Topic: The Eikosany's tonal center

1 scales

File Description Notes Period (ยข) Limit
eikocenter The 2-3-5-7-9-11 Eikosany plus a tonal center note 21 1200.0 11

Thread (18 messages)

From: genewardsmith (2010-08-25)
Subject: The Eikosany's tonal center

For the 2-3-5-7-9-11 3)6 Eikosany and similar combination product sets, much tends to be made of the lack of a strong tonal center inherent in the scale. For instance, a few years back there was this:

http://launch.dir.groups.yahoo.com/group/tuning/message/56325

Carl mentions in a followup that the Eikosany is "symmetrical around
a point at which there is no note." I think it is worth noting that if you add one note, the character of the scale changes to one with a built-in tonal center.

The eikosany can be split into three sections, the central portion and two symmetrically located wings, the seven wing and the eleven wing. In one transposition, the seven wing consists of the notes 35/32, 7/6, 21/16, 35/24, 7/4, 35/18. This is a transposed 5-limit scale. The 11-wing is similar, consisting of 33/32, 55/48, 11/8, 55/36, 55/32, 11/6, again purely 5-limit on transposition. The central portion is a more curious affair: 77/72, 77/64, 5/4, 385/288, 3/2, 77/48, 5/3, 15/8. This might seem like an arbitrary amalgam of the notes with numerators divisible by 77 with the 5-limit notes, unless we allow ourselves to tweak things by 385/384. Then we get 16/15, 6/5, 5/4, 4/3, 3/2, 8/5, 5/3, 15/8. This is the 3x3 square Euler genus, defined via divisors of 225, minus its central 1/1. Adding that to the Eikosany gives a 21-note scale which suddenly is not tonally ambiguous, as the central 1/1 ties everything together. Tempering by 385/384 is an obvious possibility, but even if we don't temper, 385/384 is small enough that you can't really escape it save by refusing to acknowledge or employ the approximations in question. Going solely by ear, you are stuck with them.

Here is the full 21-note scale:

! eikocenter.scl
The 2-3-5-7-9-11 Eikosany plus a tonal center note
21
!
33/32
77/72
35/32
55/48
7/6
77/64
5/4
21/16
385/288
11/8
35/24
3/2
55/36
77/48
5/3
55/32
7/4
11/6
15/8
35/18
2/1
From: Kraig Grady (2010-08-25)
Subject: Re: The Eikosany's tonal center

All of Ervs papers on the eikosany can be found in the Wilson 
archives http://anaphoria.com/wilson.html
under the subtitle
THE HEXANY , THE EIKOSANY, AND THE OTHER COMBINATION PRODUCT SETS

I probably without doubt have worked more with the eikosany than 
anyone. i made an entire ensemble of instruments in it and was 
almost my sole tuning for 15 years. Because of it i got rid of 
31 equal which is a good system to try it out in if one in 
interested before commiting one self.
  If functions better in just without a doubt.

  The eikosany allows certain structural possibilities and gives 
to each note a unique function in relationship to the whole. for 
instance the 1-3-5 will function harmonically as these three 
factors but function subharmonically as a a 7, a 9 and a 11 in 
relationship to other tones.
  Each tone will have this similar relation to the whole defined 
by the three factors that make it up.

  Yes you can divide it into 2,  3 parts and 6 parts and even 
get cubes which says allot about its multidimensional space
  If one wants it to be tonal one has only to hold a note , any 
note. half the structure will be related as a reciprocal 
cross-set. You have only to move beyond this if you wish to move.

  Once you reduce the structure to any 1/1 or spell it with 
reduced ratios i am afraid you would lose track of where you 
are. It is best to keep the three factors just as they are to 
easily find by omitting the common factors.

One could add a harmonic series and a subharmonic series at the 
1)6 set and the 6)6 set and with these additional 12 if quite 
well fills out a 31 tone matrix which you have to add an 
additional row at the top and bottom.This is the full 
dalessandro layout.

  This gives you also the 2)6 set and the 4)6 set each very 
interesting structures.
  If you fill in the two empty places in the keyboard you also 
get 2 1-3-7-9-11-15 eikosanies a 3/2 apart. these form good 22 
tone scales that can stand on their own .
  the briefest of outline of patterns can be found here
http://anaphoria.com/eikopapers.html
  Even with a single eikosany one can rotate the the factors in 
the centered pentad lattice and one can have bascially 120 
different versions (another 120 mirroring these) of the same 
pattern.

     As a structure also to have the most compact relationship 
possible there are numerous tetrachordal scales often one can 
modulated through a few cycles of 5ths.
  Since it is self mirroring the inversions of every thing is 
possible.






