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Meantone temperament

Meantone temperaments are musical temperaments, that is a variety of tuning systems, obtained by narrowing the fifths so that their ratio is slightly less than 3:2 (making them narrower than a perfect fifth), in order to push the thirds closer to pure. Meantone temperaments are constructed similarly to Pythagorean tuning, as a stack of equal fifths, but they are temperaments in that the fifths are not pure.

Figure 1. Comparison between Pythagorean tuning (blue), equal-tempered (black), quarter-comma meantone (red) and third-comma meantone (green). For each, the common origin is arbitrarily chosen as C. The values indicated by the scale at the left are deviations in cents with respect to equal temperament.

Notable meantone temperaments edit

Equal temperament, obtained by making all semitones the same size, each equal to one-twelfth of an octave (with ratio the 12th root of 2 to one (122:1), narrows the fifths by about 2 cents or 1/12 of a Pythagorean comma, and produces thirds that are only slightly better than in Pythagorean tuning. Equal temperament is roughly the same as 1/11 comma meantone tuning.

Quarter-comma meantone, which tempers the fifths by 1/4 of a syntonic comma, is the best known type of meantone temperament, and the term meantone temperament is often used to refer to it specifically. Four ascending fifths (as C–G–D–A–E) tempered by 1/4 comma produce a perfect major third (C–E), one syntonic comma narrower than the Pythagorean third that would result from four perfect fifths. Quarter-comma meantone has been practiced from the early 16th century to the end of the 19th. It can be approximated by a division of the octave in 31 equal steps.

This proceeds in the same way as Pythagorean tuning; i.e., it takes the fundamental (say, C) and goes up by six successive fifths (always adjusting by dividing by powers of 2 to remain within the octave above the fundamental), and similarly down, by six successive fifths, while adjusting the octave by multiplying by powers of 2. However, instead of using the 3/2 ratio, which gives "perfect" fifths, this must be multiplied by the fourth root of (80/81), (which is the "syntonic comma": the ratio of a just major third (5/4) to a Pythagorean one (81/64)) or, equivalently, one can use 5^(1/4), to slightly reduce the fifths. This results in the interval C-E being a "perfect third" (5/4), and the intermediate seconds (C-D, D-E) dividing C-E uniformly, so D-C and E-D are equal ratios whose square is 5/4. The same is true of the major second sequences F-G-A and G-A-B. However, there is still a "comma" in meantone tuning (i.e. the F and the G are not the same), which is actually larger than the Pythagorean one, and in the opposite sense.

In third-comma meantone, the fifths are tempered by 1/3 comma, and three descending fifths (such as A–D–G–C) produce a perfect minor third (A–C) one syntonic comma wider than the Pythagorean one that would result from three perfect fifths. Third-comma meantone can be approximated extremely well by a division of the octave in 19 equal steps.

The tone as a mean edit

The name "meantone temperament" derives from the fact that all such temperaments have only one size of the tone, between the major tone (8:9) and minor tone (9:10) of just intonation, which differ by a syntonic comma. In any regular system (i.e. with all fifths but one of the same size)[1] the tone (as C–D) is reached after two fifths (as C–G–D), while the major third is reached after four fifths: the tone therefore is exactly half the major third.

This is one sense in which the tone is a mean.

In the case of quarter-comma meantone, in addition, where the major third is made narrower by a syntonic comma, the tone is also half a comma narrower than the major tone of just intonation, or half a comma wider than the minor tone: this is another sense in which the tone in quarter-tone temperament may be considered a mean tone, and it explains why quarter-comma meantone is often considered the meantone temperament properly speaking.[2]

Meantone temperaments edit

 
For a tuning to be meantone, its fifth must be between 68557 and 700 ¢ in size. Note that 7-TET is on the flatmost extreme, 12-TET is on the sharpmost extreme, and 19-TET forms the midpoint of the spectrum.

"Meantone" can receive the following equivalent definitions:

  • The meantone is the geometric mean between the major whole tone (9:8 in just intonation) and the minor whole tone (10:9 in just intonation).
  • The meantone is the mean of its major third (for instance the square root of 5:4 in quarter-comma meantone).

The family of meantone temperaments share the common characteristic that they form a stack of identical fifths, the whole tone (major second) being the result of two fifths minus one octave, the major third of four fifths minus two octaves. Meantone temperaments are often described by the fraction of the syntonic comma by which the fifths are tempered: quarter-comma meantone, the most common type, tempers the fifths by 14 of a syntonic comma, with the result that four fifths produce a just major third, a syntonic comma lower than a Pythagorean major third; third-comma meantone tempers by 13 of a syntonic comma, three fifths producing a just major sixth (and hence a just minor 3rd), a syntonic comma lower than a Pythagorean one.

