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Anhemitonic scale

Musicology commonly classifies scales as either hemitonic or anhemitonic. Hemitonic scales contain one or more semitones, while anhemitonic scales do not contain semitones. For example, in traditional Japanese music, the anhemitonic yo scale is contrasted with the hemitonic in scale.[4] The simplest and most commonly used scale in the world is the atritonic anhemitonic "major" pentatonic scale. The whole tone scale is also anhemitonic.

Min'yō scale on D,[1] equivalent to yo scale on C,[2] an anhemitonic scale
Miyako-bushi scale on D, equivalent to in scale on D,[3] a hemitonic scale
Hungarian minor scale on C, a cohemitonic scale.[5]

A special subclass of the hemitonic scales is the cohemitonic scales.[6] Cohemitonic scales contain two or more semitones (making them hemitonic) such that two or more of the semitones appear consecutively in scale order. For example, the Hungarian minor scale in C includes F, G, and A in that order, with a semitone between F and G, and then a semitone between G and A.

Octatonic scales on C, hemitonic but ancohemitonic

Ancohemitonic scales, in contrast, either contain no semitones (and thus are anhemitonic), or contain semitones (being hemitonic) where none of the semitones appear consecutively in scale order.[7][failed verification] Some authors, however, do not include anhemitonic scales in their definition of ancohemitonic scales. Examples of ancohemitonic scales are numerous, as ancohemitonia is favored over cohemitonia in the world's musics: diatonic scale, melodic major/melodic minor, harmonic major scale, harmonic minor scale, Hungarian major scale, Romanian major scale, and the so-called octatonic scale.

Hemitonia is also quantified by the number of semitones present. Unhemitonic scales have only one semitone; dihemitonic scales have 2 semitones; trihemitonic scales have 3 semitones, etc. In the same way that an anhemitonic scale is less dissonant than a hemitonic scale, an anhemitonic scale is less dissonant than a dihemitonic scale.

The qualification of cohemitonia versus ancohemitonia combines with the cardinality of semitones, giving terms like: dicohemitonic, triancohemitonic, and so forth. An ancohemitonic scale is less dissonant than a cohemitonic scale, the count of their semitones being equal. In general, the number of semitones is more important to the perception of dissonance than the adjacency (or lack thereof) of any pair of them. Additional adjacency between semitones (once adjacency is present) does not necessarily increase the dissonance, the count of semitones again being equal.[8]

Related to these semitone classifications are tritonic and atritonic scales. Tritonic scales contain one or more tritones, while atritonic scales do not contain tritones. A special monotonic relationship exists between semitones and tritones as scales are built by projection, q.v. below.

The harmonic relationship of all these categories comes from the perception that semitones and tritones are the severest of dissonances, and that avoiding them is often desirable. The most-used scales across the planet are anhemitonic. Of the remaining hemitonic scales, the ones most used are ancohemitonic.

Quantification of hemitonia and its relationship to ancohemitonia edit

Most of the world's music is anhemitonic, perhaps 90%.[9] Of that other hemitonic portion, perhaps 90% is unhemitonic, predominating in chords of only 1 semitone, all of which are ancohemitonic by definition.[9] Of the remaining 10%, perhaps 90% are dihemitonic, predominating in chords of no more than 2 semitones. The same applies to chords of 3 semitones.[10] In both later cases, however, there is a distinct preference for ancohemitonia, as the lack of adjacency of any two semitones goes a long way towards softening the increasing dissonance.

The following table plots sonority size (downwards on the left) against semitone count (to the right) plus the quality of ancohemitonia (denoted with letter A) versus cohemitonia (denoted with letter C). In general, ancohemitonic combinations are fewer for a given chord or scale size, but used much more frequently so that their names are well known.

Sonority Semitone counts
Notes Count 0 1 2 2A 2C 3 3A 3C >=4 >=4A >=4C
1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
2 6 5 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
3 19 10 8 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0
4 43 10 21 11 4 7 1 0 1 0 0 0
5 66 3 20 30 15 15 12 0 12 1 0 1
6 80 1 5 26 16 10 34 4 30 14 0 14
7 66 0 0 3 2 1 20 4 16 43 0 43
8 43 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 43 1 42
9 19 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 19 0 19
10 6 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 6 0 6
11 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1
12 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1
TOTALS 351 30 55 71 37 34 67 8 59 128 1 127

Column "0" represents the most commonly used chords.,[8] avoiding intervals of M7 and chromatic 9ths and such combinations of 4th, chromatic 5ths, and 6th to produce semitones. Column 1 represents chords that barely use the harmonic degrees that column "0" avoids. Column 2, however, represents sounds far more intractable.[8]