--- In [email protected], "genewardsmith" 
<genewardsmith@...> wrote:
 >
 > For the 2-3-5-7-9-11 3)6 Eikosany and similar combination 
product sets, much tends to be made of the lack of a strong 
tonal center inherent in the scale. For instance, a few years 
back there was this:
 >
 > http://launch.dir.groups.yahoo.com/group/tuning/message/56325
 >
 > Carl mentions in a followup that the Eikosany is "symmetrical 
around
 > a point at which there is no note." I think it is worth 
noting that if you add one note, the character of the scale 
changes to one with a built-in tonal center.
 >
 > The eikosany can be split into three sections, the central 
portion and two symmetrically located wings, the seven wing and 
the eleven wing. In one transposition, the seven wing consists 
of the notes 35/32, 7/6, 21/16, 35/24, 7/4, 35/18. This is a 
transposed 5-limit scale. The 11-wing is similar, consisting of 
33/32, 55/48, 11/8, 55/36, 55/32, 11/6, again purely 5-limit on 
transposition. The central portion is a more curious affair: 
77/72, 77/64, 5/4, 385/288, 3/2, 77/48, 5/3, 15/8. This might 
seem like an arbitrary amalgam of the notes with numerators 
divisible by 77 with the 5-limit notes, unless we allow 
ourselves to tweak things by 385/384. Then we get 16/15, 6/5, 
5/4, 4/3, 3/2, 8/5, 5/3, 15/8. This is the 3x3 square Euler 
genus, defined via divisors of 225, minus its central 1/1. 
Adding that to the Eikosany gives a 21-note scale which suddenly 
is not tonally ambiguous, as the central 1/1 ties everything 
together. Tempering by 385/384 is an obvious possibility, but 
even if we don't temper, 385/384 is small enough that you can't 
really escape it save by refusing to acknowledge or employ the 
approximations in question. Going solely by ear, you are stuck 
with them.
 >
 > Here is the full 21-note scale:
 >
 > ! eikocenter.scl
 > The 2-3-5-7-9-11 Eikosany plus a tonal center note
 > 21
 > !
 > 33/32
 > 77/72
 > 35/32
 > 55/48
 > 7/6
 > 77/64
 > 5/4
 > 21/16
 > 385/288
 > 11/8
 > 35/24
 > 3/2
 > 55/36
 > 77/48
 > 5/3
 > 55/32
 > 7/4
 > 11/6
 > 15/8
 > 35/18
-- 


/^_,',',',_ //^ /Kraig Grady_ ^_,',',',_
Mesotonal Music from:
_'''''''_ ^North/Western Hemisphere:
North American Embassy of Anaphoria Island <http://anaphoria.com/>

_'''''''_ ^South/Eastern Hemisphere:
Austronesian Outpost of Anaphoria 
<http://anaphoriasouth.blogspot.com/>

',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',

a momentary antenna as i turn to water
this evaporates - an island once again
From: genewardsmith (2010-08-25)
Subject: Re: The Eikosany's tonal center

--- In [email protected], Kraig Grady <kraiggrady@...> wrote:

> I probably without doubt have worked more with the eikosany than 
> anyone. i made an entire ensemble of instruments in it and was 
> almost my sole tuning for 15 years. Because of it i got rid of 
> 31 equal which is a good system to try it out in if one in 
> interested before commiting one self.
>   If functions better in just without a doubt.

But even so I doubt it. Did you notice that 385=5*7*11 can function as a 3? Once you allow yourself to think in that way, the eikosany looks very different.

>   The eikosany allows certain structural possibilities and gives 
> to each note a unique function in relationship to the whole. for 
> instance the 1-3-5 will function harmonically as these three 
> factors but function subharmonically as a a 7, a 9 and a 11 in 
> relationship to other tones.

What does "function subharmonically" mean?

>   Yes you can divide it into 2,  3 parts and 6 parts and even 
> get cubes which says allot about its multidimensional space.

But which multidimensional space? The 11-limit is rank five, which means the lattice of pitch classes is in a four dimensional space. But if you allow 385~384, so that the product 5*7*11 functions also as a 3, the space is reduced by one dimension, and the eikosany can be seen as a construct of pitch classes in three dimensions. In the middle of it, not part of the eikosany but exactly centrally located and with a dominating connection to the eikosany as a whole, is 9. The scale I gave, which plugs the hole in the middle, simply adds 9 to the eikosany.

>   If one wants it to be tonal one has only to hold a note , any 
> note.

A drone is hardly the most sophisticated way of introducing tonality. I think putting the 3x3 Euler genus ("Genus chromaticum veterum correctum") in the middle of it all with the rest symmetrically arranged around it changes the whole picture as far as tonality is concerned.

>   Once you reduce the structure to any 1/1 or spell it with 
> reduced ratios i am afraid you would lose track of where you 
> are. 

I don't see why, but you can add the 9, and then adopt a rule that 385 can be equated with 3. That's obviously more confusing than pure JI but that's the way the cookie then crumbles, as the approximation in question is sitting there in the notes of the scale in the form of the Euler genus, and etc, whether you acknowledge them or not; your ear will insist that a fifth 4.5 cents flat is a fifth of some kind. 

You can look at things in terms of the 7-limit JI lattice, with 11 coming in as 384/35, which is in the 3/35 pitch class, a note on the opposite side of a hexany from 1 and hence not complex at all.

Of course you can also temper everything, for instance by 284edo, where the fifth is now half a cent flat and the whole issue of two kinds of fifth in your scale goes away.
From: Kraig Grady (2010-08-26)
Subject: Re: The Eikosany's tonal center

Re: The Eikosany's tonal center

Gene~
In order to avoid a point by point argument
  This should at least confirm that what you are talking about 
was considered
  page 31of http://anaphoria.com/dal.PDF shows the small 
interval and how they conflict on a 31 tone mapping

If you then look at the http://anaphoria.com/xen11.PDF   [ The 
article was written in a haste at a time in which i was working 
long hours.] you will see on the marimba i indeed did temper out 
one of these small intervals in the middle of the marimba bar 23 
[ for fans of numerology]. Elsewhere i made a choice between one 
and the other.
  Erv strategy for keyboard mapping here is quite interesting 
where certain intervals can occur in some octaves and alternates 
in others.

  You could temper the entire structure if you wish with minute 
tempering stretching the  over 31 fifths.
  This possibility was discussed at the time and I decided 
against it. I would understand how this would appeal to some. 
The goal was to have instruments where other traditional 
instruments could be added  to play along with it and it seemed 
all the help one could get would be needed.