A meantone temperament is a linear temperament, distinguished by the width of its generator (the fifth, often measured in cents). Historically notable meantone temperaments, discussed below, occupy a narrow portion of this tuning continuum, with fifths ranging from approximately 695 to 699 cents.

Meantone temperaments can be specified in various ways: by what fraction (logarithmically) of a syntonic comma the fifth is being flattened (as above), what equal temperament has the meantone fifth in question, the width of the tempered perfect fifth in cents, or the ratio of the whole tone to the diatonic semitone. This last ratio was termed "R" by American composer, pianist and theoretician Easley Blackwood, but in effect has been in use for much longer than that.[citation needed] It is useful because it gives an idea of the melodic qualities of the tuning, and because if R is a rational number N/D, so is 3R + 1/5R + 2 or 3N + D/5N + 2D, which is the size of fifth in terms of logarithms base 2, and which immediately tells us what division of the octave we will have.[clarification needed]

If we multiply by 1200, we have the size of fifth in cents.

In these terms, some historically notable meantone tunings are listed below. The second and fourth column are corresponding approximations to the first column. The third column shows how close the second column's approximation is to the actual size of the fifth interval in the given meantone tuning from the first column.

Meantone tunings
Fraction of a (syntonic) comma Pure interval Approximate size of the fifth in octaves Error (in cents) Ratio R Approximate ET
1315 (nearly Pythagorean tuning) 3311×52495, but 32 can be considered pure for all practical purposes
(perfect fifth, major whole tone)
3153 +6.55227×10−5 9:4 53
111 (112 Pythagorean comma) 1638410935 (21437×5)
(Kirnberger fifth, a just perfect fifth flattened by a schisma)
712 +1.16371×10−4 2:1 12
16 4532 and 6445 (tritone) 3255 −0.188801 9:5 55
15 158 and 1615 (diatonic semitone) 2543 +0.0206757 7:4 43
14 54 and 85 (major third) 1831 +0.195765 5:3 31
27 2524 and 4825 (chromatic semitone) 2950 +0.189653 8:5 50
13 53 and 65 (minor third) 1119 −0.0493956 3:2 19
12 95 and 109 (minor whole tone) 1933 −0.292765 4:3 33

Equal temperaments edit

Neither the just fifth nor the quarter-comma meantone fifth is a rational fraction of the octave, but several tunings exist which approximate the fifth by such an interval; these are a subset of the equal temperaments ("N-ET"), in which the octave is divided into some number (N) of equally wide intervals.

Equal temperaments useful as meantone tunings include (in order of increasing generator width) 19-ET (~1/3 comma), 50-ET (~2/7 comma), 31-ET (~1/4 comma), 43-ET (~1/5 comma), and 55-ET (~1/6 comma). The farther the tuning gets away from quarter-comma meantone, however, the less related the tuning is to harmonic timbres, which can be overcome by tempering the partials to match the tuning – which is possible, however, only on electronic synthesizers.[3]

 
Comparison of perfect fifths, major thirds, and minor thirds in various meantone tunings with just intonation

Wolf intervals edit

A whole number of just perfect fifths will never add up to a whole number of octaves, because log2(3) is an irrational number. If a stacked-up whole number of perfect fifths is too close with the octave, then one of the intervals that is enharmonically equivalent to a fifth must have a different width than the other fifths. For example, to make a 12-note chromatic scale in Pythagorean tuning close at the octave, one of the fifth intervals must be lowered ("out-of-tune") by the Pythagorean comma; this altered fifth is called a "wolf fifth" because it sounds similar to a fifth in its interval size and seems like an out-of-tune fifth, but is actually a diminished sixth (e.g. between G and E). Likewise, 11 of the 12 perfect fourths are also in tune, but the remaining fourth becomes an augmented third.

Wolf intervals are an artifact of keyboard design.[4] This can be shown most easily using an isomorphic keyboard, such as that shown in Figure 2.

 
Fig. 2: The Wicki isomorphic keyboard, invented by Kaspar Wicki in 1896.

On an isomorphic keyboard, any given musical interval has the same shape wherever it appears, except at the edges. Here's an example. On the keyboard shown in Figure 2, from any given note, the note that's a perfect fifth higher is always up-and-rightwardly adjacent to the given note. There are no wolf intervals within the note-span of this keyboard. The problem is at the edge, on the note E. The note that's a perfect fifth higher than E is B, which is not included on the keyboard shown (although it could be included in a larger keyboard, placed just to the right of A, hence maintaining the keyboard's consistent note-pattern). Because there is no B button, when playing an E power chord, one must choose some other note, such as C, to play instead of the missing B.