Column 0, row 5 are the full but pleasant chords: 9th, 6/9, and 9alt5 with no 7.[11] Column "0", row "6", is the unique whole tone scale.[12][verification needed] Column "2A", row "7", a local minimum, refers to the diatonic scale and melodic major/melodic minor scales.[13][verification needed] Ancohemitonia, inter alii, probably makes these scales popular. Column "2C", row "7", another local minimum, refers to the Neapolitan major scale, which is cohemitonic and somewhat less common but still popular enough to bear a name.[14][verification needed] Column "3A", row "7", another local minimum, represents the harmonic major scale and its involution harmonic minor scale, and the Hungarian major scale and its involution Romanian major scale.[15][verification needed] Column "3A", row "6", are the hexatonic analogs to these four familiar scales,[16][verification needed] one of which being the Augmented scale,[17][verification needed] and another the analog of the Octatonic scale - which itself appears, alone and solitary, at Column ">=4A". row "8".[18][=4A row 8. (January 2020)">verification needed] Column "2A", row "4", another minimum, represents a few frankly dissonant, yet strangely resonant harmonic combinations: mM9 with no 5, 119, dom139, and M711.[11]

As music tends towards increasing dissonance through history, perhaps someday Column 2 will be as acceptable as even Column 1 might be, and Column 3 will finally have a place in the harmony of the world.

Note, too, that in the highest cardinality row for each column before the terminal zeros begin, the sonority counts are small, except for row "7" and the "3" columns of all sorts. This explosion of hemitonic possibility associated with note cardinality 7 (and above) possibly marks the lower bound for the entity called "scale" (in contrast to "chord").

As shown in the table, anhemitonia is a property of the domain of note sets cardinality 2 through 6, while ancohemitonia is a property of the domain of note sets cardinality 4 through 8 (3 through 8 for improper ancohemitonia including unhemitonia as well). This places anhemitonia generally in the range of "chords" and ancohemitonia generally in the range of "scales".

Example: hemitonia and tritonia of the perfect-fifth projection edit

The interrelationship of semitones, tritones, and increasing note count can be demonstrated by taking five consecutive pitches from the circle of fifths;[19] starting on C, these are C, G, D, A, and E. Transposing the pitches to fit into one octave rearranges the pitches into the major pentatonic scale: C, D, E, G, A. This scale is anhemitonic, having no semitones; it is atritonic, having no tritones.

 

In addition, this is the maximal number of notes taken consecutively from the circle of fifths for which is it still possible to avoid a semitone.[20]

Adding another note from the circle of fifths gives the major hexatonic scale: C D E G A B. This scale is hemitonic, having a semitone between B and C; it is atritonic, having no tritones. In addition, this is the maximal number of notes taken consecutively from the circle of fifths for which is it still possible to avoid a tritone.[21][failed verification]

Adding still another note from the circle of fifths gives the major heptatonic scale: C D E F G A B (when the fifth is added from below the tonic). This scale is strictly ancohemitonic, having 2 semitones but not consecutively; it is tritonic, having a tritone between F and B. Past this point in the projection series, no new intervals are added to the Interval vector analysis of the scale,[22] but cohemitonia results.

 
P7 projection/major heptatonic on C

Adding still another note from the circle of fifths gives the major octatonic scale: C D E F F G A B (when the fifth is added from above the top note in the series--B in this case). This scale is cohemitonic, having 3 semitones together at E F F G, and tritonic as well.[22][failed verification]

Similar behavior is seen across all scales generally, that more notes in a scale tend cumulatively to add dissonant intervals (specifically: hemitonia and tritonia in no particular order) and cohemitonia not already present. While also true that more notes in a scale tend to allow more and varied intervals in the interval vector, there might be said to be a point of diminishing returns, when qualified against the also increasing dissonance, hemitonia, tritonia and cohemitonia.[22] It is near these points where most popular scales lie.

Cohemitonic and hemitonic scales edit

Though less used than ancohemitonic scales, the cohemitonic scales have an interesting property. The sequence of two (or more) consecutive halfsteps in a scale presents the opportunity to "split" the scale by placing the tonic note of the scale on the middle note of the halfstep span. This allows a leading tone from below resolving upwards, as well as a descending flat-supertonic upper neighbor, both converging on the tonic. The split turns a weakness - dissonance of cohemitonia - to a strength: contrapuntal convergence on the tonic. It is very common that a cohemitonic (or even hemitonic) scale (e.g.: Hungarian minor { C D E F G A B }) be displaced preferentially to a mode where the halfstep span is split (e.cont.: Double harmonic scale { G A B C D E F }), and by which name we more commonly know the same circular series of intervals.[23] Cohemitonic scales with multiple halfstep spans present the additional possibility of modulating between tonics each furnished with both upper and lower neighbors.

Modes of heptatonic scales and the key signature system edit

 
Key signature A major / F minor, an ancohemitonic heptatonic scale.

Western music's system of key signature is based upon the assumption of a heptatonic scale of 7 notes, such that there are never more than 7 accidentals present in a valid key signature. The global preference for anhemitonic scales combines with this basis to highlight the 6 ancohemitonic heptatonic scales,[24][verification needed] most of which are common in romantic music, and of which most Romantic music is composed:

These cohemitonic scales are less common:

Adhering to the definition of heptatonic scales, these all possess 7 modes each, and are suitable for use in modal mutation.[25] They appear in the table above in Row "7", Columns "2A" and "3A".

Table of key signatures edit

The following lists the key signatures for all possible untransposed modes of the aforementioned heptatonic scales using the note C as the tonic.

