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Enharmonic

In modern musical notation and tuning, an enharmonic equivalent is a note, interval, or key signature that is equivalent to some other note, interval, or key signature but "spelled", or named differently. The enharmonic spelling of a written note, interval, or chord is an alternative way to write that note, interval, or chord. The term is derived from Latin enharmonicus, from Late Latin enarmonius, from Ancient Greek ἐναρμόνιος (enarmónios), from ἐν (en) and ἁρμονία (harmonía).

Comparison of intervals near or enharmonic with the unison

Definition

For example, in any twelve-tone equal temperament (the predominant system of musical tuning in Western music), the notes C and D are enharmonic (or enharmonically equivalent) notes. Namely, they are the same key on a keyboard, and thus they are identical in pitch, although they have different names and different roles in harmony and chord progressions. Arbitrary amounts of accidentals can produce further enharmonic equivalents, such as B  (meaning B-double sharp), although these are much rarer and have less practical use.

In other words, if two notes have the same pitch but have different letter names, we call them enharmonic.[1] "Enharmonic intervals are intervals with the same sound that are spelled differently… [resulting], of course, from enharmonic tones."[2]

Prior to this modern meaning, "enharmonic" referred to notes that were very close in pitch—closer than the smallest step of a diatonic scale—but not identical in pitch. One such example is G, which is not the same note and sound as A in many temperaments of more than twelve tones,[3] as in an enharmonic scale. "Enharmonic equivalence is peculiar to post-tonal theory."[4] "Much music since at least the 18th century, however, exploits enharmonic equivalence for purposes of modulation and this requires that enharmonic equivalents in fact be equivalent."[5]

 
The notes F and G are enharmonic equivalents.
 
E and F, however, are not enharmonic equivalents, because E is enharmonic with F.
 
G  and B  are enharmonic equivalents, both the same as A.
 
Enharmonically equivalent key signatures of B and C major, each followed by its respective tonic chord

Some key signatures have an enharmonic equivalent that represents a scale identical in sound but spelled differently. The number of sharps and flats of two enharmonically equivalent keys sum to twelve. For example, the key of B major, with five sharps, is enharmonically equivalent to the key of C major with seven flats, so that gives five (sharps) + seven (flats) = 12. Keys past seven sharps or seven flats exist only theoretically and not in practice. The enharmonic keys are six pairs, three major pairs and three minor pairs: B major/C major, G minor/A minor, F major/G major, D minor/E minor, C major/D major and A minor/B minor. There are practically no works composed in keys that require double sharps or double flats in the key signature. In practice, musicians learn and practice 15 major and 15 minor keys, three more than 12 due to the enharmonic spellings.

Enharmonic equivalents can also be used to improve the readability of a line of music. For example, a sequence of notes is more easily read as "ascending" or "descending" if the noteheads are on different positions on the staff. Doing so may also reduce the number of accidentals that must be used. Thus, in the key of B major, the sequence B-B-B is more easily read using the enharmonic spelling C instead of B.

 
Enharmonic tritones: augmented 4th = diminished 5th on C  Play .

For example, the intervals of a minor sixth on C, on B, and an augmented fifth on C are all enharmonic intervals  Play . The most common enharmonic intervals are the augmented fourth and diminished fifth, or tritone, for example C–F = C–G.[1]

Enharmonic equivalence is not to be confused with octave equivalence, nor are enharmonic intervals to be confused with inverted or compound intervals.

Examples in practice

An example in popular music occurs in melody line of Jerome Kern's song “All the things you are”, where the note G sharp that concludes the bridge section repeats, over changing harmony, as an A flat, the first note of the returning “A” section.[6][7]

Beethoven's Piano Sonata in E Minor, Op. 90, contains a passage where the lowest note, B-flat, becomes an A-sharp, altering its musical meaning and significance. The first two bars of the following passage unfold a simple descending scale of B-flat major. However, according to Wilfrid Mellers, the B-flats here "turn out to be a pun, for they change enharmonically into A-sharps, part of a dominant ninth leading to B minor."[8]

Beethoven Sonata in E Minor Op. 90, first movement, bars 37–45
 
Beethoven Sonata in E Minor Op. 90, first movement, bars 37–45

Chopin's Prelude No. 15, known as the "Raindrop Prelude", features a pedal point on the note A-flat throughout its opening section.