Even edge conditions produce wolf intervals only if the isomorphic keyboard has fewer buttons per octave than the tuning has enharmonically-distinct notes (Milne, 2007). For example, the isomorphic keyboard in Figure 2 has 19 buttons per octave, so the above-cited edge-condition, from E to C, is not a wolf interval in 12-ET, 17-ET, or 19-ET; however, it is a wolf interval in 26-ET, 31-ET, and 50-ET. In these latter tunings, using electronic transposition could keep the current key's notes on the isomorphic keyboard's white buttons, such that these wolf intervals would very rarely be encountered in tonal music, despite modulation to exotic keys.[5]

Isomorphic keyboards expose the invariant properties of the meantone tunings of the syntonic temperament isomorphically (that is, for example, by exposing a given interval with a single consistent inter-button shape in every octave, key, and tuning) because both the isomorphic keyboard and temperament are two-dimensional (i.e., rank-2) entities (Milne, 2007). One-dimensional N-key keyboards can expose accurately the invariant properties of only a single one-dimensional N-ET tuning; hence, the one-dimensional piano-style keyboard, with 12 keys per octave, can expose the invariant properties of only one tuning: 12-ET.

When the perfect fifth is exactly 700 cents wide (that is, tempered by approximately 111 of a syntonic comma, or exactly 112 of a Pythagorean comma) then the tuning is identical to the familiar 12-tone equal temperament. This appears in the table above when R = 2:1.

Because of the compromises (and wolf intervals) forced on meantone tunings by the one-dimensional piano-style keyboard, well temperaments and eventually equal temperament became more popular.

Using standard interval names, twelve fifths equal six octaves plus one augmented seventh; seven octaves are equal to eleven fifths plus one diminished sixth. Given this, three "minor thirds" are actually augmented seconds (for example, B to C), and four "major thirds" are actually diminished fourths (for example, B to E). Several triads (like B–E–F and B–C–F) contain both these intervals and have normal fifths.

Extended meantones edit

All meantone tunings fall into the valid tuning range of the syntonic temperament, so all meantone tunings are syntonic tunings. All syntonic tunings, including the meantones, have a conceptually infinite number of notes in each octave, that is, seven natural notes, seven sharp notes (F to B), seven flat notes (B to F), double sharp notes, double flat notes, triple sharps and flats, and so on. In fact, double sharps and flats are uncommon, but still needed; triple sharps and flats are almost never seen. In any syntonic tuning that happens to divide the octave into a small number of equally wide smallest intervals (such as 12, 19, or 31), this infinity of notes still exists, although some notes will be equivalent. For example, in 19-ET, E and F are the same pitch.

Many musical instruments are capable of very fine distinctions of pitch, such as the human voice, the trombone, unfretted strings such as the violin, and lutes with tied frets. These instruments are well-suited to the use of meantone tunings.

On the other hand, the piano keyboard has only twelve physical note-controlling devices per octave, making it poorly suited to any tunings other than 12-ET. Almost all of the historic problems with the meantone temperament are caused by the attempt to map meantone's infinite number of notes per octave to a finite number of piano keys. This is, for example, the source of the "wolf fifth" discussed above. When choosing which notes to map to the piano's black keys, it is convenient to choose those notes that are common to a small number of closely related keys, but this will only work up to the edge of the octave; when wrapping around to the next octave, one must use a "wolf fifth" that is not as wide as the others, as discussed above.

The existence of the "wolf fifth" is one of the reasons why, before the introduction of well temperament, instrumental music generally stayed in a number of "safe" tonalities that did not involve the "wolf fifth" (which was generally put between G and E).

Throughout the Renaissance and Enlightenment, theorists as varied as Nicola Vicentino, Francisco de Salinas, Fabio Colonna, Marin Mersenne, Christiaan Huygens, and Isaac Newton advocated the use of meantone tunings that were extended beyond the keyboard's twelve notes,[6][7][8] and hence have come to be called "extended" meantone tunings. These efforts required a concomitant extension of keyboard instruments to offer means of controlling more than 12 notes per octave, including Vincento's Archicembalo, Mersenne's 19-ET harpsichord, Colonna's 31-ET sambuca, and Huygens's 31-ET harpsichord.[9] Other instruments extended the keyboard by only a few notes. Some period harpsichords and organs have split D/E keys, such that both E major/C minor (4 sharps) and E major/C minor (3 flats) can be played without wolf fifths. Many of those instruments also have split G/A keys, and a few have all the five accidental keys split.