Base scale Accidentals Mode name
Diatonic F Lydian
Diatonic Ionian
Diatonic B Mixolydian
Diatonic B, E Dorian
Diatonic B, E, A Aeolian
Diatonic B, E, A, D Phrygian
Diatonic B, E, A, D, G Locrian
Base scale Accidentals Mode name
Melodic F, G Lydian Augmented
Melodic F, B Acoustic, Lydian Dominant
Melodic E Melodic minor (ascending), Jazz minor
Melodic B, A Melodic Major (descending), Aeolian Dominant, Mixolydian 6
Melodic B, E, D Dorian 2
Melodic B, E, A, G Half Diminished, Locrian 2, Semilocrian
Melodic B, E, A, D, G, F Superlocrian, Altered
Base scale Accidentals Mode name
Harmonic major F, G, D Lydian Augmented 2
Harmonic major F, E Lydian Diminished
Harmonic major A Harmonic Major
Harmonic major B, D Phrygian Dominant 6
Harmonic major B, E, G Diminished Dorian
Harmonic major B, E, A, D, F Superphrygian
Harmonic major E, A, D, G, B  Locrian Diminished
Base scale Accidentals Mode name
Harmonic minor F, D Lydian 2
Harmonic minor G Ionian Augmented
Harmonic minor F, B, E Ukrainian Dorian
Harmonic minor E, A Harmonic Minor
Harmonic minor B, A, D Phrygian Dominant
Harmonic minor B, E, D, G Locrian 6
Harmonic minor E, A, D, G, F, B  Ultralocrian
Base scale Accidentals Mode name
Hungarian major F, G, E Lydian Augmented 3
Hungarian major F, D, B Hungarian Major
Hungarian major G, E Jazz Minor 5
Hungarian major F, B, E, D Ukrainian Dorian 9
Hungarian major E, A, G Harmonic Minor 5
Hungarian major B, E, D, G, F Altered Dominant 6
Hungarian major E, D, G, F, B , A  Ultralocrian  6
Base scale Accidentals Mode name
Romanian major F, G, D, E Super Lydian Augmented 6
Romanian major F, G, E Lydian Augmented 3
Romanian major F, B, D Romanian Major
Romanian major E, G Jazz Minor 5
Romanian major B, E, D, F Dorian 9 11
Romanian major E, A, G, B  Semilocrian  7
Romanian major B, E, D, G, F, A  Altered Dominant  6
Base scale Accidentals Mode name
Hungarian minor F, D, A Lydian 2 6
Hungarian minor G, D Ionian Augmented 2
Hungarian minor F, E, A Hungarian Minor
Hungarian minor A, D Double harmonic
Hungarian minor B, D, G Oriental
Hungarian minor E, A, D, F, B  Ultraphrygian
Hungarian minor A, D, G, B , E  Locrian Diminished  3
Base scale Accidentals Mode name
Neapolitan major F, G, A Leading Whole-Tone
Neapolitan major F, G, B Lydian Augmented Dominant
Neapolitan major F, B, A Lydian Minor
Neapolitan major E, D Neapolitan Major
Neapolitan major B, A, G Locrian Major
Neapolitan major B, E, A, G, F Altered 2
Neapolitan major B, A, D, G, F, E  Altered  3
Base scale Accidentals Mode name
Neapolitan minor F, A Lydian 6
Neapolitan minor D Ionian 2
Neapolitan minor G, B Mixolydian Augmented
Neapolitan minor F, B, E, A Hungarian Gypsy
Neapolitan minor E, A, D Neapolitan Minor
Neapolitan minor B, A, D, G Locrian Dominant
Neapolitan minor A, D, G, F, B , E  Ultralocrian  3
Base scale Accidentals Mode name
Ionian 5 F, G, D, A, E Super Lydian Augmented
Ionian 5 F, D Lydian 2
Ionian 5 G Ionian 5
Ionian 5 B, E, F Dorian 4
Ionian 5 E, A, B  Aeolian  7
Ionian 5 B, A, D, E  Phrygian  3
Ionian 5 B, E, D, G, A  Locrian  6
Base scale Accidentals Mode name
Persian F, A, E Lydian 6 3
Persian D, A Ionian 2 6
Persian G, D, B Mixolydian Augmented 2
Persian F, E, A, D Neapolitan Minor 4
Persian A, D, G Persian
Persian A, D, G, B , E  Ultraphrygian  3
Persian D, G, B , E , A  Altered Altered 4
Base scale Accidentals Mode name
Locrian 7 F, E Lydian 3
Locrian 7 A Ionian 6
Locrian 7 D, B Mixolydian 2
Locrian 7 G, B, E Dorian Augmented
Locrian 7 F, B, E, A, D Phrygian 4
Locrian 7 E, A, D, G Locrian 7
Locrian 7 D, G, F, B , E , A  Altered Altered

Common citation in theories edit

  • Dimitri Tymoczko, in A Geometry of Music: Harmony and Counterpoint in the Extended Common Practice (ISBN 978-0195336672), includes hemitonia in calculation formulas for contrapuntal smoothness and harmonic force transfer.
  • Brett Willmott, in Mel Bays Complete Book of Harmony Theory and Voicing (ISBN 978-1562229948), restricts the scope of his guitar chord voicing to ancohemitonic tetrads.
  • Michael Keith, in From Polychords to Polya : Adventures in Musical Combinatorics (ISBN 978-0963009708), draws his list of basic harmonies as anhemitonic sonorities.

