Verse:Hmøøh/Tumhan/Music: Difference between revisions

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'''Bjeheondian music''' is a monophonic tradition based on [[Netagin]] music. In modern times it is usually notated based on 19 equal divisions of the octave (19edo), however real-world intonational practices differ by region and context. Liturgical and folk music is usually based on scales similar to the semiquartal (5L 4s MOS) scale, the nine-note scale 331313131 which is an extension of the familiar pentatonic scale. Diatonic-like melodic shapes sometimes arise as a consequence of altering the semiquartal scale.
'''Bjeheondian music''' is a monophonic tradition based on [[Netagin]] music. In modern times it is usually notated based on 19 equal divisions of the octave (19edo). However, real-world intonational practices are not fixed to a particular tuning and use traditional microtonal inflections or fine-tuned intervals, and they differ by region and context. Liturgical and folk music is usually based on scales similar to the semiquartal (5L 4s MOS) scale, the nine-note scale 331313131 which is an extension of the familiar pentatonic scale. Diatonic-like melodic shapes sometimes arise as a consequence of altering the semiquartal scale.
 
Folk music is not fixed to a particular tuning and may use traditional microtonal inflections or fine-tuned intervals.


A ''hanier'' /hɐ'nɪɾ/ (literally 'stepping'; Wdm. ''hănier'') consists of a nine-note scale plus which subsets to emphasize, either a set of two ''pezům'' /pɛ'zuəm/ (pentachords, lit. 'set of five'; Wdm. ''păsuam'') or a framework based on a ''buri'' /by'ɾi/ (lit. 'sprint'; Wdm. ''büri''), a pentatonic subset where 1\19 is not used as a step. Different styles encourage different subset use.
A ''hanier'' /hɐ'nɪɾ/ (literally 'stepping'; Wdm. ''hănier'') consists of a nine-note scale plus which subsets to emphasize, either a set of two ''pezům'' /pɛ'zuəm/ (pentachords, lit. 'set of five'; Wdm. ''păsuam'') or a framework based on a ''buri'' /by'ɾi/ (lit. 'sprint'; Wdm. ''büri''), a pentatonic subset where 1\19 is not used as a step. Different styles encourage different subset use.
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