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In tuning, it is most easy to hear UNISON, so far as I know everyone who can hear can do this; next easiest is "OCTAVE", most people have no problem telling when two pitch are exactly in "octave"; then there is the "perfect" fourth and fifth, a student can be trained to hear them and tell when they have tuned exactly to a fourth or fifth. To me this is the starting point for the tuning of a musical instrument. A Maker of musical instruments has to know more about Scales than a Player. Remember: People learned to talk and sing first (poetry and melody), and then came musical instruments, rhythm, dancing and harmony; finally there was a large enough body of work for thinkers/philosophers to try to find rules. In the order of things, it looked like the Chinese Civilization came first. They had music, music theory, mathematics, medicine, war and politics. China’s people knew that Japan existed, there was some trade and China sent monks to Japan to expand their religion. China also traded with the Mediterranean Cultures, but they were just too far away to have much influence. Egypt and Sumerian were also a early civilizations. Egypt was established on a narrow river valley and kept the same name and culture, there was some language drift. Sumeria was also in a river valley and got its name from a conquering people that came from the East or North-East. The area that was Sumeria changed a lot as successive waves of conquering people arrived. Its name changed from Sumeria, Chadeea, Babylonia, Mesopotamia, Persia, Iran and Iraq. Then there were the Greeks and the Romans civilizations cam later than the Egyptian and Sumerian Civilizations. How about mathematics; there is a fair description of the Egyptian, Greek and Roman math and math symbols? There should be one for the Sumerian math as they seemed to have been more advanced and the Egyptians, Greeks and Romans who borrowed from them. The mathematics and style of writing has an influence on music philosophy. Although I have not found an authorian source yet, I suspect that Sumerian and Greek math had a lot in similar to Roman math and numbers, that is: if an inferior number is placed in front (reading left to right) the inferior number is to be subtracted from the superior number. Both Greek and Romans used letters from their alphabet to signify numbers; separate symbols were a later invention. The Sumerians and the Egyptians had a written language, the Greeks were just at the verge of creating a written language, animals smaller than the horse had been domesticated, and the horse had not yet been domesticated at the time of the first Hyssop invasion of Egypt. Now to switch to Greek musical Philosophy ... none of the Greek Musicians could read music or anything, only some of the rich Greek Philosophers had the skill of reading and writing. The Greek used letters of their alphabet to indicate a musical pitch. They had a separate letter for every single pitch of every scale and every mode. There were not enough letters in the Greek alphabet for all these symbols, so they used letters backwards and up-side-down and even “broken” letters to get enough symbols. Figure 2 Staff of Seiklos Figure 3 Rubbing of the Staff of Seiklos Example of Greek Music Score Refer to Figure 3, Greek music was mostly religious poetry that was sung and a string instrument was used to back the voice. The above example is a religious poem (in Classical Greek) the smaller symbols above the text poem are the notes that are intended to be sounded when the poem is sung. Pythagoras (600BC) was the first, in the West, to write about forming scales for stringed instruments (well we had to wait for them to invent writing before they could write anything down). He was part scientist (he conducted test to verify his theories) and part mystic. The straight story about Pythagoras is difficult to obtain as all his writings were destroyed and all existing information is secondhand. There is more music history about Pythagoras in the Math and Physic department than in the Music Department. Euclid’s comments are from the Math Department: Pythagoras studied in Babylonia when it was part of Chaldean Empire and returned home to Samos, a Greek Island and started a school. This first school was not successful; it attracted only one student, which Pythagoras had to pay to attend. Next, Pythagoras studied more in Egypt and returned to Croton, a Greek colony in southern Italy. His second school was very successful. He caused a scandal