Miscellanea edit

References edit

  1. ^ Susan Miyo Asai (1999). Nōmai Dance Drama, p. 126. ISBN 978-0-313-30698-3.
  2. ^ Minoru Miki, Marty Regan, Philip Flavin (2008). Composing for Japanese instruments, p. 2. ISBN 978-1-58046-273-0.
  3. ^ Titon, Jeff Todd (1996). Worlds of Music: An Introduction to the Music of the World's Peoples, p. 373. ISBN 0-02-872612-X.
  4. ^ Anon. (2001) "Ditonus", The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, second edition, edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell. London: Macmillan Publishers; Bence Szabolcsi (1943), "Five-Tone Scales and Civilization", Acta Musicologica 15, Fasc. 1/4 (January–December): pp. 24–34, citation on p. 25.
  5. ^ Kahan, Sylvia (2009). In Search of New Scales, p. 39. ISBN 978-1-58046-305-8. Cites Liszt. Des Bohémians, p. 301.
  6. ^ Christ, William (1966). Materials and Structure of Music, v.1, p. 39. Englewood Cliffs: Prentice–Hall. LOC 66-14354.
  7. ^ Tymoczko, Dmitri (1997). "The Consecutive-Semitone Constraint on Scalar Structure: A Link between Impressionism and Jazz", Intégral, v.11, (1997), p. 135-179.
  8. ^ a b c Keith, Michael. 1991. From Polychords to Polya : Adventures in Musical Combinatorics, p. 45. Princeton: Vinculum Press. ISBN 978-0963009708.
  9. ^ a b Keith, Michael. 1991. From Polychords to Polya : Adventures in Musical Combinatorics, p. 43. Princeton: Vinculum Press. ISBN 978-0963009708.
  10. ^ Keith, Michael. 1991. From Polychords to Polya : Adventures in Musical Combinatorics, p. 48-49. Princeton: Vinculum Press. ISBN 978-0963009708.
  11. ^ a b Wilmott, Brett. (1994) Mel Bays Complete Book of Harmony Theory and Voicing, p.210. Pacific, Missouri: Mel Bay. ISBN 978-1562229948.
  12. ^ Hanson, Howard. (1960) Harmonic Materials of Modern Music, p.367. New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts. LOC 58-8138.
  13. ^ Hanson, Howard. (1960) Harmonic Materials of Modern Music, p.362-363. New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts. LOC 58-8138.
  14. ^ Hanson, Howard. (1960) Harmonic Materials of Modern Music, p.363. New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts. LOC 58-8138.
  15. ^ Hanson, Howard. (1960) Harmonic Materials of Modern Music, p.364. New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts. LOC 58-8138.
  16. ^ Hanson, Howard. (1960) Harmonic Materials of Modern Music, p.369. New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts. LOC 58-8138.
  17. ^ Hanson, Howard. (1960) Harmonic Materials of Modern Music, p.368. New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts. LOC 58-8138.
  18. ^ Hanson, Howard. (1960) Harmonic Materials of Modern Music, p.360. New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts. LOC 58-8138.
  19. ^ Cooper, Paul. 1973. Perspectives in Music Theory: An Historical-Analytical Approach, p. 18. New York: Dodd, Mead. ISBN 0-396-06752-2.
  20. ^ Hanson, Howard. (1960) Harmonic Materials of Modern Music, p.29. New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts. LOC 58-8138. "The hexad [consisting of perfect fifths] adds B, C-G-D-A-E-B, or melodically, producing C-D-E-F-G-A-B, its components being five perfect fifths, four major seconds, three minor thirds, two major thirds, and--for the first time--the dissonant minor second (or major seventh), p5m2n3s4d."
  21. ^ Hanson, Howard. (1960) Harmonic Materials of Modern Music, p.40. New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts. LOC 58-8138.
  22. ^ a b c Hanson, Howard. (1960) Harmonic Materials of Modern Music, p. 33. New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts. LOC 58-8138. "When the projection [of the perfect fifth] is carried beyond seven tones, no new intervals can be added." "On the other hand, as sonorities are projected beyond the six-tone series they tend to lose their individuality. All seven-tone series, for example, contain all of the six basic intervals, and difference in their proportion decreases as additional tones are added....Such patterns tend to lose their identity, producing a monochromatic effect with its accompanying lack of the essential element of contrast."
  23. ^ Schillinger, Joseph. (1941) The Schillinger System of Musical Composition, v.1, p. 113ff. New York: Carl Fischer. ISBN 0306775212.
  24. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Hanson, Howard. (1960) Harmonic Materials of Modern Music, p. 362ff. New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts. LOC 58-8138.
  25. ^ Christ, William (1966). Materials and Structure of Music, v.1, p. 45. Englewood Cliffs: Prentice-Hall. LOC 66-14354.