Chopin Prelude No. 15, opening
 
Chopin Prelude No. 15, opening

"The repeated A-flats ... become enharmonically changed into G-sharps in the middle section of this Prelude, and take on a brooding, ominous character."[9]

Chopin Prelude No. 15, bars 28–29
 
Chopin Prelude No. 15, bars 28–29

One of the most spectacular enharmonic changes in all music occurs in the concluding passage of the slow movement of one of Schubert's last sonatas, his final piano sonata, in B-flat, D960. Here, in bars 102-3, the note B-sharp transforms into C natural as part of a progression, where the chord of G sharp, the dominant chord of C sharp minor, "melts with breathtaking effect into a C major chord."[10]

G-sharp to C progression
 
G-sharp to C progression
Schubert Piano Sonata D960 second movement, bars 98–106
 
Schubert Piano Sonata D960 second movement, bars 98–106

Tuning enharmonics

In principle, the modern musical use of the word enharmonic to mean identical tones is correct only in equal temperament, where the octave is divided into 12 equal semitones. In other tuning systems, however, enharmonic associations can be perceived by listeners and exploited by composers.[11]

Pythagorean

In Pythagorean tuning, all pitches are generated from a series of justly tuned perfect fifths, each with a frequency ratio of 3 to 2. If the first note in the series is an A, the thirteenth note in the series, G is higher than the seventh octave (octave = ratio of 1 to 2, seven octaves is 1 to 27 = 128) of the A by a small interval called a Pythagorean comma. This interval is expressed mathematically as:

 

Meantone

In quarter-comma meantone, on the other hand, consider G and A. Call middle C's frequency x. Then high C has a frequency of 2x. The quarter-comma meantone has just (i.e., perfectly-tuned) major thirds, which means major thirds with a frequency ratio of exactly 4 to 5.

To form a just major third with the C above it, A and high C must be in the ratio 4 to 5, so A needs to have the frequency

 

To form a just major third above E, however, G needs to form the ratio 5 to 4 with E, which, in turn, needs to form the ratio 5 to 4 with C. Thus the frequency of G is

 

Thus, G and A are not the same note; G is, in fact 41 cents lower in pitch (41% of a semitone, not quite a quarter of a tone). The difference is the interval called the enharmonic diesis, or a frequency ratio of 128/125. On a piano tuned in equal temperament, both G and A are played by striking the same key, so both have a frequency

 

Such small differences in pitch can escape notice when presented as melodic intervals. However, when they are sounded as chords, the difference between meantone intonation and equal-tempered intonation can be quite noticeable, even to untrained ears.

One can label enharmonically equivalent pitches with one and only one name; for instance, the numbers of integer notation, as used in serialism and musical set theory and employed by the MIDI interface.

Enharmonic genus

In ancient Greek music the enharmonic was one of the three Greek genera in music in which the tetrachords are divided (descending) as a ditone plus two microtones. The ditone can be anywhere from 16/13 to 9/7 (3.55 to 4.35 semitones) and the microtones can be anything smaller than 1 semitone.[12] Some examples of enharmonic genera are

  1. 1/1 36/35 16/15 4/3
  2. 1/1 28/27 16/15 4/3
  3. 1/1 64/63 28/27 4/3
  4. 1/1 49/48 28/27 4/3
  5. 1/1 25/24 13/12 4/3