as he allowed women to attend his school and he married his best female pupil late in life. Pythagoras was both a scientist and a mystic, he performed actual experiments especially in his study of sound, but he had large parts of his school locked in secrecy. Philolaus was his best pupil. He is credited with the theorem that the square of the sides of the two shorter sides of a right triangle equal the square of the longer. Also that the relationship of pitch of a string could be correlated with length. He was capable of addition, subtraction, multiplication, division and the calculating of square roots and cube roots of numbers using Greek notation. But Pythagoras had the religious belief that the whole universe rested on numbers and their relationship. It was a major blow to his faith and creditability when it was discovered in his school that the sides of the simplest right triangle where the smaller sides are equal does not allow the value of the longer side to be calculated exactly. In simple terms, the square root of two can not be found as equal to the ratio of any two real numbers. Of course Euclid also had his problems as well. He favored geometry, but could not trisect an angle nor double a cube using geometry and there was one of his theorems that would later be proven to be faulty. From the Physic Department: Pythagoras used a Monochord for his sound experiments. He was only interested in string instruments. He (as well as Plato and Aristotle) spoke out against flute (and whistles and pipes) music as being bad for the state. All the aristocratic Greek philosophers postulated that all music should be controlled by the state in the interest of the community; they further postulated that disorderly music depraves the conduct of man, but orderly music improves it. Pythagoras was a sage and philosopher that was trying to find rules for why certain groups of music sounded pleasing. Pythagoras already knew that sound was a vibration. He investigated the triads of 6:5:4 string lengths as sounding pleasant. He developed a diatonic music scale based on this relation. Example: pick any pitch to start from. (Note that Pythagoras could not know about the frequency of notes as he had no way to measure time to any accuracy.) Pythagoras had to work with string length and his monochord. If the longest string is selected to be 100 units long and the triad is defined to be the pitch of every other string, the third string is (100/6)X5=83-1/3, the fifth string is (100/6)X4=66-2/3. Now take the fifth string and make it the first of a new triad, so the seventh string is (66.6666666/6)X5=55.55555, and the ninth is (66.666666/6)X4=44.44444. The eight string is the octave of the first string so its value can be set at one half the length of the first string. So for the first pass through: 1 100 2 ? 3 4 83-1/3 ? 5 6 66-2/3 ? 7 55.5555 8 50.00 9 (string number) 44.444 (relative string length) The value of the second string is twice the length of the ninth string so 2X44.44444=88.88888. The value of the second string can be set to the 6 of a new triad. So the forth string has to equal (88.88888/6)X5=74.074074 and the sixth string equals (88.88888/6)X4=59.259259. So finally: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 100.000 88.888 83.333 74.074 66.666 59.259 55.555 50.000 0.111 0.0625 0.111 0.099 0.111 0.06250 0.099 0 203.9 315.64 519.55 701.95 905.87 1017.60 1200 203.9 111.74 203.9 182.4 203.9 111.73 182.4 string number. relative length of equal strings. relative step size. cents from tonic. step size in cent. In this scale the Major and Minor Triads are pure, the fifth is pure. The interval to the forth is slightly narrow (1 cent). Also Pythagoras is credited with naming the Modes of the Greek Tetrachord after various Greek Tribes, when asked why, he is credited with stating: “that the way they sound to me”. All the above about Pythagoras may not be true. The Tetrachord (Ancient). is one of the earliest known scales; it is ancient. It was known in Babylon and Sumeria. This is a scale for the Kithara (Lyre), rather than a Harp. The Harp was only a minor instrument in Sumeria and shunned by the mainland Greeks. Tetrachord means four notes in Greek (cord can mean either a string or note in Greek, in this case it is note because the various tetrachord scales can be played quite well on a three string Greek Lyre). The first note of the tetrachord is called the keynote or tonic, and the fourth string is tuned to a perfect forth above the tonic. Any two equal strings whose length are in