All of these alternative instruments were "complicated" and "cumbersome" (Isacoff, 2003), due to (a) not being isomorphic, and (b) not having the ability to transpose electronically, which can significantly reduce the number of note-controlling buttons needed on an isomorphic keyboard (Plamondon, 2009). Both of these criticisms could be addressed by electronic isomorphic keyboard instruments (such as the open-source hardware jammer keyboard), which could be simpler, less cumbersome, and more expressive than existing keyboard instruments.[10]

Use of meantone temperament edit

References to tuning systems that could possibly refer to meantone were published as early as 1496 (Gafori), and Aron (1523) is unmistakably referring to meantone. However, the first mathematically precise Meantone tuning descriptions are found in late 16th century treatises by Francisco de Salinas and Gioseffo Zarlino. Salinas (in De musica libri septem, 1577) describes three different mean tone temperaments: the third-comma system, the two-seventh-comma system, and the quarter-comma system. He is the likely inventor of the third-comma system, while he and Zarlino both wrote on the two-seventh-comma system, apparently independently. Lodovico Fogliano mentions the quarter-comma system, but offers no discussion of it.

Of course, the quarter comma meantone system (or any other meantone system) could not have been implemented with complete accuracy until much later, since devices that could accurately measure pitch frequencies didn't exist until the mid-19th century. But tuners could use precisely the same method that "by ear" tuners have used until recently: go up by fifths, and down by octaves, or down by fifths, and up by octaves, and "temper" the fifths so they are "slightly" smaller than 3/2's.

For 12 tone equitempered tuning, they would have to be tempered by a little less than a "1/4 comma", since they must form a perfect cycle, with no comma at the end, whereas the "Mean" tuning still has a residual comma.

How tuners could identify a "quarter comma" reliably by ear is a bit more subtle. Since this amounts to about 0.3% of the frequency which, near middle C (~264 Hz), is about one Hertz, they could do it by using perfect fifths as a reference and adjusting the tempered note to produce beats at this rate. However, the frequency of the beats would have to be slightly adjusted, proportionately to the frequency of the note.

In the past, meantone temperaments were sometimes used or referred to under other names or descriptions. For example, in 1691 Christiaan Huygens wrote his "Lettre touchant le cycle harmonique" ("Letter concerning the harmonic cycle") with the purpose of introducing what he believed to be a new division of the octave. In this letter Huygens referred several times, in a comparative way, to a conventional tuning arrangement, which he indicated variously as "temperament ordinaire", or "the one that everyone uses". But Huygens' description of this conventional arrangement was quite precise, and is clearly identifiable with what is now classified as (quarter-comma) meantone temperament.[11]

Although meantone is best known as a tuning environment associated with earlier music of the Renaissance and Baroque, there is evidence of continuous usage of meantone as a keyboard temperament well into the middle of the 19th century.[12] Meantone temperament has had considerable revival for early music performance in the late 20th century and in newly composed works specifically demanding meantone by composers including John Adams, György Ligeti and Douglas Leedy.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ J. Murray Barbour, Tuning and Temperament. A Historical Survey. East Lansing, 1951, p. xi.
  2. ^ Barbour 1951, p. x and pp. 25-44.
  3. ^ Sethares, William; Milne, A.; Tiedje, S.; Prechtl, A.; Plamondon, J. (2009). "Spectral Tools for Dynamic Tonality and Audio Morphing". Computer Music Journal. 33 (2): 71–84. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.159.838. doi:10.1162/comj.2009.33.2.71. S2CID 216636537. Retrieved 2009-09-20.
  4. ^ Milne, Andrew; Sethares, W.A.; Plamondon, J. (March 2008). "Tuning Continua and Keyboard Layouts". Journal of Mathematics and Music. 2 (1): 1–19. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.158.6927. doi:10.1080/17459730701828677. S2CID 1549755.
  5. ^ Plamondon, Jim; Milne, A.; Sethares, W.A. (2009). "Dynamic Tonality: Extending the Framework of Tonality into the 21st Century" (PDF). Proceedings of the Annual Conference of the South Central Chapter of the College Music Society.
  6. ^ Barbour, J.M., 2004, Tuning and Temperament: A Historical Survey.
  7. ^ Duffin, R.W., 2006, How Equal Temperament Ruined Harmony (and Why You Should Care).
  8. ^ Isacoff, Stuart, 2003, Temperament: How Music Became a Battleground for the Great Minds of Western Civilization
  9. ^ Stembridge, Christopher (1993). "The Cimbalo Cromatico and Other Italian Keyboard Instruments with Nineteen or More Divisions to the Octave". Performance Practice Review. vi (1): 33–59. doi:10.5642/perfpr.199306.01.02.
  10. ^ Paine, G.; Stevenson, I.; Pearce, A. (2007). "The Thummer Mapping Project (ThuMP)" (PDF). Proceedings of the 7th International Conference on New Interfaces for Musical Expression (NIME07): 70–77.
  11. ^ (See references cited in article 'Temperament Ordinaire'.)
  12. ^ George Grove wrote as late as 1890: "The mode of tuning which prevailed before the introduction of equal temperament, is called the Meantone System. It has hardly yet died out in England, for it may still be heard on a few organs in country churches. According to Don B. Yñiguez, organist of Seville Cathedral, the meantone system is generally maintained on Spanish organs, even at the present day." A Dictionary of Music and Musicians, Macmillan, London, vol. IV, 1890 [1st edition], p. 72.

