discussions, here
is a somewhat "17-ish" scale for people to consider, with special
salutations to Robert Walker.

There are some ratios of 17, although the definition of "17-ness" may
rest largely in the eye of the beholder, or the ears of the listener.

This 24-note tuning is designed for two 12-note manuals, with
alternating notes placed on the two manuals. I give a Scala file, then
Scala's output showing the value of each ratio in cents.

There is also a tempered version of this scale which I have devised,
and will post after giving people a chance to consider this rational
version.

Here I might comment that one feature of a tuning proposed by
Kirnberger in 1766 plays a role by analogy in this scale, and also
that on looking through the Scala archives, I found that Manuel Op de
Coul had designed a scale with a certain conceptual affinity on some
level which actually shares one ratio in common placed in a
corresponding position.

My special thanks go also to Jacky Ligon and Dave Keenan, who in
sharing their often very different philosophies concerning rational
and/or just intonation systems, and providing most illustrative
examples, have both played a vital role in this creative process.

Here I present first a Scala file of the tuning showing only the
integer ratios, and suitable for import into the free Scala program
created by Manuel Op de Coul; and then output from Scala showing the
value of these ratios in cents.


--------------- Scala file starts on next line of text -------------

! ri17isha.scl
!
Rational intonation (RI) scale with some "17-ish" features (24 notes)
24
!
 32/31
 243/224
 243/217
 26/23
 7/6
 20/17
 17/14
 23/18
 368/279
 11160261/8388608
 11160261/8126464 
 13/9
 416/279
 16777216/11160261
 26040609/16777216
 31/19
 32/19
 17/10
 561/320
 23/13
 736/403
 48/25
 119/60
 2/1


------------- Scala output showing value of ratios in cents ----------

|
Rational intonation (RI) scale with some "17-ish" features (24 notes)
  0:          1/1            0.000000 unison, perfect prime
  1:         32/31           54.96445 Greek enharmonic 1/4-tone
  2:        243/224          140.9491
  3:        243/217          195.9136
  4:         26/23           212.2534
  5:          7/6            266.8710 septimal minor third
  6:         20/17           281.3584
  7:         17/14           336.1296 supraminor third
  8:         23/18           424.3645
  9:        368/279          479.3289
 10:   11160261/8388608      494.2411
 11:   11160261/8126464      549.2055
 12:         13/9            636.6179
 13:        416/279          691.5823
 14:   16777216/11160261     705.7594
 15:   26040609/16777216     761.1121
 16:         31/19           847.5230
 17:         32/19           902.4874 19th subharmonic
 18:         17/10           918.6421
 19:        561/320          971.9151
 20:         23/13           987.7471
 21:        736/403          1042.711
 22:         48/25           1129.328 classic diminished octave
 23:        119/60           1185.513
 24:          2/1            1200.000 octave


Most respectfully,

Margo Schulter
[email protected]
Full thread (3 messages)
From: M. Schulter (2001-03-16)
Subject: Re: A 17-ish tuning

Hello, there, everyone, and in view of some recent discussions, here
is a somewhat "17-ish" scale for people to consider, with special
salutations to Robert Walker.

There are some ratios of 17, although the definition of "17-ness" may
rest largely in the eye of the beholder, or the ears of the listener.

This 24-note tuning is designed for two 12-note manuals, with
alternating notes placed on the two manuals. I give a Scala file, then
Scala's output showing the value of each ratio in cents.

There is also a tempered version of this scale which I have devised,
and will post after giving people a chance to consider this rational
version.

Here I might comment that one feature of a tuning proposed by
Kirnberger in 1766 plays a role by analogy in this scale, and also
that on looking through the Scala archives, I found that Manuel Op de
Coul had designed a scale with a certain conceptual affinity on some
level which actually shares one ratio in common placed in a
corresponding position.

My special thanks go also to Jacky Ligon and Dave Keenan, who in
sharing their often very different philosophies concerning rational
and/or just intonation systems, and providing most illustrative
examples, have both played a vital role in this creative process.