the ratio of 4:3 will produce a perfect fourth (also 498.05 cents). The intervals of the two notes between the first note and the fourth note are movable and are moved to allow the stringed instrument to play the various Greek Modes. There are three tetrachord modes: 1) the Enharmonic, 2) the Chromatic and 3) the Diatonic (ancient Greek definitions of these words are different from modern usage). The Enharmonic Mode is formed by two tones and two diesis. The Chromatic Mode consists of two semitones and a tone and a half. The Diatonic Mode is formed by two consecutive tones and a semitone. The movable notes will have to fit in this interval of 498 cents by the following rules: Quoting Sachs The Rise of Music in the Ancient World, East and West some Greek Modes and Shades: “according to Aristonuxes: interval from tonic from second note to third third to fourth(fixed) Enharmonic 398 49 49 Chroma malakon Chroma hemiolion Chroma toninion 364 348 298 66 74 99 66 74 99 Diatonon malakon Diatonon syntonon 249 199 149 199 99 99 however Ptolemy disagreed, he chose: Enharmonic 386 74 38 Chroma malakon Chroma syntonon 316 267 120 151 62 80 Diatonon malikon Diatonon toninon Diatonon syntonon Diatonon ditoniaion Diatonon homalon 233 204 182 204 182 182 233 204 204 165 83 62 198 90 151” Tetrachords can be extended to make larger scales with more range. Consecutive tetrachords can be arranged two ways 1) the conjunct is where two Teteachords are connected and share one string (for a total of seven strings) or 2) the disjunct where the two Tetrachords are separate and there is a tone ( 9:8 string length ratio) separation between the two Tetrachords (for a total of eight strings). Again remember that the Tonic and the Forth are the fixed strings or notes. The two strings between the tonic and forth are movable pitches; however, the sum of their step size stays equal to a tone (9:8 step size) plus a semi-tone (16:15 step size). The scale The following on the scale is from the Ten Books of Architecture by Vitruvius. The version available to us today is a summery of a summary of a translation of a translation of a copy of a copy (after all the average life of a copy is about a hundred years, so there had to be many copies and some copyist had to make “improvements”). Vitruvius translated Aristonuxes Greek into Latin and summarized. Vitruvius was copied and copied, with each copier changing it a little. Then Dr. Morris Morgan translated the copy from Valentine Rose’s Latin into English and cut the section on Aristonuxes short saying what Virtruvis Summery just contained an obvious interpolation. Valentine Rose’s copy added a grand staff to the section on Aristonuxes to help explain the Refer to Figure 4, the scale of Aristonuxe as quoted from Vitruvius, Book V, Chapter IV, page XX. These scales are also called the hexatonic and the octatonic scales. The of Aristonuxes of Tarentum (330 BC) is an 18-note scale that spans two octaves. This two-octave span is supposed to be the range of male voice. Rose, in his version of Vitruvius, stated that the lowest note is the A an octave plus two notes below middle C and the highest note was the A above middle C, but he gave no explanation of why he choose it to be this way. The is comprised of five tetrachords and a few additional notes. Now refer to Figure 4, and I will try to walk through how to form this scale (This scale almost appears to be two scales push together so that the beginning and end are on the same scale note, A. This results in a slight jumble of notes about in the middle of the scale). The scale is comprised of 8 fixed notes and 10 movable notes. A technique that would be consistence with the technology at this time would be to use a Monochord. I have built one for this purpose. Now we will start with the fixed pitch strings and build the Harp scale. Take the pitch of the tonic from some authoritarian source. Tune the pitch of the Monochord to unison with this source. Now tune the pitch of the Proslambanomenus string to unison with the Monochord. Note the Monochord string’s vibrating length. Reduce this vibrating length by 8/9 and use this new pitch to tune the Hypaton Hypate Harp String to unison. Note this vibrating length on the Monochord and reduce it by 3:4 to get the pitch for the Meson Hypate. Now tune the Meson Hypate Harp String to unison with the Monochord. If at any time the Monochord runs out of range for the string it is currently using, a string change will be required. With a string change, when one is going up the scale, just remove