External links edit

meantone, temperament, this, article, need, reorganization, comply, with, wikipedia, layout, guidelines, please, help, editing, article, make, improvements, overall, structure, february, 2021, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, musical, temperaments. This article may be in need of reorganization to comply with Wikipedia s layout guidelines Please help by editing the article to make improvements to the overall structure February 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Meantone temperaments are musical temperaments that is a variety of tuning systems obtained by narrowing the fifths so that their ratio is slightly less than 3 2 making them narrower than a perfect fifth in order to push the thirds closer to pure Meantone temperaments are constructed similarly to Pythagorean tuning as a stack of equal fifths but they are temperaments in that the fifths are not pure Figure 1 Comparison between Pythagorean tuning blue equal tempered black quarter comma meantone red and third comma meantone green For each the common origin is arbitrarily chosen as C The values indicated by the scale at the left are deviations in cents with respect to equal temperament Contents 1 Notable meantone temperaments 2 The tone as a mean 3 Meantone temperaments 3 1 Equal temperaments 4 Wolf intervals 5 Extended meantones 6 Use of meantone temperament 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksNotable meantone temperaments editEqual temperament obtained by making all semitones the same size each equal to one twelfth of an octave with ratio the 12th root of 2 to one 12 2 1 narrows the fifths by about 2 cents or 1 12 of a Pythagorean comma and produces thirds that are only slightly better than in Pythagorean tuning Equal temperament is roughly the same as 1 11 comma meantone tuning Quarter comma meantone which tempers the fifths by 1 4 of a syntonic comma is the best known type of meantone temperament and the term meantone temperament is often used to refer to it specifically Four ascending fifths as C G D A E tempered by 1 4 comma produce a perfect major third C E one syntonic comma narrower than the Pythagorean third that would result from four perfect fifths Quarter comma meantone has been practiced from the early 16th century to the end of the 19th It can be approximated by a division of the octave in 31 equal steps This proceeds in the same way as Pythagorean tuning i e it takes the fundamental say C and goes up by six successive fifths always adjusting by dividing by powers of 2 to remain within the octave above the fundamental and similarly down by six successive fifths while adjusting the octave by multiplying by powers of 2 However instead of using the 3 2 ratio which gives perfect fifths this must be multiplied by the fourth root of 80 81 which is the syntonic comma the ratio of a just major third 5 4 to a Pythagorean one 81 64 or equivalently one can use 5 1 4 to slightly reduce the fifths This results in the interval C E being a perfect third 5 4 and the intermediate seconds C D D E dividing C E uniformly so D C and E D are equal ratios whose square is 5 4 The same is true of the major second sequences F G A and G A B However there is still a comma in meantone tuning i e the F and the G are not the same which is actually larger than the Pythagorean one and in the opposite sense In third comma meantone the fifths are tempered by 1 3 comma and three descending fifths such as A D G C produce a perfect minor third A C one syntonic comma wider than the Pythagorean one that would result from three perfect fifths Third comma meantone can be approximated extremely well by a division of the octave in 19 equal steps The tone as a mean editThe name meantone temperament derives from the fact that all such temperaments have only one size of the tone between the major tone 8 9 and minor tone 9 10 of just intonation which differ by a syntonic comma In any regular system i e with all fifths but one of the same size 1 the tone as C D is reached after two fifths as C G D while the major third is reached after four fifths the tone therefore is exactly half the major third This is one sense in which the tone is a mean In the case of quarter comma meantone in addition where the major third is made narrower by a syntonic comma the tone is also half a comma narrower than the major tone of just intonation or half a comma wider than the minor tone this is another sense in which the tone in quarter tone temperament may be considered a mean tone and it explains why quarter comma meantone is often considered the meantone temperament properly speaking 2 Meantone temperaments edit nbsp For a tuning to be meantone its fifth must be between 6855 7 and 700 in size Note that 7 TET is on the flatmost extreme 12 TET is on the sharpmost extreme and 19 TET forms the midpoint of the spectrum Meantone can receive the following equivalent definitions The meantone is the geometric mean between the major whole tone 9 8 in just intonation and the minor whole tone 10 9 in just intonation The meantone is the mean of its major third for instance the square root of 5 4 in quarter comma meantone The family of meantone temperaments share the common characteristic that they form a stack of identical fifths the whole tone major second being the result of two fifths minus one octave the major third of four fifths minus two octaves Meantone temperaments are often described by the fraction of the syntonic comma by which the fifths are tempered quarter