anhemitonic, scale, scales, with, three, notes, tritonic, scale, musicology, commonly, classifies, scales, either, hemitonic, anhemitonic, hemitonic, scales, contain, more, semitones, while, anhemitonic, scales, contain, semitones, example, traditional, japane. For scales with three notes see Tritonic scale Musicology commonly classifies scales as either hemitonic or anhemitonic Hemitonic scales contain one or more semitones while anhemitonic scales do not contain semitones For example in traditional Japanese music the anhemitonic yo scale is contrasted with the hemitonic in scale 4 The simplest and most commonly used scale in the world is the atritonic anhemitonic major pentatonic scale The whole tone scale is also anhemitonic source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file Min yō scale on D 1 equivalent to yo scale on C 2 an anhemitonic scale source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file Miyako bushi scale on D equivalent to in scale on D 3 a hemitonic scale source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file Hungarian minor scale on C a cohemitonic scale 5 A special subclass of the hemitonic scales is the cohemitonic scales 6 Cohemitonic scales contain two or more semitones making them hemitonic such that two or more of the semitones appear consecutively in scale order For example the Hungarian minor scale in C includes F G and A in that order with a semitone between F and G and then a semitone between G and A source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file Octatonic scales on C hemitonic but ancohemitonic Ancohemitonic scales in contrast either contain no semitones and thus are anhemitonic or contain semitones being hemitonic where none of the semitones appear consecutively in scale order 7 failed verification Some authors however do not include anhemitonic scales in their definition of ancohemitonic scales Examples of ancohemitonic scales are numerous as ancohemitonia is favored over cohemitonia in the world s musics diatonic scale melodic major melodic minor harmonic major scale harmonic minor scale Hungarian major scale Romanian major scale and the so called octatonic scale Hemitonia is also quantified by the number of semitones present Unhemitonic scales have only one semitone dihemitonic scales have 2 semitones trihemitonic scales have 3 semitones etc In the same way that an anhemitonic scale is less dissonant than a hemitonic scale an anhemitonic scale is less dissonant than a dihemitonic scale The qualification of cohemitonia versus ancohemitonia combines with the cardinality of semitones giving terms like dicohemitonic triancohemitonic and so forth An ancohemitonic scale is less dissonant than a cohemitonic scale the count of their semitones being equal In general the number of semitones is more important to the perception of dissonance than the adjacency or lack thereof of any pair of them Additional adjacency between semitones once adjacency is present does not necessarily increase the dissonance the count of semitones again being equal 8 Related to these semitone classifications are tritonic and atritonic scales Tritonic scales contain one or more tritones while atritonic scales do not contain tritones A special monotonic relationship exists between semitones and tritones as scales are built by projection q v below The harmonic relationship of all these categories comes from the perception that semitones and tritones are the severest of dissonances and that avoiding them is often desirable The most used scales across the planet are anhemitonic Of the remaining hemitonic scales the ones most used are ancohemitonic Contents 1 Quantification of hemitonia and its relationship to ancohemitonia 2 Example hemitonia and tritonia of the perfect fifth projection 3 Cohemitonic and hemitonic scales 4 Modes of heptatonic scales and the key signature system 4 1 Table of key signatures 5 Common citation in theories 6 Miscellanea 7 ReferencesQuantification of hemitonia and its relationship to ancohemitonia editMost of the world s music is anhemitonic perhaps 90 9 Of that other hemitonic portion perhaps 90 is unhemitonic predominating in chords of only 1 semitone all of which are ancohemitonic by definition 9 Of the remaining 10 perhaps 90 are dihemitonic predominating in chords of no more than 2 semitones The same applies to chords of 3 semitones 10 In both later cases however there is a distinct preference for ancohemitonia as the lack of adjacency of any two semitones goes a long way towards softening the increasing dissonance The following table plots sonority size downwards on the left against semitone count to the right plus the quality of ancohemitonia denoted with letter A versus cohemitonia denoted with letter C In general ancohemitonic combinations are fewer for a given chord or scale size but used much more frequently so that their names are well known Sonority Semitone countsNotes Count 0 1 2 2A 2C 3 3A 3C gt 4 gt 4A gt 4C1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 02 6 5 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 03 19 10 8 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 04 43 10 21 11 4 7 1 0 1 0 0 05 66 3 20 30 15 15 12 0 12 1 0 16 80 1 5 26 16 10 34 4 30 14 0 147 66 0 0 3 2 1 20 4 16 43 0 438 43 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 43 1 429 19 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 19 0 1910 6 