the current string and insert the next lighter string, then go back to one of the previously tuned strings on the Harp and pick up the correct pitch and continue. The Synhemmenon Mese string will be 3:4 the vibrating length of the string tuned to the Meson Hypate, so reduce the vibrating length of the string in the Monochord and then tune the Synhemmenon Mese string to unison with the Monochord. Again note the vibrating length on the Monochord and reduce it by 3:4 to get the pitch step size to get to the Synhemmenon Nete. Now tune the Synhemmenon Nete Harp string to unison with the Monochord. Now it appears that a change in technique is required. Retune the Monochord back to unison with the Synhemmenon Mese. Note the vibrating length on the Monochord for the Synhemmenon Mese and then reduce this vibrating length to 1:2 to get the octave pitch. Now tune the Hyperbolaeon Nete Harp (highest) String to unison with the Monochord. Now note the current Monochord vibrating string length and increase the length by 4:3 to go down a perfect forth to the Diezbugmenon Nete. Tune the Diezbugmenon Nete Harp String to unison with the Monochord. Again, note the vibrating length of the Monochord string length and increase its length further by 4:3 to go down to the Diezbugmenon Paramese. Tune the Diezbugmenon Paramese Harp string to unison with the Monochord. This concludes tuning the fix pitch strings, but as noted before this gives a break in the middle of the scale between the Synmemmenon Tetrachord and the Diezbugmenon Hexichord. Figure 4 The of Aristonuxes The Synhemmenon Nete (highest note of the lower Tetrachord) is a pitch step and a half above the Diezbugmenon Paramese (the lowest note of the higher Tetrachord). Confusion. To Quote Sachs, from The Rise of Music in the Ancient World, East and West, pg222: “With all the Greek modes: Aeolian, Boeotian, Dorian, Iastian, Ionian, Locrain, Lydian, Phryaian, with or without epithets; aneimene, chalara, hyper, hypo, mixo, syntono, in an ever changing and often contradictory terminology, impelled the methodical Greek philosophers to organize this chaotic multiplicity of modes into one consistent system and eliminate those modes that were not acceptable. As early as 400 BC the kithara had progressed to eleven strings. Which in some pentatonic sequence covered exactly two octaves and within had the possibility of representing the new system in its totality.” The Greater Perfect Scale. The first section I extracted from Peter Fraser’s web site and added the step sizes. I then follow this with a quotation from Sachs, who had a better copy of Euclid to work from. Both are interesting. Figure 5. The Greater Perfect Scale. The Greater Perfect Scale (300 BC). Quoting Sachs, from The Rise of Music in the Ancient World, East and West, pg222-223: “The Greek Philosopher and Mathematician, Euclid first described the Perfect System or Systema teleion. The Perfect Scale is a 15 note scale that covers just two octaves. However the perfect system was more than just a double octave; it was perfect as a unique attempt to organize the musical space from one center, (the note) a. The center stands in its original octave of Dorian structure, e’-e, which, by adding half an octave above and half an octave below, is extended to two octaves a’-A. This new unit could shift both up and down by half an octave either way and thus cover three octaves. The notes added above and below the inner octave were named after the three extreme notes at either end of it: nete, paranete, trite, above; lichanos, parhypate, hypate below. Only the lowest note was given a name of its own; the added note, proslambanomenos. The organization of the two octaves was rather strange. Subdivision were neither octaves nor pentachords, but tetrachords throughout. This implied two conjuncts at either end of the inner octave and disjunction or diazeuxis in the middle. Reading downward, the arrangement results in the tetrachord hyperbolaion, ‘of the exceeding notes’, conjunct with the tetrachord diezeugmenon, which as the name said, was disjunct from the tetrachord meson, ‘of the middle’ notes; this in was conjunct with the tetrachord hypaton, ‘of the low’ (literally ‘high’) notes. The proslambanomenos, ‘the left over’ note. Naming of the notes of the Greater Perfect Scale The somewhat cryptic remark “literally high” refers to a strange inversion in Greek terminology: nete, the highest note (in our current terminology) means low in Greek (or neat, short or small). Likewise, hypate, the lowest note means