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Benward, Bruce; Saker, Marilyn (2003). Music in Theory and Practice. Vol. I. p. 7 & 360. ISBN 978-0-07-294262-0.
  2. ^ Benward, Bruce; Saker, Marilyn (2003). Music in Theory and Practice. Vol. I. p. 54. ISBN 978-0-07-294262-0.
  3. ^ Elson, Louis Charles (1905). Elson's Music Dictionary. O. Ditson Company. p. 100. The relation existing between two chromatics, when, by the elevation of one and depression of the other, they are united into one.
  4. ^ Randel, Don Michael, ed. (2003). "Set theory". The Harvard Dictionary of Music (4th ed.). Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. p. 776. ISBN 978-0-674-01163-2.
  5. ^ Randel, Don Michael, ed. (2003). "Enharmonic". The Harvard Dictionary of Music (4th ed.). Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. p. 295. ISBN 978-0-674-01163-2.
  6. ^ Kern, J. and Hammerstein, O. (1939, bars 23-25) “All the things you are”, New York, T. B. Harms Co.
  7. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the : "Ella Fitzgerald - All The Things You Are (with lyrics)". YouTube.
  8. ^ Mellers, W. (1983, p.132) Beethoven and the Voice of God. London, Faber.
  9. ^ Walker, A. (2018, p. 383), Fryderyk Chopin, a Life and Times. London, Faber.
  10. ^ Newbould, B., (1997, p.336) Schubert, the Music and the Man, London, Gollancz.
  11. ^ Rushton, Julian (2001). "Enharmonic". In Sadie, Stanley; Tyrrell, John (eds.). The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians (2nd ed.). London: Macmillan Publishers. ISBN 0-19-517067-9.
  12. ^ Barbera, C. André (1977). "Arithmetic and Geometric Divisions of the Tetrachord". Journal of Music Theory. 21 (2): 294–323. doi:10.2307/843492. JSTOR 843492.

Further reading

External links

  •   The dictionary definition of enharmonic at Wiktionary
  •   Media related to Enharmonic at Wikimedia Commons