comma meantone the most common type tempers the fifths by 1 4 of a syntonic comma with the result that four fifths produce a just major third a syntonic comma lower than a Pythagorean major third third comma meantone tempers by 1 3 of a syntonic comma three fifths producing a just major sixth and hence a just minor 3rd a syntonic comma lower than a Pythagorean one A meantone temperament is a linear temperament distinguished by the width of its generator the fifth often measured in cents Historically notable meantone temperaments discussed below occupy a narrow portion of this tuning continuum with fifths ranging from approximately 695 to 699 cents Meantone temperaments can be specified in various ways by what fraction logarithmically of a syntonic comma the fifth is being flattened as above what equal temperament has the meantone fifth in question the width of the tempered perfect fifth in cents or the ratio of the whole tone to the diatonic semitone This last ratio was termed R by American composer pianist and theoretician Easley Blackwood but in effect has been in use for much longer than that citation needed It is useful because it gives an idea of the melodic qualities of the tuning and because if R is a rational number N D so is 3R 1 5R 2 or 3N D 5N 2D which is the size of fifth in terms of logarithms base 2 and which immediately tells us what division of the octave we will have clarification needed If we multiply by 1200 we have the size of fifth in cents In these terms some historically notable meantone tunings are listed below The second and fourth column are corresponding approximations to the first column The third column shows how close the second column s approximation is to the actual size of the fifth interval in the given meantone tuning from the first column Meantone tunings Fraction of a syntonic comma Pure interval Approximate size of the fifth in octaves Error in cents Ratio R Approximate ET1 315 nearly Pythagorean tuning 3311 5 2495 but 3 2 can be considered pure for all practical purposes perfect fifth major whole tone 31 53 6 55227 10 5 9 4 531 11 1 12 Pythagorean comma 16384 10935 214 37 5 Kirnberger fifth a just perfect fifth flattened by a schisma 7 12 1 16371 10 4 2 1 121 6 45 32 and 64 45 tritone 32 55 0 188801 9 5 551 5 15 8 and 16 15 diatonic semitone 25 43 0 0206757 7 4 431 4 5 4 and 8 5 major third 18 31 0 195765 5 3 312 7 25 24 and 48 25 chromatic semitone 29 50 0 189653 8 5 501 3 5 3 and 6 5 minor third 11 19 0 0493956 3 2 191 2 9 5 and 10 9 minor whole tone 19 33 0 292765 4 3 33Equal temperaments edit Neither the just fifth nor the quarter comma meantone fifth is a rational fraction of the octave but several tunings exist which approximate the fifth by such an interval these are a subset of the equal temperaments N ET in which the octave is divided into some number N of equally wide intervals Equal temperaments useful as meantone tunings include in order of increasing generator width 19 ET 1 3 comma 50 ET 2 7 comma 31 ET 1 4 comma 43 ET 1 5 comma and 55 ET 1 6 comma The farther the tuning gets away from quarter comma meantone however the less related the tuning is to harmonic timbres which can be overcome by tempering the partials to match the tuning which is possible however only on electronic synthesizers 3 nbsp Comparison of perfect fifths major thirds and minor thirds in various meantone tunings with just intonationWolf intervals editA whole number of just perfect fifths will never add up to a whole number of octaves because log2 3 is an irrational number If a stacked up whole number of perfect fifths is too close with the octave then one of the intervals that is enharmonically equivalent to a fifth must have a different width than the other fifths For example to make a 12 note chromatic scale in Pythagorean tuning close at the octave one of the fifth intervals must be lowered out of tune by the Pythagorean comma this altered fifth is called a wolf fifth because it sounds similar to a fifth in its interval size and seems like an out of tune fifth but is actually a diminished sixth e g between G and E Likewise 11 of the 12 perfect fourths are also in tune but the remaining fourth becomes an augmented third Wolf intervals are an artifact of keyboard design 4 This can be shown most easily using an isomorphic keyboard such as that shown in Figure 2 nbsp Fig 2 The Wicki isomorphic keyboard invented by Kaspar Wicki in 1896 On an isomorphic keyboard any given musical interval has the same shape wherever it appears except at the edges Here s an example On the keyboard shown in Figure 2 from any given note the note that s a perfect fifth higher is always up and rightwardly adjacent to the given note There are no wolf intervals within the note span of this keyboard The problem is at the edge on the note E The note that s a perfect fifth higher than E is B which is not included on the keyboard shown although it could be included in a larger keyboard placed just to the right of A hence maintaining the keyboard s consistent note pattern Because there is no B button when playing an E power chord one must choose some other note such as C to play instead of the missing B Even edge conditions produce wolf intervals only if the isomorphic keyboard has fewer buttons per octave than the tuning has enharmonically distinct notes Milne 2007 For example the isomorphic keyboard in Figure 2 has 19 buttons per octave so the above cited edge condition from E to C is not a wolf interval in 12 ET 17 ET or 19 ET however it is a wolf