  So I decided for going for the pure version to give as many 
acoustical cues as possible .also no one had heard it and i was 
the first to tune up the full dallesandro CPS with James Wyness 
being the only other person i know who has.

It is conjecture at this point what would happen to such a 
microtemperment of this structure on either of our parts.
  It is like the "humanize' function on many software programs. 
It shifts everything slightly, but what happens if we try to 
humanize the humanize, and what is the limit before it causes 
problems.

We can all witness the Midi standard where tuning of 768[?] 
seemed like it would solve all.
  surely a difference of no more than a cent and a half could 
make any difference.
  It has been one of the greatest mistakes this field has 
endured and maybe set it back 30 years.

Certain aspects of working with this material are more apparent 
when one works with it on a day to day level.
I remember a discussion of putting a 22 tone scale a 
conventional keyboard and the list decided that it was better to 
skip the two notes at the end of the second octave in order to 
have the appearance look the same.

  That i had and used two such keyboards daily for years were 
ignored and the fact that many thing would no longer be 
possible, such as perfect fifths in one hand matter little.

There were many assumption i made and for all practical purposes 
seemed correct about the eikosany.
  It was only by working with the material did certain things 
come up and kick me in the face.
What i put up i did in order to having others not to fall into 
the same traps as myself.

  I placed the 1-3-7-9-11-15 22 tone eikosany in three different 
keyboard patterns over the years and the final one was thought 
to be the worse by the list and would still appear so. It was 
the best for what i was doing.
and would not go back to any of the previous versions.





-- 


/^_,',',',_ //^ /Kraig Grady_ ^_,',',',_
Mesotonal Music from:
_'''''''_ ^North/Western Hemisphere:
North American Embassy of Anaphoria Island <http://anaphoria.com/>

_'''''''_ ^South/Eastern Hemisphere:
Austronesian Outpost of Anaphoria 
<http://anaphoriasouth.blogspot.com/>

',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',

a momentary antenna as i turn to water
this evaporates - an island once again
From: genewardsmith (2010-08-26)
Subject: Re: The Eikosany's tonal center

--- In [email protected], Kraig Grady <kraiggrady@...> wrote:
>
> 
> Re: The Eikosany's tonal center
> 
> Gene~
> In order to avoid a point by point argument
>   This should at least confirm that what you are talking about 
> was considered
>   page 31of http://anaphoria.com/dal.PDF shows the small 
> interval and how they conflict on a 31 tone mapping

Nothing I said had anything very much to do with 31et, and I'm sorry if I left that impression. Erv has a lot of nifty diagrams of the eikosany and other scales as regular graphs, but I don't see anything relevant to my comments. I suppose two regular graph diagrams, one showing the JI relationships you get when adding 9 to the eikosany and the other showing the full complement of 385/384 tempered intervals might be illuminating.

385/384 tempering is quite a lot more accurate than 31et is able to demonstrate; you can get the error of the 11-limit to within two cents. But I wouldn't call it microtempering. My point however is that even if you do no tempering at all, a fifth flat by 385/384 is going to sound like a fifth. Hence after adding 9 you have a 21-note just intonation scale, with a clearly audible 9-note Euler genus in the middle of it dominating things so far as tonal centering goes, even though some of the fifths are flat by 4.5 cents (about 1/5 comma) and others are just. From that point of view the eikosany is a scale where the natural choice for 1/1 was omitted, rendering it more fragmented and tonally ambiguous.
From: sevishmusic (2010-08-26)
Subject: The Eikosany

Kraig,

you mentioned that Eikosanies should not be reduced to an octave, because it makes the patterns harder to understand. The 1-3-5-7-9-11 Eikosany scale in the Scala database looks like this:

3)6 1.3.5.7.9.11 Eikosany (1.3.5 tonic)
|
  0:          1/1               0.000  unison, perfect prime
  1:         33/32             53.273  undecimal comma, al-Farabi's 1/4-tone
  2:         21/20             84.467  minor semitone
  3:         11/10            165.004  4/5-tone, Ptolemy's second
  4:          9/8             203.910  major whole tone
  5:          7/6             266.871  septimal minor third
  6:         99/80            368.914
  7:         77/60            431.875
  8:         21/16            470.781  narrow fourth
  9:         11/8             551.318  undecimal semi-augmented fourth
 10:          7/5             582.512  septimal or Huygens' tritone, BP fourth
 11:        231/160           635.785
 12:          3/2             701.955  perfect fifth
 13:         63/40            786.422  narrow minor sixth
 14:         77/48            818.189
 15:         33/20            866.959
 16:          7/4             968.826  harmonic seventh
 17:          9/5            1017.596  just minor seventh, BP seventh
 18:         11/6            1049.363  21/4-tone, undecimal neutral seventh
 19:         77/40           1133.830
 20:          2/1            1200.000  octave

As a beginner, should I avoid using this Eikosany?

Besides this I am having many troubles writing my first piece of music using any Eikosany. My first problem is which one to use? My second problem is how do I know which notes should be used with others?

Many thanks if you can help me to understand!