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 6 0 611 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 112 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1TOTALS 351 30 55 71 37 34 67 8 59 128 1 127Column 0 represents the most commonly used chords 8 avoiding intervals of M7 and chromatic 9ths and such combinations of 4th chromatic 5ths and 6th to produce semitones Column 1 represents chords that barely use the harmonic degrees that column 0 avoids Column 2 however represents sounds far more intractable 8 Column 0 row 5 are the full but pleasant chords 9th 6 9 and 9alt5 with no 7 11 Column 0 row 6 is the unique whole tone scale 12 verification needed Column 2A row 7 a local minimum refers to the diatonic scale and melodic major melodic minor scales 13 verification needed Ancohemitonia inter alii probably makes these scales popular Column 2C row 7 another local minimum refers to the Neapolitan major scale which is cohemitonic and somewhat less common but still popular enough to bear a name 14 verification needed Column 3A row 7 another local minimum represents the harmonic major scale and its involution harmonic minor scale and the Hungarian major scale and its involution Romanian major scale 15 verification needed Column 3A row 6 are the hexatonic analogs to these four familiar scales 16 verification needed one of which being the Augmented scale 17 verification needed and another the analog of the Octatonic scale which itself appears alone and solitary at Column gt 4A row 8 18 4A row 8 January 2020 gt verification needed Column 2A row 4 another minimum represents a few frankly dissonant yet strangely resonant harmonic combinations mM9 with no 5 11 9 dom13 9 and M7 11 11 As music tends towards increasing dissonance through history perhaps someday Column 2 will be as acceptable as even Column 1 might be and Column 3 will finally have a place in the harmony of the world Note too that in the highest cardinality row for each column before the terminal zeros begin the sonority counts are small except for row 7 and the 3 columns of all sorts This explosion of hemitonic possibility associated with note cardinality 7 and above possibly marks the lower bound for the entity called scale in contrast to chord As shown in the table anhemitonia is a property of the domain of note sets cardinality 2 through 6 while ancohemitonia is a property of the domain of note sets cardinality 4 through 8 3 through 8 for improper ancohemitonia including unhemitonia as well This places anhemitonia generally in the range of chords and ancohemitonia generally in the range of scales Example hemitonia and tritonia of the perfect fifth projection editThe interrelationship of semitones tritones and increasing note count can be demonstrated by taking five consecutive pitches from the circle of fifths 19 starting on C these are C G D A and E Transposing the pitches to fit into one octave rearranges the pitches into the major pentatonic scale C D E G A This scale is anhemitonic having no semitones it is atritonic having no tritones nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file In addition this is the maximal number of notes taken consecutively from the circle of fifths for which is it still possible to avoid a semitone 20 Adding another note from the circle of fifths gives the major hexatonic scale C D E G A B This scale is hemitonic having a semitone between B and C it is atritonic having no tritones In addition this is the maximal number of notes taken consecutively from the circle of fifths for which is it still possible to avoid a tritone 21 failed verification Adding still another note from the circle of fifths gives the major heptatonic scale C D E F G A B when the fifth is added from below the tonic This scale is strictly ancohemitonic having 2 semitones but not consecutively it is tritonic having a tritone between F and B Past this point in the projection series no new intervals are added to the Interval vector analysis of the scale 22 but cohemitonia results nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file P7 projection major heptatonic on C Adding still another note from the circle of fifths gives the major octatonic scale C D E F F G A B when the fifth is added from above the top note in the series B in this case This scale is cohemitonic having 3 semitones together at E F F G and tritonic as well 22 failed verification Similar behavior is seen across all scales generally that more notes in a scale tend cumulatively to add dissonant intervals specifically hemitonia and tritonia in no particular order and cohemitonia not already present While also true that more notes in a scale tend to allow more and varied intervals in the interval vector there might be said to be a point of diminishing returns when qualified against the also increasing dissonance hemitonia tritonia and cohemitonia 22 It is near these points where most popular scales lie Cohemitonic and hemitonic scales editThough less used than ancohemitonic scales the cohemitonic scales have an interesting property The sequence of two or more consecutive halfsteps in a scale presents the opportunity to split the scale by placing the tonic note of the scale on the middle note of the halfstep span This allows a leading tone from below resolving upwards as well as a descending flat supertonic upper neighbor both converging on the tonic The split turns a weakness dissonance of cohemitonia to a strength