enharmonic, confused, with, anharmonic, inharmonic, this, article, technical, most, readers, understand, please, help, improve, make, understandable, experts, without, removing, technical, details, september, 2019, learn, when, remove, this, template, message,. Not to be confused with Anharmonic or Inharmonic This article may be too technical for most readers to understand Please help improve it to make it understandable to non experts without removing the technical details September 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message In modern musical notation and tuning an enharmonic equivalent is a note interval or key signature that is equivalent to some other note interval or key signature but spelled or named differently The enharmonic spelling of a written note interval or chord is an alternative way to write that note interval or chord The term is derived from Latin enharmonicus from Late Latin enarmonius from Ancient Greek ἐnarmonios enarmonios from ἐn en and ἁrmonia harmonia Comparison of intervals near or enharmonic with the unison Contents 1 Definition 2 Examples in practice 3 Tuning enharmonics 3 1 Pythagorean 3 2 Meantone 4 Enharmonic genus 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksDefinition EditFor example in any twelve tone equal temperament the predominant system of musical tuning in Western music the notes C and D are enharmonic or enharmonically equivalent notes Namely they are the same key on a keyboard and thus they are identical in pitch although they have different names and different roles in harmony and chord progressions Arbitrary amounts of accidentals can produce further enharmonic equivalents such as B meaning B double sharp although these are much rarer and have less practical use In other words if two notes have the same pitch but have different letter names we call them enharmonic 1 Enharmonic intervals are intervals with the same sound that are spelled differently resulting of course from enharmonic tones 2 Prior to this modern meaning enharmonic referred to notes that were very close in pitch closer than the smallest step of a diatonic scale but not identical in pitch One such example is G which is not the same note and sound as A in many temperaments of more than twelve tones 3 as in an enharmonic scale Enharmonic equivalence is peculiar to post tonal theory 4 Much music since at least the 18th century however exploits enharmonic equivalence for purposes of modulation and this requires that enharmonic equivalents in fact be equivalent 5 The notes F and G are enharmonic equivalents E and F however are not enharmonic equivalents because E is enharmonic with F G and B are enharmonic equivalents both the same as A Enharmonically equivalent key signatures of B and C major each followed by its respective tonic chord Some key signatures have an enharmonic equivalent that represents a scale identical in sound but spelled differently The number of sharps and flats of two enharmonically equivalent keys sum to twelve For example the key of B major with five sharps is enharmonically equivalent to the key of C major with seven flats so that gives five sharps seven flats 12 Keys past seven sharps or seven flats exist only theoretically and not in practice The enharmonic keys are six pairs three major pairs and three minor pairs B major C major G minor A minor F major G major D minor E minor C major D major and A minor B minor There are practically no works composed in keys that require double sharps or double flats in the key signature In practice musicians learn and practice 15 major and 15 minor keys three more than 12 due to the enharmonic spellings Enharmonic equivalents can also be used to improve the readability of a line of music For example a sequence of notes is more easily read as ascending or descending if the noteheads are on different positions on the staff Doing so may also reduce the number of accidentals that must be used Thus in the key of B major the sequence B B B is more easily read using the enharmonic spelling C instead of B Enharmonic tritones augmented 4th diminished 5th on C Play help info For example the intervals of a minor sixth on C on B and an augmented fifth on C are all enharmonic intervals Play help info The most common enharmonic intervals are the augmented fourth and diminished fifth or tritone for example C F C G 1 Enharmonic equivalence is not to be confused with octave equivalence nor are enharmonic intervals to be confused with inverted or compound intervals Examples in practice EditAn example in popular music occurs in melody line of Jerome Kern s song All the things you are where the note G sharp that concludes the bridge section repeats over changing harmony as an A flat the first note of the returning A section 6 7 Beethoven s Piano Sonata in E Minor Op 90 contains a passage where the lowest note B flat becomes an A sharp altering its musical meaning and significance The first two bars of the following passage unfold a simple descending scale of B flat major However according to Wilfrid Mellers the B flats here turn out to be a pun for they change enharmonically into A sharps part of a dominant ninth leading to B minor 8 source source source Beethoven Sonata in E Minor Op 90 first movement bars 37 45 Beethoven Sonata in E Minor Op 90 first movement bars 37 45 Chopin s Prelude No 15 known as the Raindrop Prelude features a pedal point on the note A flat throughout its opening section source source source Chopin Prelude No 15 opening Chopin Prelude No 15 opening The repeated A flats become enharmonically changed into G sharps in the middle section of this Prelude and take on a brooding ominous character 9 source source source Chopin Prelude No 15 bars 28 29 Chopin Prelude No 15 bars 28 29 One of the most spectacular enharmonic changes in all music occurs in the concluding passage of