Sean



--- In [email protected], Kraig Grady <kraiggrady@...> wrote:
>
> 
> Re: The Eikosany's tonal center
> 
> Gene~
> In order to avoid a point by point argument
>   This should at least confirm that what you are talking about 
> was considered
>   page 31of http://anaphoria.com/dal.PDF shows the small 
> interval and how they conflict on a 31 tone mapping
> 
> If you then look at the http://anaphoria.com/xen11.PDF   [ The 
> article was written in a haste at a time in which i was working 
> long hours.] you will see on the marimba i indeed did temper out 
> one of these small intervals in the middle of the marimba bar 23 
> [ for fans of numerology]. Elsewhere i made a choice between one 
> and the other.
>   Erv strategy for keyboard mapping here is quite interesting 
> where certain intervals can occur in some octaves and alternates 
> in others.
> 
>   You could temper the entire structure if you wish with minute 
> tempering stretching the  over 31 fifths.
>   This possibility was discussed at the time and I decided 
> against it. I would understand how this would appeal to some. 
> The goal was to have instruments where other traditional 
> instruments could be added  to play along with it and it seemed 
> all the help one could get would be needed.
> 
>   So I decided for going for the pure version to give as many 
> acoustical cues as possible .also no one had heard it and i was 
> the first to tune up the full dallesandro CPS with James Wyness 
> being the only other person i know who has.
> 
> It is conjecture at this point what would happen to such a 
> microtemperment of this structure on either of our parts.
>   It is like the "humanize' function on many software programs. 
> It shifts everything slightly, but what happens if we try to 
> humanize the humanize, and what is the limit before it causes 
> problems.
> 
> We can all witness the Midi standard where tuning of 768[?] 
> seemed like it would solve all.
>   surely a difference of no more than a cent and a half could 
> make any difference.
>   It has been one of the greatest mistakes this field has 
> endured and maybe set it back 30 years.
> 
> Certain aspects of working with this material are more apparent 
> when one works with it on a day to day level.
> I remember a discussion of putting a 22 tone scale a 
> conventional keyboard and the list decided that it was better to 
> skip the two notes at the end of the second octave in order to 
> have the appearance look the same.
> 
>   That i had and used two such keyboards daily for years were 
> ignored and the fact that many thing would no longer be 
> possible, such as perfect fifths in one hand matter little.
> 
> There were many assumption i made and for all practical purposes 
> seemed correct about the eikosany.
>   It was only by working with the material did certain things 
> come up and kick me in the face.
> What i put up i did in order to having others not to fall into 
> the same traps as myself.
> 
>   I placed the 1-3-7-9-11-15 22 tone eikosany in three different 
> keyboard patterns over the years and the final one was thought 
> to be the worse by the list and would still appear so. It was 
> the best for what i was doing.
> and would not go back to any of the previous versions.
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> -- 
> 
> 
> /^_,',',',_ //^ /Kraig Grady_ ^_,',',',_
> Mesotonal Music from:
> _'''''''_ ^North/Western Hemisphere:
> North American Embassy of Anaphoria Island <http://anaphoria.com/>
> 
> _'''''''_ ^South/Eastern Hemisphere:
> Austronesian Outpost of Anaphoria 
> <http://anaphoriasouth.blogspot.com/>
> 
> ',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',
> 
> a momentary antenna as i turn to water
> this evaporates - an island once again
>
From: genewardsmith (2010-08-26)
Subject: Re: The Eikosany

--- In [email protected], "sevishmusic" <sevish@...> wrote:
>
> Kraig,
> 
> you mentioned that Eikosanies should not be reduced to an octave, because it makes the patterns harder to understand. The 1-3-5-7-9-11 Eikosany scale in the Scala database looks like this:
> 
> 3)6 1.3.5.7.9.11 Eikosany (1.3.5 tonic)

And if you add a 9 to the Eikosany, and divide by the
1.3.5 tonic, you will add 6/5 to the list of scale elements below. Since the notes of the Eikosany are more closely related to this 6/5 than to anything else, I think it's quite likely it would become easier to understand after adding it. You could try working your way up from the bottom: first find the 5-limit triads, then the 7-limit tetrads, and then add the 9 and 11 limit stuff. It would depend, I suppose, on how you work, but if you feed this scale, with or without the added 6/5, into Scala and do "show location" on various sorts of chords you will get listings for the chords in question, which might help. As I remarked, you can break it apart in the 5-limit into two "wings" and a central region, and you could try to find these, though the central region doesn't make much sense unless you add the 6/5.


>   0:          1/1               0.000  unison, perfect prime
>   1:         33/32             53.273  undecimal comma, al-Farabi's 1/4-tone
>   2:         21/20             84.467  minor semitone
>   3:         11/10            165.004  4/5-tone, Ptolemy's second
>   4:          9/8             203.910  major whole tone
>   5:          7/6             266.871  septimal minor third
6/5 "center note"
>   6:         99/80            368.914
>   7:         77/60            431.875
>   8:         21/16            470.781  narrow fourth
>   9:         11/8             551.318  undecimal semi-augmented fourth
>  10:          7/5             582.512  septimal or Huygens' tritone, BP fourth
>  11:        231/160           635.785
>  12:          3/2             701.955  perfect fifth
>  13:         63/40            786.422  narrow minor sixth
>  14:         77/48            818.189
>  15:         33/20            866.959
>  16:          7/4             968.826  harmonic seventh
>  17:          9/5            1017.596  just minor seventh, BP seventh
>  18:         11/6            1049.363  21/4-tone, undecimal neutral seventh
>  19:         77/40           1133.830
>  20:          2/1            1200.000  octave
> 
> As a beginner, should I avoid using this Eikosany?

Why?

> Besides this I am having many troubles writing my first piece of music using any Eikosany. My first problem is which one to use? My second problem is how do I know which notes should be used with others?

For any scale, you can find the chords using Scala.
From: genewardsmith (2010-08-26)
Subject: Re: The Eikosany's tonal center

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

> Carl mentions in a followup that the Eikosany is "symmetrical around
> a point at which there is no note." 