Here I present first a Scala file of the tuning showing only the
integer ratios, and suitable for import into the free Scala program
created by Manuel Op de Coul; and then output from Scala showing the
value of these ratios in cents.


--------------- Scala file starts on next line of text -------------

! ri17isha.scl
!
Rational intonation (RI) scale with some "17-ish" features (24 notes)
24
!
 32/31
 243/224
 243/217
 26/23
 7/6
 20/17
 17/14
 23/18
 368/279
 11160261/8388608
 11160261/8126464 
 13/9
 416/279
 16777216/11160261
 26040609/16777216
 31/19
 32/19
 17/10
 561/320
 23/13
 736/403
 48/25
 119/60
 2/1


------------- Scala output showing value of ratios in cents ----------

|
Rational intonation (RI) scale with some "17-ish" features (24 notes)
  0:          1/1            0.000000 unison, perfect prime
  1:         32/31           54.96445 Greek enharmonic 1/4-tone
  2:        243/224          140.9491
  3:        243/217          195.9136
  4:         26/23           212.2534
  5:          7/6            266.8710 septimal minor third
  6:         20/17           281.3584
  7:         17/14           336.1296 supraminor third
  8:         23/18           424.3645
  9:        368/279          479.3289
 10:   11160261/8388608      494.2411
 11:   11160261/8126464      549.2055
 12:         13/9            636.6179
 13:        416/279          691.5823
 14:   16777216/11160261     705.7594
 15:   26040609/16777216     761.1121
 16:         31/19           847.5230
 17:         32/19           902.4874 19th subharmonic
 18:         17/10           918.6421
 19:        561/320          971.9151
 20:         23/13           987.7471
 21:        736/403          1042.711
 22:         48/25           1129.328 classic diminished octave
 23:        119/60           1185.513
 24:          2/1            1200.000 octave


Most respectfully,

Margo Schulter
[email protected]
From: shreeswifty (2001-03-16)
Subject: Re: [tuning] Re: A 17-ish tuning

Margo
can you explain the "manuals"
i am not familiar so much with the Kirnberger scale as i have been hard @
work with the Pagano/Beardsley 17 limit scale.
can you post a brief history of the scale?

Pat Pagano, Director
South East Just Intonation Society
http://indians.australians.com/meherbaba/
http://www.screwmusicforever.com/SHREESWIFT/
----- Original Message -----
From: M. Schulter <[email protected]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Thursday, March 15, 2001 11:49 PM
Subject: [tuning] Re: A 17-ish tuning


> Hello, there, everyone, and in view of some recent discussions, here
> is a somewhat "17-ish" scale for people to consider, with special
> salutations to Robert Walker.
>
> There are some ratios of 17, although the definition of "17-ness" may
> rest largely in the eye of the beholder, or the ears of the listener.
>
> This 24-note tuning is designed for two 12-note manuals, with
> alternating notes placed on the two manuals. I give a Scala file, then
> Scala's output showing the value of each ratio in cents.
>
> There is also a tempered version of this scale which I have devised,
> and will post after giving people a chance to consider this rational
> version.
>
> Here I might comment that one feature of a tuning proposed by
> Kirnberger in 1766 plays a role by analogy in this scale, and also
> that on looking through the Scala archives, I found that Manuel Op de
> Coul had designed a scale with a certain conceptual affinity on some
> level which actually shares one ratio in common placed in a
> corresponding position.
>
> My special thanks go also to Jacky Ligon and Dave Keenan, who in
> sharing their often very different philosophies concerning rational
> and/or just intonation systems, and providing most illustrative
> examples, have both played a vital role in this creative process.
>
> Here I present first a Scala file of the tuning showing only the
> integer ratios, and suitable for import into the free Scala program
> created by Manuel Op de Coul; and then output from Scala showing the
> value of these ratios in cents.
>
>
> --------------- Scala file starts on next line of text -------------
>
> ! ri17isha.scl
> !
> Rational intonation (RI) scale with some "17-ish" features (24 notes)
> 24
> !
>  32/31
>  243/224
>  243/217
>  26/23
>  7/6
>  20/17
>  17/14
>  23/18
>  368/279
>  11160261/8388608
>  11160261/8126464
>  13/9
>  416/279
>  16777216/11160261
>  26040609/16777216
>  31/19
>  32/19
>  17/10
>  561/320
>  23/13
>  736/403
>  48/25
>  119/60
>  2/1
>
>
> ------------- Scala output showing value of ratios in cents ----------
>
> |
> Rational intonation (RI) scale with some "17-ish" features (24 notes)
>   0:          1/1            0.000000 unison, perfect prime
>   1:         32/31           54.96445 Greek enharmonic 1/4-tone
>   2:        243/224          140.9491
>   3:        243/217          195.9136
>   4:         26/23           212.2534
>   5:          7/6            266.8710 septimal minor third
>   6:         20/17           281.3584
>   7:         17/14           336.1296 supraminor third
>   8:         23/18           424.3645
>   9:        368/279          479.3289
>  10:   11160261/8388608      494.2411
>  11:   11160261/8126464      549.2055
>  12:         13/9            636.6179
>  13:        416/279          691.5823
>  14:   16777216/11160261     705.7594
>  15:   26040609/16777216     761.1121
>  16:         31/19           847.5230
>  17:         32/19           902.4874 19th subharmonic
>  18:         17/10           918.6421
>  19:        561/320          971.9151
>  20:         23/13           987.7471
>  21:        736/403          1042.711
>  22:         48/25           1129.328 classic diminished octave
>  23:        119/60           1185.513
>  24:          2/1            1200.000 octave
>
>
> Most respectfully,
>
> Margo Schulter
> [email protected]
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
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From: [email protected] (2001-03-16)
Subject: Re: A 17-ish tuning