interval in 26 ET 31 ET and 50 ET In these latter tunings using electronic transposition could keep the current key s notes on the isomorphic keyboard s white buttons such that these wolf intervals would very rarely be encountered in tonal music despite modulation to exotic keys 5 Isomorphic keyboards expose the invariant properties of the meantone tunings of the syntonic temperament isomorphically that is for example by exposing a given interval with a single consistent inter button shape in every octave key and tuning because both the isomorphic keyboard and temperament are two dimensional i e rank 2 entities Milne 2007 One dimensional N key keyboards can expose accurately the invariant properties of only a single one dimensional N ET tuning hence the one dimensional piano style keyboard with 12 keys per octave can expose the invariant properties of only one tuning 12 ET When the perfect fifth is exactly 700 cents wide that is tempered by approximately 1 11 of a syntonic comma or exactly 1 12 of a Pythagorean comma then the tuning is identical to the familiar 12 tone equal temperament This appears in the table above when R 2 1 Because of the compromises and wolf intervals forced on meantone tunings by the one dimensional piano style keyboard well temperaments and eventually equal temperament became more popular Using standard interval names twelve fifths equal six octaves plus one augmented seventh seven octaves are equal to eleven fifths plus one diminished sixth Given this three minor thirds are actually augmented seconds for example B to C and four major thirds are actually diminished fourths for example B to E Several triads like B E F and B C F contain both these intervals and have normal fifths Extended meantones editAll meantone tunings fall into the valid tuning range of the syntonic temperament so all meantone tunings are syntonic tunings All syntonic tunings including the meantones have a conceptually infinite number of notes in each octave that is seven natural notes seven sharp notes F to B seven flat notes B to F double sharp notes double flat notes triple sharps and flats and so on In fact double sharps and flats are uncommon but still needed triple sharps and flats are almost never seen In any syntonic tuning that happens to divide the octave into a small number of equally wide smallest intervals such as 12 19 or 31 this infinity of notes still exists although some notes will be equivalent For example in 19 ET E and F are the same pitch Many musical instruments are capable of very fine distinctions of pitch such as the human voice the trombone unfretted strings such as the violin and lutes with tied frets These instruments are well suited to the use of meantone tunings On the other hand the piano keyboard has only twelve physical note controlling devices per octave making it poorly suited to any tunings other than 12 ET Almost all of the historic problems with the meantone temperament are caused by the attempt to map meantone s infinite number of notes per octave to a finite number of piano keys This is for example the source of the wolf fifth discussed above When choosing which notes to map to the piano s black keys it is convenient to choose those notes that are common to a small number of closely related keys but this will only work up to the edge of the octave when wrapping around to the next octave one must use a wolf fifth that is not as wide as the others as discussed above The existence of the wolf fifth is one of the reasons why before the introduction of well temperament instrumental music generally stayed in a number of safe tonalities that did not involve the wolf fifth which was generally put between G and E Throughout the Renaissance and Enlightenment theorists as varied as Nicola Vicentino Francisco de Salinas Fabio Colonna Marin Mersenne Christiaan Huygens and Isaac Newton advocated the use of meantone tunings that were extended beyond the keyboard s twelve notes 6 7 8 and hence have come to be called extended meantone tunings These efforts required a concomitant extension of keyboard instruments to offer means of controlling more than 12 notes per octave including Vincento s Archicembalo Mersenne s 19 ET harpsichord Colonna s 31 ET sambuca and Huygens s 31 ET harpsichord 9 Other instruments extended the keyboard by only a few notes Some period harpsichords and organs have split D E keys such that both E major C minor 4 sharps and E major C minor 3 flats can be played without wolf fifths Many of those instruments also have split G A keys and a few have all the five accidental keys split All of these alternative instruments were complicated and cumbersome Isacoff 2003 due to a not being isomorphic and b not having the ability to transpose electronically which can significantly reduce the number of note controlling buttons needed on an isomorphic keyboard Plamondon 2009 Both of these criticisms could be addressed by electronic isomorphic keyboard instruments such as the open source hardware jammer keyboard which could be simpler less cumbersome and more expressive than existing keyboard instruments 10 Use of meantone temperament editReferences to tuning systems that could possibly refer to meantone were published as early as 1496 Gafori and Aron 1523 is unmistakably referring to meantone However the first mathematically precise Meantone tuning descriptions are found in late 16th century treatises by Francisco de Salinas and Gioseffo Zarlino Salinas in De musica libri septem 1577 describes three different mean