high (or long or tall) in Greek. Similarly the Greeks constructed a lesser perfect scale or systema teleion elatton on the basis of the old heptad of two conjunct tetrachord. It comprised only an eleventh, from d’ to A. The top tetrachord did not exist, and the disjunct tetrachord diezugmenon was replaced by a conjunct tetrachord synemmenon: Naming of notes of the Lesser Perfect Scale I am not satisfied with Sachs use of letter to indicate the notes in his representation of the Greater and Lesser Perfect Scale. Also these letters give the wrong impression as to the intervals between the notes. The Perfect Scale is a diatonic scale, the intervals between notes are: (Diatonic=unequal step sizes) Tone Tone Tone Semitone Tone Tone Semitone, then next octave or Tone Tone Semitone Tone Tone Tone Semitone. However, the Greeks did not use instrumental music and only need an octave and a few notes to achieve all the range that they wanted. The purpose of Greek music was to back a male singer (they did not use female singers). Quoting Sachs The Rise of Music in the Ancient World, East and West, pg225: “Ptolemy, who lived in the second century AD, admitted seven keys, the centers of which ascended diatonically from e to d’. With an attempt to keep “a” as the common center. There is a higher group of hyper scales, a lower group of hypo scales, and a middle group without epithets. At first sight, all of them are similar Dorian keys; but the modal structures are fundamentally different in the three groups: The middle scales, based on disjunct tetrachords, have the fifth on the top and are plagal. 2) The hyper scales based on conjunct tetrachords, with an additional note above are likewise plagal. 3) The hypo scales based on conjunct tetrachords, with an additional note below, have the fourth on top, or rather, should have the fourth on top and be authentic. “ 1) Quote from Sachs The Rise of Music in the Ancient World, East and West, pg234: “Aristides Quintilianus expressly states that voices did not span more than two octaves. For this reason he adds that Dorian was the only key sung in its total range. … Lyre players had similar limitations. … The consequences are that music space, vague and shapeless in our music, became a palpable reality in Greece. Each key had its own center, to be sure; but also music space as a whole had its immovable center which, being the pitch tone was never neglected. As a result, every melody had two foci; every note or group of notes gravitated toward two different centers at once, toward the center of the individual key and toward the center of the immovable perfect system. The first bearing was called dynamis or mobile force, and the second, thesis or stationary force. A note changed its dynamis according to its key; its thesis was immovable. The note e’ for example, was in all melodies nete kata thesin or highest stationary note, whatever the key; but in Mixolydian, it was also mese katra dynamin or mobile center, and in Lydian trite kata dynamin or mobile third from above. The mobile and stationary functions coincided only in Dorian. Look at a Greek melody from the dynamic center - b in Phrygian or d’ in Mixolydian - finds the modal structure that we call Dorian; descending, the sequence is to step through two whole tones and a concluding semitone to the (dynamic) hypate. Things look different from the stationary center. The player, adjusting his (Lyre to an) a and tuning the outer strings to e’ and e (the usual range of melodies), realized that each transposition of the (Dorian) scale altered the structure of his octave, since it shifted the semitone to places where previously whole tones had been. The central rectangle in the above diagram encases the resulting structure of all eight keys. The Phrygian key, by one tone higher than the Dorian, sharped by two notes of the central octave, c’ and f; thus the two central tetrachords become e’ d’ c#’ and a g f# e: the semitone moved to the middle of the tetrachord and the original Dorian octave changed to the Phrygian species. In the same way, the Lydian key sharped d’ c’ g f and shifted the semitones to the upper ends of the tetrachord that formed the central octave. Dorian as a key (Dorios tonos) created a Dorian mode (Doristi harmonia) in the perfect system; a Dorian mode in the perfect system could only originate if the melody followed the Dorian key. And the same is true for Phrygian, Lydian, and the rest. Key and mode conditioned each other and rightly were given the same tribal names.” Now quoting from Jargenson, page 24: “Tuning to Fifths and Fourths are the easiest intervals outside of the octave to tune because they exist next in order after the octave in the Harmonic series. The ease of tuning Fifths and Fourths along with their greater utility determined that Fifths and Fourths were to be used for creating most of the practical scales from the beginning of history to the present. When the practice of tuning the pentatonic scale by means of a circle of fourths and fifths became established, the following changes took place: 1) The fourths and fifths were made in tune enough to be used in vertical sonorities. 