We find not only 385/384 approximations in the Eikosany, but also 441/440 and 540/539. Putting these together yields miracle temperament, which suggests looking at the Eikosany through miracle spectacles. That gives us this:

[-21, -15, -13, -9, -8, -7, -6, -4, -2, -1, 
1, 2, 4, 6, 7, 8, 9, 13, 15, 21]

This is symmetrical around 0, a point at which there is no note. Adding the 0 gives the miracle tempering of the Eikosany+9 scale I've been promoting:

[-21, -15, -13, -9, -8, -7, -6, -4, -2, -1, 
0, 1, 2, 4, 6, 7, 8, 9, 13, 15, 21]

Miracle tempering is accurate enough that it seems to me there is a lot to be said in favor of using it on the Eikosany. It smooths out the irregularity of having some intervals pure and others flat or sharp by small commas, which some people will wish to do and others will not. In any case, it's a aid towards analyzing relationships.

"The eikosany can be split into three sections, the central portion and two symmetrically located wings, the seven wing and the eleven wing. In one transposition, the seven wing consists of the notes 35/32, 7/6, 21/16, 35/24, 7/4, 35/18. This is a transposed 5-limit scale."

In miracle, [-21, -15, -9, -8, -2, 4].

"The 11-wing is similar, consisting of 33/32, 55/48, 11/8, 55/36, 55/32, 11/6, again purely 5-limit on transposition."

In miracle, [-4, 2, 8, 9, 15, 21]

"The central portion is a more curious affair: 77/72, 77/64, 5/4, 385/288, 3/2, 77/48, 5/3, 15/8." 

In miracle, [-13, -7, -6, -1, 1, 6, 7, 13]

"This might seem like an arbitrary amalgam of the notes with numerators divisible by 77 with the 5-limit notes, unless we allow ourselves to tweak things by 385/384. Then we get 16/15, 6/5, 5/4, 4/3, 3/2, 8/5, 5/3, 15/8. This is the 3x3 square Euler genus, defined via divisors of 225, minus its central 1/1. Adding that to the Eikosany gives a 21-note scale which suddenly is not tonally ambiguous, as the central 1/1 ties everything together." 

1-16/15-6/5-5/4-4/3-3/2-8/5-5/3-15/8 in miracle is:

[-13, -7, -6, -1, 0, 1, 6, 7, 13]
From: Kraig Grady (2010-08-26)
Subject: Re: The Eikosany's tonal center

Does the addition of just this one note make a constant 
structure? is that what i am missing?
which Euler genus
The reason i brought up the 31 tone context is because the 
1-3-5-7-9-11 eikosany is not a constant structure (per.block) 
and to build an instrument or map it to a keyboard you are 
probably want the rest of these notes much in the same way if 
one has a diamond one is going to be inclined to add the tones 
Partch added to bring it as close to a constant structure one can.
the interesting thing with the 1-3-7-9-11-15 eikosany one has to 
only add two tones to make it a constant structure.

-- 
Re: The Eikosany's tonal center



--- In [email protected] 
<http://launch.groups.yahoo.com/group/tuning/post?postID=o_jPoNtGUvD3k1NdVCaHrRd8qRJXmyVqOtKAsX4bInOdgOXVlQyl-O1JgXcP04K-IvJHL5-QlUM-tfvY>, 


Nothing I said had anything very much to do with 31et, and I'm 
sorry if I left
that impression. Erv has a lot of nifty diagrams of the eikosany 
and other
scales as regular graphs, but I don't see anything relevant to 
my comments. I
suppose two regular graph diagrams, one showing the JI 
relationships you get
when adding 9 to the eikosany and the other showing the full 
complement of
385/384 tempered intervals might be illuminating.

385/384 tempering is quite a lot more accurate than 31et is able 
to demonstrate;
you can get the error of the 11-limit to within two cents. But I 
wouldn't call
it microtempering. My point however is that even if you do no 
tempering at all,
a fifth flat by 385/384 is going to sound like a fifth. Hence 
after adding 9 you
have a 21-note just intonation scale, with a clearly audible 
9-note Euler genus
in the middle of it dominating things so far as tonal centering 
goes, even
though some of the fifths are flat by 4.5 cents (about 1/5 
comma) and others are
just. From that point of view the eikosany is a scale where the 
natural choice
for 1/1 was omitted, rendering it more fragmented and tonally 
ambiguous.



/^_,',',',_ //^ /Kraig Grady_ ^_,',',',_
Mesotonal Music from:
_'''''''_ ^North/Western Hemisphere:
North American Embassy of Anaphoria Island <http://anaphoria.com/>

_'''''''_ ^South/Eastern Hemisphere:
Austronesian Outpost of Anaphoria 
<http://anaphoriasouth.blogspot.com/>

',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',

a momentary antenna as i turn to water
this evaporates - an island once again
From: Kraig Grady (2010-08-26)
Subject: The Eikosany

Sean~
  It is not a matter of not octave reducing you are wanting to 
do that. It is a matter of not reducing the factors into a 
fraction. so we are talking more about notation when working with it
  For instance I cannot even tell looking at the diagram below 
what factor they are using for 1/1.
for instance 1*3*11 is a C a 6/5 from A=440 which is 1*5*11 
which you will notice is 55 a sub octave of a 440.
  the factors work because if you say have 1*9*11 ,3*9*11, 
5*9*11,7*9*11 you know you have a 1-3-5-7 because all the 9*11s 
cancel each other out. you can also quickly find a 3*5*7*9*11 
dekany because you know they are all going to have I and the 
complement will not have 1. I don't think you can find those 
type of structures if you are referring to the set of ratios 
below. can you find the 1-3-5-7 tetrad within a minute even?
I can't see it in there.