the slow movement of one of Schubert s last sonatas his final piano sonata in B flat D960 Here in bars 102 3 the note B sharp transforms into C natural as part of a progression where the chord of G sharp the dominant chord of C sharp minor melts with breathtaking effect into a C major chord 10 source source source G sharp to C progression G sharp to C progression source source source Schubert Piano Sonata D960 second movement bars 98 106 Schubert Piano Sonata D960 second movement bars 98 106Tuning enharmonics EditIn principle the modern musical use of the word enharmonic to mean identical tones is correct only in equal temperament where the octave is divided into 12 equal semitones In other tuning systems however enharmonic associations can be perceived by listeners and exploited by composers 11 Pythagorean Edit Main article Pythagorean tuning In Pythagorean tuning all pitches are generated from a series of justly tuned perfect fifths each with a frequency ratio of 3 to 2 If the first note in the series is an A the thirteenth note in the series G is higher than the seventh octave octave ratio of 1 to 2 seven octaves is 1 to 27 128 of the A by a small interval called a Pythagorean comma This interval is expressed mathematically as twelve fifths seven octaves 3 2 12 2 7 3 12 2 19 531 441 524 288 1 013 643 264 23 46 cents displaystyle frac hbox twelve fifths hbox seven octaves frac left tfrac 3 2 right 12 2 7 frac 3 12 2 19 frac 531 441 524 288 1 013 643 264 approx 23 46 hbox cents Meantone Edit Main article Meantone temperament In quarter comma meantone on the other hand consider G and A Call middle C s frequency x Then high C has a frequency of 2x The quarter comma meantone has just i e perfectly tuned major thirds which means major thirds with a frequency ratio of exactly 4 to 5 To form a just major third with the C above it A and high C must be in the ratio 4 to 5 so A needs to have the frequency 4 5 2 x 8 5 x 1 6 x displaystyle frac 4 5 2x frac 8 5 x 1 6x To form a just major third above E however G needs to form the ratio 5 to 4 with E which in turn needs to form the ratio 5 to 4 with C Thus the frequency of G is 5 4 2 x 25 16 x 1 5625 x displaystyle left frac 5 4 right 2 x frac 25 16 x 1 5625x Thus G and A are not the same note G is in fact 41 cents lower in pitch 41 of a semitone not quite a quarter of a tone The difference is the interval called the enharmonic diesis or a frequency ratio of 128 125 On a piano tuned in equal temperament both G and A are played by striking the same key so both have a frequency 2 8 12 x 2 2 3 x 1 5874 x displaystyle 2 frac 8 12 x 2 frac 2 3 x approx 1 5874x Such small differences in pitch can escape notice when presented as melodic intervals However when they are sounded as chords the difference between meantone intonation and equal tempered intonation can be quite noticeable even to untrained ears One can label enharmonically equivalent pitches with one and only one name for instance the numbers of integer notation as used in serialism and musical set theory and employed by the MIDI interface Enharmonic genus EditMain article Genus music Enharmonic In ancient Greek music the enharmonic was one of the three Greek genera in music in which the tetrachords are divided descending as a ditone plus two microtones The ditone can be anywhere from 16 13 to 9 7 3 55 to 4 35 semitones and the microtones can be anything smaller than 1 semitone 12 Some examples of enharmonic genera are 1 1 36 35 16 15 4 3 1 1 28 27 16 15 4 3 1 1 64 63 28 27 4 3 1 1 49 48 28 27 4 3 1 1 25 24 13 12 4 3See also EditEnharmonic keyboard Music theory Transpositional equivalence Diatonic and chromatic Enharmonic modulationReferences Edit a b Benward Bruce Saker Marilyn 2003 Music in Theory and Practice Vol I p 7 amp 360 ISBN 978 0 07 294262 0 Benward Bruce Saker Marilyn 2003 Music in Theory and Practice Vol I p 54 ISBN 978 0 07 294262 0 Elson Louis Charles 1905 Elson s Music Dictionary O Ditson Company p 100 The relation existing between two chromatics when by the elevation of one and depression of the other they are united into one Randel Don Michael ed 2003 Set theory The Harvard Dictionary of Music 4th ed Cambridge MA Belknap Press of Harvard University Press p 776 ISBN 978 0 674 01163 2 Randel Don Michael ed 2003 Enharmonic The Harvard Dictionary of Music 4th ed Cambridge MA Belknap Press of Harvard University Press p 295 ISBN 978 0 674 01163 2 Kern J and Hammerstein O 1939 bars 23 25 All the things you are New York T B Harms Co Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine Ella Fitzgerald All The Things You Are with lyrics YouTube Mellers W 1983 p 132 Beethoven and the Voice of God London Faber Walker A 2018 p 383 Fryderyk Chopin a Life and Times London Faber Newbould B 1997 p 336 Schubert the Music and the Man London Gollancz Rushton Julian 2001 Enharmonic In Sadie Stanley Tyrrell John eds The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians 2nd ed London Macmillan Publishers ISBN 0 19 517067 9 Barbera C Andre 1977 Arithmetic and Geometric Divisions of the Tetrachord Journal of Music Theory 21 2 294 323 doi 10 2307 843492 JSTOR 843492 Further reading EditEijk Lisette D van der 2020 The difference between a sharp and a flat Mathiesen Thomas J 2001 Greece I Ancient In Sadie Stanley Tyrrell John eds The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians 2nd ed London Macmillan Publishers ISBN 0 19 517067 9 Morey Carl 1966 The Diatonic Chromatic and Enharmonic Dances by Martino Pesenti Acta Musicologica 38 2 4 185 189 doi 10 2307 932526 JSTOR 932526 External links Edit The dictionary definition of enharmonic at Wiktionary Media related to Enharmonic at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Enharmonic amp oldid 1091496575, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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