2) Two of the wholetones (intervals between) became enlarged to become a new interval named a minor third. 3) One of the fourths (intervals) became narrow enough to become a new interval named a major third. 4) The new intervals listed above and their inversions resulted in minor thirds, major thirds, minor sixths, and major sixths all being added to the basic harmonic vocabulary of fourths and fifths; however, there were still no semitones, tritones or major sevenths to make singing difficult. 5) Strong tonality was developed in melodic compositions because the scales were made permanently uneven. 6) One major triad along with its lower relative minor triad was discovered. Evidentially the phenomenon of Just Intervals was discovered and used for tuning the fourths and fifths for two reasons: first, it is much easier to tune an interval without beats than it is to temper an interval and guess how many beats it should contain; second, the fifths and thirds can not be completely Just at the same time, but fourths and fifths were chosen to be pure because the vertical sonorities of the thirds and sixths were not yet important in harmony. The Just fifth tuning practice must have been centuries old when Pythagoras began his investigation into music. All the major and minor sixths and also the major and minor thirds are each altered by one Syntonic comma from Just because all the fifths are Just. The latter sixths and thirds are known as Pythagorean sixths and thirds. Since these intervals are altered by the extreme of one Syntonic comma each, their beat speeds are too fast to be objectionable because they seem to disappear into a single tone. Pythagorean sixths and thirds have a tone color or sound uniquely their own. “ Basic Pentatonic Scale (Ancient) (quoting from Jorgenson, now page 25)”In this tuning there are two triads: namely the F Major and D Minor. There are two major sixths and one minor third which are wide by one Syntonic comma. There are two minor thirds which are narrow by a Syntonic comma. These intervals which are altered by one Syntonic comma are known as Pythagorean intervals. … This gives Pythagorean triads a certain rhythmic harmoniousness. … This descending scale has intervals between notes in the ratio: F 27:32 D 8:9 C 27:32 A 8 :9 G 8:9 F. The cent values in round numbers are 294-204-294204-204. The Basic Pentatonic scale contains pure major tones of the 8:9 ratio, pure fourths of the 3:4 ratio, pure fifths of the 2:3 ratio, minor sevenths of the 9:16 ratio and pure octave of the 1:2 ratio. There are no semitones, tritones or major sevenths. All the triads and sixths are altered by the ratio 80:81 Syntonic comma. The minor third ratio is 27:32; the major third ratio is 64:81; the minor sixth ratio is 81:128 and the major sixth ratio is 16:27. The line of fifths in the Pentatonic Scale is F C G D A. The bearing octave is F below middle C to F above middle C. All fifths and fourths are pure. Major sixths and minor triads are wide, minor thirds are narrow. Tuning steps: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Tune middle C to tuning folk. Tune F below middle C and F above middle C both pure to middle C. Tune G below middle C pure to middle C. Tune D above middle C to G below middle C pure. Test the intervals for the purpose of finding possible mistake which should be corrected. In the figure the numbers above the intervals indicate the beat speeds in beats per second in round numbers. Tune A below middle C pure to D above middle C. Test all intervals. ” Basic Pentatonic (descending) (step size) Celtic Pentatonic F G A C D F 1/1 27/32 4/3 101/64 16/9 2/1 0 294 498 792 996 1200 cent value from tonic. 