contrapuntal convergence on the tonic It is very common that a cohemitonic or even hemitonic scale e g Hungarian minor C D E F G A B be displaced preferentially to a mode where the halfstep span is split e cont Double harmonic scale G A B C D E F and by which name we more commonly know the same circular series of intervals 23 Cohemitonic scales with multiple halfstep spans present the additional possibility of modulating between tonics each furnished with both upper and lower neighbors Modes of heptatonic scales and the key signature system edit nbsp Key signature A major F minor an ancohemitonic heptatonic scale Western music s system of key signature is based upon the assumption of a heptatonic scale of 7 notes such that there are never more than 7 accidentals present in a valid key signature The global preference for anhemitonic scales combines with this basis to highlight the 6 ancohemitonic heptatonic scales 24 verification needed most of which are common in romantic music and of which most Romantic music is composed Diatonic scale Melodic major melodic minor Harmonic major scale Harmonic minor scale Hungarian major scale Romanian major scaleThese cohemitonic scales are less common Double harmonic major scale Neapolitan major scale Neapolitan minor scale Ionian 5 scale Persian scale Locrian 7 scaleAdhering to the definition of heptatonic scales these all possess 7 modes each and are suitable for use in modal mutation 25 They appear in the table above in Row 7 Columns 2A and 3A Table of key signatures edit The following lists the key signatures for all possible untransposed modes of the aforementioned heptatonic scales using the note C as the tonic Base scale Accidentals Mode nameDiatonic F LydianDiatonic IonianDiatonic B MixolydianDiatonic B E DorianDiatonic B E A AeolianDiatonic B E A D PhrygianDiatonic B E A D G LocrianBase scale Accidentals Mode nameMelodic F G Lydian AugmentedMelodic F B Acoustic Lydian DominantMelodic E Melodic minor ascending Jazz minorMelodic B A Melodic Major descending Aeolian Dominant Mixolydian 6Melodic B E D Dorian 2Melodic B E A G Half Diminished Locrian 2 SemilocrianMelodic B E A D G F Superlocrian AlteredBase scale Accidentals Mode nameHarmonic major F G D Lydian Augmented 2Harmonic major F E Lydian DiminishedHarmonic major A Harmonic MajorHarmonic major B D Phrygian Dominant 6Harmonic major B E G Diminished DorianHarmonic major B E A D F SuperphrygianHarmonic major E A D G B nbsp Locrian DiminishedBase scale Accidentals Mode nameHarmonic minor F D Lydian 2Harmonic minor G Ionian AugmentedHarmonic minor F B E Ukrainian DorianHarmonic minor E A Harmonic MinorHarmonic minor B A D Phrygian DominantHarmonic minor B E D G Locrian 6Harmonic minor E A D G F B nbsp UltralocrianBase scale Accidentals Mode nameHungarian major F G E Lydian Augmented 3Hungarian major F D B Hungarian MajorHungarian major G E Jazz Minor 5Hungarian major F B E D Ukrainian Dorian 9Hungarian major E A G Harmonic Minor 5Hungarian major B E D G F Altered Dominant 6Hungarian major E D G F B nbsp A nbsp Ultralocrian nbsp 6Base scale Accidentals Mode nameRomanian major F G D E Super Lydian Augmented 6Romanian major F G E Lydian Augmented 3Romanian major F B D Romanian MajorRomanian major E G Jazz Minor 5Romanian major B E D F Dorian 9 11Romanian major E A G B nbsp Semilocrian nbsp 7Romanian major B E D G F A nbsp Altered Dominant nbsp 6Base scale Accidentals Mode nameHungarian minor F D A Lydian 2 6Hungarian minor G D Ionian Augmented 2Hungarian minor F E A Hungarian MinorHungarian minor A D Double harmonicHungarian minor B D G OrientalHungarian minor E A D F B nbsp UltraphrygianHungarian minor A D G B nbsp E nbsp Locrian Diminished nbsp 3Base scale Accidentals Mode nameNeapolitan major F G A Leading Whole ToneNeapolitan major F G B Lydian Augmented DominantNeapolitan major F B A Lydian MinorNeapolitan major E D Neapolitan MajorNeapolitan major B A G Locrian MajorNeapolitan major B E A G F Altered 2Neapolitan major B A D G F E nbsp Altered nbsp 3Base scale Accidentals Mode nameNeapolitan minor F A Lydian 6Neapolitan minor D Ionian 2Neapolitan minor G B Mixolydian AugmentedNeapolitan minor F B E A Hungarian GypsyNeapolitan minor E A D Neapolitan MinorNeapolitan minor B A D G Locrian DominantNeapolitan minor A D G F B nbsp E nbsp Ultralocrian nbsp 3Base scale Accidentals Mode nameIonian 5 F G D A E Super Lydian AugmentedIonian 5 F D Lydian 2Ionian 5 G Ionian 5Ionian 5 B E F Dorian 4Ionian 5 E A B nbsp Aeolian nbsp 7Ionian 5 B A D E nbsp Phrygian nbsp 3Ionian 5 B E D G A nbsp Locrian nbsp 6Base scale Accidentals Mode namePersian F A E Lydian 6 3Persian D A Ionian 2 6Persian G D B Mixolydian Augmented 2Persian F E A D Neapolitan Minor 4Persian A D G PersianPersian A D G B nbsp E nbsp Ultraphrygian nbsp 3Persian D G B nbsp E nbsp A nbsp Altered Altered 4Base scale Accidentals Mode nameLocrian 7 F E Lydian 3Locrian 7 A Ionian 6Locrian 7 D B Mixolydian 2Locrian 7 G B E Dorian AugmentedLocrian 7 F B E A D Phrygian 4Locrian 7 E A D G Locrian 7Locrian 7 D G F B nbsp E nbsp A nbsp Altered AlteredCommon citation in theories editDimitri Tymoczko in A Geometry of Music Harmony and Counterpoint in the Extended Common Practice ISBN 978 0195336672 includes hemitonia in calculation formulas for contrapuntal smoothness and harmonic force transfer Brett Willmott in Mel Bays Complete Book of Harmony Theory and Voicing ISBN 978 1562229948 restricts the scope of his