Glommish/Musical system: Difference between revisions
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===13th century=== | ===13th century=== | ||
===15th century=== | ===15th century=== | ||
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===19th century (popular)=== | ===19th century (popular)=== | ||
===Chinese Theory=== | |||
* experiments in pythagorean tuning followed by the discovery of 12- and 53-tone MOS scales | |||
* higher limit tonalities introduced by throat-singers; subsequent treatises describe otonality as yin (qürm) and utonality as yang (läŋ) | |||
* musical theater, orchestra, Partchian ideas | |||
===European Theory=== | |||
* Babylonians independently discover pythagorean tuning and Greeks extend it into genera | |||
* poly-pythagorean chains introduced by Jewish theorists to explain the enharmonic genus |
Revision as of 08:12, 10 October 2016
Instruments
þe térem = string instrument (from Türiŋit täärm)
þe kátérem = guqin (← kaa-täärm 'ancient string instrument')
þe júskion = dulcimer (← jüüskön)
þí klársiach = harp (← cláirseach)
þe kinnór = lyre (← cinnowr)
þe piengeng (térem) = bowed string instrument (← peŋ-eŋ (bow-COMITATIVE))
þe siópiengeng = violin (← söö-peŋeŋ 'small bowed')
þe latspiengeng = cello (← lats-peŋeŋ 'large bowed')
þe lúg (← luug), þí fiadóg (← feadóg) = (two kinds of) flute
þí szavúrtéreme = broken instruments
Tuning
13th century
15th century
17th century
There are three kinds of systems:
1) Two eleven-limit diamonds spaced a perfect fifth apart, or two (1...13)x(1...1/7) diamonds spaced a perfect fifth apart
2) A cross set (1...15)x(1...15)
3) An Euler-Fokker genus 3⁴x5²x7²
19th century (popular)
Chinese Theory
- experiments in pythagorean tuning followed by the discovery of 12- and 53-tone MOS scales
- higher limit tonalities introduced by throat-singers; subsequent treatises describe otonality as yin (qürm) and utonality as yang (läŋ)
- musical theater, orchestra, Partchian ideas
European Theory
- Babylonians independently discover pythagorean tuning and Greeks extend it into genera
- poly-pythagorean chains introduced by Jewish theorists to explain the enharmonic genus