--- In tuning@y..., "M. Schulter" <MSCHULTER@V...> wrote:
> Hello, there, everyone, and in view of some recent discussions, here
> is a somewhat "17-ish" scale for people to consider, with special
> salutations to Robert Walker.
> 
> There are some ratios of 17, although the definition of "17-ness" 
may
> rest largely in the eye of the beholder, or the ears of the 
listener.
> 
> This 24-note tuning is designed for two 12-note manuals, with
> alternating notes placed on the two manuals. I give a Scala file, 
then
> Scala's output showing the value of each ratio in cents.
> 
> There is also a tempered version of this scale which I have devised,
> and will post after giving people a chance to consider this rational
> version.
> 
> Here I might comment that one feature of a tuning proposed by
> Kirnberger in 1766 plays a role by analogy in this scale, and also
> that on looking through the Scala archives, I found that Manuel Op 
de
> Coul had designed a scale with a certain conceptual affinity on some
> level which actually shares one ratio in common placed in a
> corresponding position.
> 
> My special thanks go also to Jacky Ligon and Dave Keenan, who in
> sharing their often very different philosophies concerning rational
> and/or just intonation systems, and providing most illustrative
> examples, have both played a vital role in this creative process.
> 
> Here I present first a Scala file of the tuning showing only the
> integer ratios, and suitable for import into the free Scala program
> created by Manuel Op de Coul; and then output from Scala showing the
> value of these ratios in cents.
> 

Margo,

Hello!


I've did a little deconstruction of your scale to view the inner 
symmetries, and it is very compelling to look inside!

Let's look at the rounded cents values for the consecutive intervals:

Degree Ratio               Rounded Consecutive
0:     1/1                 0
1:     32/31               55
2:     243/224             86
3:     243/217             55
4:     26/23               16
5:     7/6                 55
6:     20/17               14
7:     17/14               55
8:     23/18               88
9:     368/279             55
10:   11160261/8388608     15
11:   11160261/8126464     55
12:   13/9                 87
13:   416/279              55
14:   16777216/11160261    14
15:   26040609/16777216    55
16:   31/19                86
17:   32/19                55
18:   17/10                16
19:   561/320              53
20:   23/13                16
21:   736/403              55
22:   48/25                87
23:   119/60               56
24:   2/1                  14

And by considering the consecutive intervals (a somewhat melodic 
consideration for me) we find:

1.    Seven @ and average of 15 cents.
2.    Twelve @ an average of 55 cents.
3.    Five @ an average of 87 cents.

Now, I'm supposing that the odd scale degrees are for the lower 
manual, which has the following structure:

Degree Ratio                    Cents      Rounded Consecutive
0:        1/1                   0 
1:        32/31                 54.96445         55
3:        243/217               195.9136         141
5:        7/6                   266.871          71
7:        17/14                 336.1296         69
9:        368/279               479.3289         143
11:       11160261/8126464      549.2055         70
13:       416/279               691.5823         142
15:       26040609/16777216     761.1121         70
17:       32/19                 902.4874         141
19:       561/320               971.9151         69
21:       736/403               1042.711         71
23:       119/60                1185.513         143
24:       2/1                   1200             14

And the even degrees giving:

Degree Ratio                  Cents    Rounded Consecutive
          1/1                 0 0  
2:        243/224             140.9491     141
4:        26/23               212.2534     71
6:        20/17               281.3584     69
8:        23/18               424.3645     143
10:       11160261/8388608    494.2411     70
12:       13/9                636.6179     142
14:       16777216/11160261   705.7594     69
16:       31/19               847.523      142
18:       17/10               918.6421     71
20:       23/13               987.7471     69
22:       48/25               1129.328     142
24:       2/1                 1200         71

A "near MOS" for this manual.

Looking at the scale broken this way onto the two manuals, reveals 
other interesting properties as we can see above:

1.    One @ 14 cents.
2.    Thirteen @ an average of 70 cents
3.    Ten @ an average of 142 cents.

With this exploded view of the consecutive intervals, we can see how 
the 15 cents commas, play into the real-time "adaptive" ability of 
this scale for two manuals.

32/31 is it's most common interval, and has the remarkable property 
of having 29 fifths @ an average of 702.293 - and is a constant 
structure (I favor constant structures too). 

A lovely structure Margo, and thanks for sharing.  Please let us know 
when the tempered version is available - I'll be eargerly awaiting 
this.

In gratitude,

Jacky Ligon

P.S. Please let me know if I've missed anything special here.


> ------------- Scala output showing value of ratios in cents --------
--
> 
> |
> Rational intonation (RI) scale with some "17-ish" features (24 
notes)
>   0:          1/1            0.000000 unison, perfect prime
>   1:         32/31           54.96445 Greek enharmonic 1/4-tone
>   2:        243/224          140.9491
>   3:        243/217          195.9136
>   4:         26/23           212.2534
>   5:          7/6            266.8710 septimal minor third
>   6:         20/17           281.3584
>   7:         17/14           336.1296 supraminor third
>   8:         23/18           424.3645
>   9:        368/279          479.3289
>  10:   11160261/8388608      494.2411
>  11:   11160261/8126464      549.2055
>  12:         13/9            636.6179
>  13:        416/279          691.5823
>  14:   16777216/11160261     705.7594
>  15:   26040609/16777216     761.1121
>  16:         31/19           847.5230
>  17:         32/19           902.4874 19th subharmonic
>  18:         17/10           918.6421
>  19:        561/320          971.9151
>  20:         23/13           987.7471
>  21:        736/403          1042.711
>  22:         48/25           1129.328 classic diminished octave
>  23:        119/60           1185.513
>  24:          2/1            1200.000 octave
> 
> 
> Most respectfully,
> 
> Margo Schulter
> mschulter@v...

Raw file

! ri17isha.scl
!
Rational intonation (RI) scale with some "17-ish" features (24 notes)
24
!
 32/31
 243/224
 243/217
 26/23
 7/6
 20/17
 17/14
 23/18
 368/279
 11160261/8388608
 11160261/8126464 
 13/9
 416/279
 16777216/11160261
 26040609/16777216
 31/19
 32/19
 17/10
 561/320
 23/13
 736/403
 48/25
 119/60
 2/1
!
! https://yahootuninggroupsultimatebackup.github.io/tuning/topicId_20224.html#20224
!
! [info]
! source = Mailing lists
! file = tuning/messages/yahoo_tuning_messages_api_raw_19437-22049.json
! topic_id = 20224
! msg_id = 20224