It is a hard tuning to work with unless you have someway to map 
it out where you can see it.
  I recently added this paper 
http://anaphoria.com/dekanyconstantstructures.pdf
to this page http://anaphoria.com/journal.html
  as what i think is a good starting point. maybe offlist i can 
show you some mapping to how to
  Some of the added tones are outside the eikosany.
Allot can be done with dekanies. this early experiment of a 
piece was done entirely on the 1-3-7-11-15
http://anaphoria.com/boehme.mp3
some of the players were not even musicians and did not read 
music which placed great limitations, but gave great energy to 
things i was trying at the time.
  those who were players had to work with unusual keyboard 
layouts of the bars and due to the size of the instruments 
practice on them was only possible at group
info on it can found on this page
http://anaphoria.com/samples.html


Kraig,

you mentioned that Eikosanies should not be reduced to an 
octave, because it
makes the patterns harder to understand. The 1-3-5-7-9-11 
Eikosany scale in the
Scala database looks like this:

3)6 1.3.5.7.9.11 Eikosany (1.3.5 tonic)
|
0: 1/1 0.000 unison, perfect prime
1: 33/32 53.273 undecimal comma, al-Farabi's 1/4-tone
2: 21/20 84.467 minor semitone
3: 11/10 165.004 4/5-tone, Ptolemy's second
4: 9/8 203.910 major whole tone
5: 7/6 266.871 septimal minor third
6: 99/80 368.914
7: 77/60 431.875
8: 21/16 470.781 narrow fourth
9: 11/8 551.318 undecimal semi-augmented fourth
10: 7/5 582.512 septimal or Huygens' tritone, BP fourth
11: 231/160 635.785
12: 3/2 701.955 perfect fifth
13: 63/40 786.422 narrow minor sixth
14: 77/48 818.189
15: 33/20 866.959
16: 7/4 968.826 harmonic seventh
17: 9/5 1017.596 just minor seventh, BP seventh
18: 11/6 1049.363 21/4-tone, undecimal neutral seventh
19: 77/40 1133.830
20: 2/1 1200.000 octave

As a beginner, should I avoid using this Eikosany?

Besides this I am having many troubles writing my first piece of 
music using any
Eikosany. My first problem is which one to use? My second 
problem is how do I
know which notes should be used with others?

Many thanks if you can help me to understand!

Sean
-- 


/^_,',',',_ //^ /Kraig Grady_ ^_,',',',_
Mesotonal Music from:
_'''''''_ ^North/Western Hemisphere:
North American Embassy of Anaphoria Island <http://anaphoria.com/>

_'''''''_ ^South/Eastern Hemisphere:
Austronesian Outpost of Anaphoria 
<http://anaphoriasouth.blogspot.com/>

',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',

a momentary antenna as i turn to water
this evaporates - an island once again
From: genewardsmith (2010-08-27)
Subject: Re: The Eikosany's tonal center

--- In [email protected], Kraig Grady <kraiggrady@...> wrote:
>
>   Does the addition of just this one note make a constant 
> structure? is that what i am missing?

No, but the Eikosany+9 scale comes closer to CS than the Eikosany in the sense that Scala lists a bunch of nonmonotonic mappings for it but not for the Eikosany.

> which Euler genus

The 3x3 Euler genus consisting of the divisors of 225, namely {1, 3, 5, 9, 15, 25, 45, 75, 225}. To see how this works, transpose the genus by multiplying through by 3/5, giving {3/5, 9/5, 3, 27/5, 9, 15, 27, 45, 135}. Of these, 15, 27, 45, and 135 belong to the Eikosany. If we multiply 3/5, 9/5, 3, 27/5 by 385/3, we get 77, 231, 385 and 693 which also belong to the Eikosany. The point of this proceedure, of course, is that (385/3)/128 = 385/384 is small (4.5 cents.) Hence in this approximate sense the 225 Euler genus is in the Eikosany save for the central note, 9.

This kind of approximate hole is not unique to the Eikosany. Another and to me very interesting example is the 9-limit tonality diamond, which has two such holes which we can patch by adding 16/15 and 15/8, which makes it into two fused approximate 3x4 Euler genuses, that is, Euler genuses defined by the divisors of 1125.

> the interesting thing with the 1-3-7-9-11-15 eikosany one has to 
> only add two tones to make it a constant structure.

Interesting indeed! I'll take a look. Do you know off-hand the two tones in question?
From: Carl Lumma (2010-08-27)
Subject: Re: The Eikosany's tonal center

Gene wrote:

> which makes it into two fused approximate 3x4 Euler genuses,
> that is, Euler genuses defined by the divisors of 1125.

please... "genera"  :)

-Carl
From: Kraig Grady (2010-08-27)
Subject: Re: The Eikosany's tonal center

I think i understand now . you are adding this pitch to fill out 
a different structure that one can then interact with the eikosany.
the 22 Eikosany the 1-3-7-9-11-15 that was made out of two jenco 
vibes ( which i have since added a third to fillout the whole 
1)6-6)6CPS [dallesandro] added 3*9**33 and the complement 1*5*7
since there are two of these found in this overall structure Erv 
and Paul Beaver tuned to the one that lowers this whole 
structure down a 3/2. This because it give a just major scale on C.
  a very weird byproduct of the 1-3-5-7-9-11 if you add the 11.