tone temperaments the third comma system the two seventh comma system and the quarter comma system He is the likely inventor of the third comma system while he and Zarlino both wrote on the two seventh comma system apparently independently Lodovico Fogliano mentions the quarter comma system but offers no discussion of it Of course the quarter comma meantone system or any other meantone system could not have been implemented with complete accuracy until much later since devices that could accurately measure pitch frequencies didn t exist until the mid 19th century But tuners could use precisely the same method that by ear tuners have used until recently go up by fifths and down by octaves or down by fifths and up by octaves and temper the fifths so they are slightly smaller than 3 2 s For 12 tone equitempered tuning they would have to be tempered by a little less than a 1 4 comma since they must form a perfect cycle with no comma at the end whereas the Mean tuning still has a residual comma How tuners could identify a quarter comma reliably by ear is a bit more subtle Since this amounts to about 0 3 of the frequency which near middle C 264 Hz is about one Hertz they could do it by using perfect fifths as a reference and adjusting the tempered note to produce beats at this rate However the frequency of the beats would have to be slightly adjusted proportionately to the frequency of the note In the past meantone temperaments were sometimes used or referred to under other names or descriptions For example in 1691 Christiaan Huygens wrote his Lettre touchant le cycle harmonique Letter concerning the harmonic cycle with the purpose of introducing what he believed to be a new division of the octave In this letter Huygens referred several times in a comparative way to a conventional tuning arrangement which he indicated variously as temperament ordinaire or the one that everyone uses But Huygens description of this conventional arrangement was quite precise and is clearly identifiable with what is now classified as quarter comma meantone temperament 11 Although meantone is best known as a tuning environment associated with earlier music of the Renaissance and Baroque there is evidence of continuous usage of meantone as a keyboard temperament well into the middle of the 19th century 12 Meantone temperament has had considerable revival for early music performance in the late 20th century and in newly composed works specifically demanding meantone by composers including John Adams Gyorgy Ligeti and Douglas Leedy See also editDynamic tonality Equal temperament Just intonation Interval Mathematics of musical scales Pythagorean tuning Semitone Well temperament Regular temperament List of meantone intervalsReferences edit J Murray Barbour Tuning and Temperament A Historical Survey East Lansing 1951 p xi Barbour 1951 p x and pp 25 44 Sethares William Milne A Tiedje S Prechtl A Plamondon J 2009 Spectral Tools for Dynamic Tonality and Audio Morphing Computer Music Journal 33 2 71 84 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 159 838 doi 10 1162 comj 2009 33 2 71 S2CID 216636537 Retrieved 2009 09 20 Milne Andrew Sethares W A Plamondon J March 2008 Tuning Continua and Keyboard Layouts Journal of Mathematics and Music 2 1 1 19 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 158 6927 doi 10 1080 17459730701828677 S2CID 1549755 Plamondon Jim Milne A Sethares W A 2009 Dynamic Tonality Extending the Framework of Tonality into the 21st Century PDF Proceedings of the Annual Conference of the South Central Chapter of the College Music Society Barbour J M 2004 Tuning and Temperament A Historical Survey Duffin R W 2006 How Equal Temperament Ruined Harmony and Why You Should Care Isacoff Stuart 2003 Temperament How Music Became a Battleground for the Great Minds of Western Civilization Stembridge Christopher 1993 The Cimbalo Cromatico and Other Italian Keyboard Instruments with Nineteen or More Divisions to the Octave Performance Practice Review vi 1 33 59 doi 10 5642 perfpr 199306 01 02 Paine G Stevenson I Pearce A 2007 The Thummer Mapping Project ThuMP PDF Proceedings of the 7th International Conference on New Interfaces for Musical Expression NIME07 70 77 See references cited in article Temperament Ordinaire George Grove wrote as late as 1890 The mode of tuning which prevailed before the introduction of equal temperament is called the Meantone System It has hardly yet died out in England for it may still be heard on a few organs in country churches According to Don B Yniguez organist of Seville Cathedral the meantone system is generally maintained on Spanish organs even at the present day A Dictionary of Music and Musicians Macmillan London vol IV 1890 1st edition p 72 External links editAn explanation of constructing Quarter Comma Meantone Tuning LucyTuning specific meantone derived from pi and the writings of John Harrison How to tune quarter comma meantone Archive index at the Wayback Machine Music fragments played in different temperaments mp3s not archived Kyle Gann s Introduction to Historical Tunings has an explanation of how the meantone temperament works Willem Kroesbergen Andrew cruickshank Meantone unequal and equal temperament during J S Bach s life https www academia edu 9189419 Blankenburg Equal or unequal temperament during J S Bach s life Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Meantone temperament amp oldid 1181779378, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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