guitar chord voicing to ancohemitonic tetrads Michael Keith in From Polychords to Polya Adventures in Musical Combinatorics ISBN 978 0963009708 draws his list of basic harmonies as anhemitonic sonorities Miscellanea editAll heptatonic except for 7EDO temperament so called neutral scale used in gamelan music and some folk musical styles of Angola and larger scales are hemitonic ditonic or better and tritonic 24 verification needed All pitch class sets of seven notes contain 1 3 tritones and 3 6 semitones as can be seen in their interval vectors on List of pitch class sets All octatonic scales save one the octatonic or Diminished scale are cohemitonic 24 verification needed All enneatonic and larger scales are cohemitonic 24 verification needed All sonorities with 5 or more semitones are cohemitonic 24 verification needed The set complement of a cohemitonic scale is often an ancohemitonic scale and vice versa Unhemitonic scales never have more than 6 notes and are always ancohemitonic verification needed Dihemitonic and trihemitonic scales never have more than 7 notes 24 verification needed Tetrahemitonic and pentahemitonic scales never have more than 8 notes 24 verification needed Hexahemitonic and heptahemitonic scales never have more than 9 notes 24 verification needed Octahemitonic and enneahemitonic scales never have more than 10 notes 24 verification needed There is no 12ET scale with exactly 11 halfsteps 24 verification needed References edit Susan Miyo Asai 1999 Nōmai Dance Drama p 126 ISBN 978 0 313 30698 3 Minoru Miki Marty Regan Philip Flavin 2008 Composing for Japanese instruments p 2 ISBN 978 1 58046 273 0 Titon Jeff Todd 1996 Worlds of Music An Introduction to the Music of the World s Peoples p 373 ISBN 0 02 872612 X Anon 2001 Ditonus The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians second edition edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell London Macmillan Publishers Bence Szabolcsi 1943 Five Tone Scales and Civilization Acta Musicologica 15 Fasc 1 4 January December pp 24 34 citation on p 25 Kahan Sylvia 2009 In Search of New Scales p 39 ISBN 978 1 58046 305 8 Cites Liszt Des Bohemians p 301 Christ William 1966 Materials and Structure of Music v 1 p 39 Englewood Cliffs Prentice Hall LOC 66 14354 Tymoczko Dmitri 1997 The Consecutive Semitone Constraint on Scalar Structure A Link between Impressionism and Jazz Integral v 11 1997 p 135 179 a b c Keith Michael 1991 From Polychords to Polya Adventures in Musical Combinatorics p 45 Princeton Vinculum Press ISBN 978 0963009708 a b Keith Michael 1991 From Polychords to Polya Adventures in Musical Combinatorics p 43 Princeton Vinculum Press ISBN 978 0963009708 Keith Michael 1991 From Polychords to Polya Adventures in Musical Combinatorics p 48 49 Princeton Vinculum Press ISBN 978 0963009708 a b Wilmott Brett 1994 Mel Bays Complete Book of Harmony Theory and Voicing p 210 Pacific Missouri Mel Bay ISBN 978 1562229948 Hanson Howard 1960 Harmonic Materials of Modern Music p 367 New York Appleton Century Crofts LOC 58 8138 Hanson Howard 1960 Harmonic Materials of Modern Music p 362 363 New York Appleton Century Crofts LOC 58 8138 Hanson Howard 1960 Harmonic Materials of Modern Music p 363 New York Appleton Century Crofts LOC 58 8138 Hanson Howard 1960 Harmonic Materials of Modern Music p 364 New York Appleton Century Crofts LOC 58 8138 Hanson Howard 1960 Harmonic Materials of Modern Music p 369 New York Appleton Century Crofts LOC 58 8138 Hanson Howard 1960 Harmonic Materials of Modern Music p 368 New York Appleton Century Crofts LOC 58 8138 Hanson Howard 1960 Harmonic Materials of Modern Music p 360 New York Appleton Century Crofts LOC 58 8138 Cooper Paul 1973 Perspectives in Music Theory An Historical Analytical Approach p 18 New York Dodd Mead ISBN 0 396 06752 2 Hanson Howard 1960 Harmonic Materials of Modern Music p 29 New York Appleton Century Crofts LOC 58 8138 The hexad consisting of perfect fifths adds B C G D A E B or melodically producing C D E F G A B its components being five perfect fifths four major seconds three minor thirds two major thirds and for the first time the dissonant minor second or major seventh p5m2n3s4d Hanson Howard 1960 Harmonic Materials of Modern Music p 40 New York Appleton Century Crofts LOC 58 8138 a b c Hanson Howard 1960 Harmonic Materials of Modern Music p 33 New York Appleton Century Crofts LOC 58 8138 When the projection of the perfect fifth is carried beyond seven tones no new intervals can be added On the other hand as sonorities are projected beyond the six tone series they tend to lose their individuality All seven tone series for example contain all of the six basic intervals and difference in their proportion decreases as additional tones are added Such patterns tend to lose their identity producing a monochromatic effect with its accompanying lack of the essential element of contrast Schillinger Joseph 1941 The Schillinger System of Musical Composition v 1 p 113ff New York Carl Fischer ISBN 0306775212 a b c d e f g h i j Hanson Howard 1960 Harmonic Materials of Modern Music p 362ff New York Appleton Century Crofts LOC 58 8138 Christ William 1966 Materials and Structure of Music v 1 p 45 Englewood Cliffs Prentice Hall LOC 66 14354 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Anhemitonic scale amp oldid 1148420840, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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