--- In [email protected] 
<http://launch.groups.yahoo.com/group/tuning/post?postID=RaKYq4Wxmivo0wmucMtGUuiwYj4hv5O8yRR1SjC4ARmFLLVhqKY4JUOlkY8i39KS6LGs-9fb5JjcbCPPcSgJTg>, 
Kraig Grady <kraiggrady@...> wrote:
 >
 > Does the addition of just this one note make a constant
 > structure? is that what i am missing?

No, but the Eikosany+9 scale comes closer to CS than the 
Eikosany in the sense
that Scala lists a bunch of nonmonotonic mappings for it but not 
for the
Eikosany.

 > which Euler genus

The 3x3 Euler genus consisting of the divisors of 225, namely 
{1, 3, 5, 9, 15,
25, 45, 75, 225}. To see how this works, transpose the genus by 
multiplying
through by 3/5, giving {3/5, 9/5, 3, 27/5, 9, 15, 27, 45, 135}. 
Of these, 15,
27, 45, and 135 belong to the Eikosany. If we multiply 3/5, 9/5, 
3, 27/5 by
385/3, we get 77, 231, 385 and 693 which also belong to the 
Eikosany. The point
of this proceedure, of course, is that (385/3)/128 = 385/384 is 
small (4.5
cents.) Hence in this approximate sense the 225 Euler genus is 
in the Eikosany
save for the central note, 9.

This kind of approximate hole is not unique to the Eikosany. 
Another and to me
very interesting example is the 9-limit tonality diamond, which 
has two such
holes which we can patch by adding 16/15 and 15/8, which makes 
it into two fused
approximate 3x4 Euler genuses, that is, Euler genuses defined by 
the divisors of
1125.

 > the interesting thing with the 1-3-7-9-11-15 eikosany one has to
 > only add two tones to make it a constant structure.

Interesting indeed! I'll take a look. Do you know off-hand the 
two tones in
question?
-- 


/^_,',',',_ //^ /Kraig Grady_ ^_,',',',_
Mesotonal Music from:
_'''''''_ ^North/Western Hemisphere:
North American Embassy of Anaphoria Island <http://anaphoria.com/>

_'''''''_ ^South/Eastern Hemisphere:
Austronesian Outpost of Anaphoria 
<http://anaphoriasouth.blogspot.com/>

',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',

a momentary antenna as i turn to water
this evaporates - an island once again
From: genewardsmith (2010-08-27)
Subject: Re: The Eikosany's tonal center

--- In [email protected], "Carl Lumma" <carl@...> wrote:
>
> Gene wrote:
> 
> > which makes it into two fused approximate 3x4 Euler genuses,
> > that is, Euler genuses defined by the divisors of 1125.
> 
> please... "genera"  :)

On fora such as this, the correct formulae for plural forms of loanwords is not required to be that approved of by the alumnae of academic institutions. Rather than bury ourselves under corrigenda deriving from languages dead for millennia, I suggest we adopt less formal criteria for what will be deemed acceptable.
From: w_orld_s (2010-08-27)
Subject: Re: The Eikosany

Two cents...

Hi Sean, I had this same problem initially... 

When we talk amongst each other I agree with Kraig, that demonstrating the factors help other people enter into the scale on hand... 

At the same time though, in terms of my use of these scales (which I should say is in the context of meditation, change ringing and personal improvisations)... I have found that after a time, I have drifted away from the technical origins of the pitches.

Once I build the house, I like to live in it, without all those markings left on the walls by builders. If it is a well built house and if I have a sense of the engineering, I can usually find my way to the bathroom in the dark of night. And if I trip on the way? Stub my toe on a step that I did not expect? I will laugh HA HA! At my discovery. 

Give the notes your own names... base them on friends, whims and absurd rationalisations. If you give them enough space they all sound good and if you spend enough time with them they do show their secrets. 

Happy travels in CPS land. 

W

--- In [email protected], Kraig Grady <kraiggrady@...> wrote:
>
> 
> Sean~
>   It is not a matter of not octave reducing you are wanting to 
> do that. It is a matter of not reducing the factors into a 
> fraction. so we are talking more about notation when working with it
>   For instance I cannot even tell looking at the diagram below 
> what factor they are using for 1/1.
> for instance 1*3*11 is a C a 6/5 from A=440 which is 1*5*11 
> which you will notice is 55 a sub octave of a 440.
>   the factors work because if you say have 1*9*11 ,3*9*11, 
> 5*9*11,7*9*11 you know you have a 1-3-5-7 because all the 9*11s 
> cancel each other out. you can also quickly find a 3*5*7*9*11 
> dekany because you know they are all going to have I and the 
> complement will not have 1. I don't think you can find those 
> type of structures if you are referring to the set of ratios 
> below. can you find the 1-3-5-7 tetrad within a minute even?
> I can't see it in there.
> 
> It is a hard tuning to work with unless you have someway to map 
> it out where you can see it.
>   I recently added this paper 
> http://anaphoria.com/dekanyconstantstructures.pdf
> to this page http://anaphoria.com/journal.html
>   as what i think is a good starting point. maybe offlist i can 
> show you some mapping to how to
>   Some of the added tones are outside the eikosany.
> Allot can be done with dekanies. this early experiment of a 
> piece was done entirely on the 1-3-7-11-15
> http://anaphoria.com/boehme.mp3
> some of the players were not even musicians and did not read 
> music which placed great limitations, but gave great energy to 
> things i was trying at the time.
>   those who were players had to work with unusual keyboard 
> layouts of the bars and due to the size of the instruments 
> practice on them was only possible at group
> info on it can found on this page
> http://anaphoria.com/samples.html
> 
> 
> Kraig,
> 
> you mentioned that Eikosanies should not be reduced to an 
> octave, because it
> makes the patterns harder to understand. The 1-3-5-7-9-11 
> Eikosany scale in the
> Scala database looks like this:
> 
> 3)6 1.3.5.7.9.11 Eikosany (1.3.5 tonic)
> |
> 0: 1/1 0.000 unison, perfect prime
> 1: 33/32 53.273 undecimal comma, al-Farabi's 1/4-tone
> 2: 21/20 84.467 minor semitone
> 3: 11/10 165.004 4/5-tone, Ptolemy's second
> 4: 9/8 203.910 major whole tone
> 5: 7/6 266.871 septimal minor third
> 6: 99/80 368.914
> 7: 77/60 431.875
> 8: 21/16 470.781 narrow fourth
> 9: 11/8 551.318 undecimal semi-augmented fourth
> 10: 7/5 582.512 septimal or Huygens' tritone, BP fourth
> 11: 231/160 635.785
> 12: 3/2 701.955 perfect fifth
> 13: 63/40 786.422 narrow minor sixth
> 14: 77/48 818.189
> 15: 33/20 866.959
> 16: 7/4 968.826 harmonic seventh
> 17: 9/5 1017.596 just minor seventh, BP seventh
> 18: 11/6 1049.363 21/4-tone, undecimal neutral seventh
> 19: 77/40 1133.830
> 20: 2/1 1200.000 octave
> 
> As a beginner, should I avoid using this Eikosany?
> 
> Besides this I am having many troubles writing my first piece of 
> music using any
> Eikosany. My first problem is which one to use? My second 
> problem is how do I
> know which notes should be used with others?
> 
> Many thanks if you can help me to understand!
> 
> Sean
> -- 
> 
> 
> /^_,',',',_ //^ /Kraig Grady_ ^_,',',',_
> Mesotonal Music from:
> _'''''''_ ^North/Western Hemisphere:
> North American Embassy of Anaphoria Island <http://anaphoria.com/>
> 
> _'''''''_ ^South/Eastern Hemisphere:
> Austronesian Outpost of Anaphoria 
> <http://anaphoriasouth.blogspot.com/>
> 
> ',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',',
> 
> a momentary antenna as i turn to water
> this evaporates - an island once again
>
From: Mike Battaglia (2010-08-27)
Subject: Re: [tuning] Re: The Eikosany's tonal center

On Thu, Aug 26, 2010 at 10:52 PM, genewardsmith
<[email protected]> wrote:
>
> --- In [email protected], "Carl Lumma" <carl@...> wrote:
> >
> > Gene wrote:
> >
> > > which makes it into two fused approximate 3x4 Euler genuses,
> > > that is, Euler genuses defined by the divisors of 1125.
> >
> > please... "genera" :)
>
> On fora such as this, the correct formulae for plural forms of loanwords is not required to be that approved of by the alumnae of academic institutions. Rather than bury ourselves under corrigenda deriving from languages dead for millennia, I suggest we adopt less formal criteria for what will be deemed acceptable.

I support whatever criteriums you all prefer, but it should be noted
that "genera" is much sexier than "genuses."

-Mike
From: martinsj013 (2010-08-27)
Subject: Re: The Eikosany's tonal center

--- In [email protected], Mike Battaglia <battaglia01@...> wrote:
> > > > which makes it into two fused approximate 3x4 Euler genuses,
> > > > that is, Euler genuses defined by the divisors of 1125.
> > > please... "genera" :)
> > ... fora ... formulae ... alumnae ... corrigenda ... millennia ... criteria ...

> I support whatever criteriums you all prefer, but it should be noted
> that "genera" is much sexier than "genuses."

please... "criterions" :)

Steve.
From: genewardsmith (2010-08-27)
Subject: Re: The Eikosany's tonal center

--- In [email protected], Kraig Grady <kraiggrady@...> wrote:
>
> 
> I think i understand now . you are adding this pitch to fill out 
> a different structure that one can then interact with the eikosany.
> the 22 Eikosany the 1-3-7-9-11-15 that was made out of two jenco 
> vibes ( which i have since added a third to fillout the whole 
> 1)6-6)6CPS [dallesandro] added 3*9**33 and the complement 1*5*7
> since there are two of these found in this overall structure Erv 
> and Paul Beaver tuned to the one that lowers this whole 
> structure down a 3/2. This because it give a just major scale on C.
>   a very weird byproduct of the 1-3-5-7-9-11 if you add the 11.

It's a very interesting scale, in the Scala directory as wilson_16, with the notation "Wilson 1 3 7 9 11 15 eikosany plus 9/8 and tritone. Used Stearns: Jewel". It has a major scale on one end, and a complementary minor scale at the other, with a juicy bunch of 11-limit harmony in the sandwich in between, all of it epimorphic and constant structure. 

However, it isn't really too much like the Eikosany+9 scale, as the two added notes are on the periphery of the harmonic relationships, whereas the added 9 is right in the middle of them. If you look at what is complementary to 9 with respect to 10395 = 3*5*7*9*11*15, you get 10395/9 = 1155. Reducing both to the octave gives 9/8 and 1155/1024, which are 385/384 apart. In an octave equivalent sense, 9 is approximately the "square root" of 10395 in the sense that 81 is complementary to 385/3 (10395/81 = 385/3) and 385/3 is approximately 128, which is equivalent to 1. 

Wilson_16 is another scale which it would make a lot of sense to temper via miracle. In fact, since there are a lot of 225/224 approximate relationships around, and since those don't work nearly as well as 385/384, 441/440 or 540/539 relationships if not tempered, you might claim it could use it more.

Did Stearns come up with this idea originally and call it "Jewel"?