27/32 8/9 27/32 8/9 8/9 1/1 0 9/8 4/3 3/2 203.9 498.0 701.9 16/9 996.0 2/1 1200 cent value of tones from tonic. It has been stated that the Celts organized their music in a pentatonic scale. Since the Celts preferred to develop their memory and refrained from writing anything down, one has to rely on their enemies for any historical record of their customs. It is highly likely that the gap scale Irish Harp music examples that are reported by Bunting and other collectors are prehistoric Pentatonic Scales transposed to historic Diatonic Scale or else works where the composer tried to make his music sound this way. Enharmonic Scale of Archytas (380 BC) Still quoting Jorgenson, page 31: “This is a descending scale with the interval ratio of E 4:5 D 35:36 C 27:28 B 8:9 A 4:5 G 35:36 F 27:28 E. The cent value in round numbers for the interval between pitches is 386 - 49 - 63 - 204 - 386 - 49 - 63.” Eratosthenes Diatonic (230 BC) is also the Diatonic Ditoniaion published by Claudius Ptolemy in 140 AD. Quoting Jorgenson, page 31: “This scale is the basis of Western Music. In this tuning, the three basic primary triads are developed. These are the G Major, C Major and F Major triads. Also, the three lower relative minor triads E Minor, A Minor and D Minor are developed. The formation of these triads creates the basic C Major tonality. This descending scale has intervals between notes as: E 8:9, D 8:9, C 243:256, B 8:9, A 8:9, G 8:9, F 243:256, E. The cent value in round numbers for the step size between pitches are 204-204-90-204-204-204-90. The above scale contains 243:256 ratio semitones, 512:729 ratio tritones and 128:243 major sevenths in addition to all the intervals contained in the Basic Pentatonic Scale. NOTE: in Jorgenson’s method, pure means that an upper partial of one pitch is in unison with an upper partial of the other note. Even though Jorgenson did not like electronic tuners, the electronic tuner method of tuning is faster than and as far as I can see better. In the electronic tuner method, just tune to the closest 12 Tone Equal Temperament note, then tune to the correct offset in cent. In the music below, the number above a pair of notes is the beat frequency of a pair of their upper partials. Tuning the Eratosthenes Diatonic Scale: In the Eratosthenes diatonic scale there are six major and minor triads to the octave and all of them contain proportional beat speeds. All the triads are Pythagorean triads. The line of fifths are F C G D A E B. The bearing octave is E below middle C. All fifths and fourths are pure. Major sixths and minor thirds are narrow. Tuning Steps: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Tune middle C to the Tuning Fork (unison zero beat). Tune F below middle C pure to middle C (a fifth, a pair of upper partials have a zero beat). Tune G below middle C pure to middle C (a fourth, a pair of upper partials have a zero beat). Tune D above middle C pure to G below middle C. Test 6. 7. Tune A below middle C pure to D above middle C. Test 8. Tune E above middle C and E below middle C both pure to A below middle C. This creates the interval EF which is the first semitone. The inversion FE is the first major seventh. 9. Test 1. Tune B below middle C pure to E above middle C and also check to see that it is pure to the E below middle C. This creates the interval FB which is the first tritone. 11. Test The Eratosthenes Diatonic Scale contains the following “Pythagorean” Triads: The Pythagorean Triads are proportional as follows: minor root = 0:1:1 minor first inversion = 1:1:0 minor second inversion = 1:0:1 major root position = 0:3:2 major first inversion = 3:4:0 major second inversion = 4:0:3” Chromatic Scale of Didymium (30 BC) Still quoting Jorgensen, page 31: “This is a descending scale with the interval ratio E 5:6 D 24:25 C 15:16 B 8:9 A 5:6 G 24:25 F 15:16 E. The cent value in round numbers for the interval between pitches is 316 - 70 - 112 - 204 - 316 - 70 - 112. Pure minor tones, minor thirds, major thirds, minor sixths and major sixths. There are pure ratio 24:25 semitones so small that they could be classified as large third tones. Diatonic Syntonon of Ptolemy (140 AD) Also known as the Diatonic Scale of Didymium (30BC). Still quoting Jorgenson, page 31: “This is a descending scale with the interval ratio of E 9:10 D 8:9 C 15:16 B 8:9 A 9:10 G 8:9 F 15:16 E. The cent value in round numbers for the interval between pitches is 182 - 204 - 112 - 204 - 182 - 204 - 112. In this scale all the ratio 64:81 Pythagorean major thirds and Pythagorean minor sixths were changed into pure 4:5 major thirds and pure 5:8 minor sixths. Three of the minor thirds and three of the major sixths were also made pure. The interval of a fourth between A D was altered by one Syntonic comma to have a new ratio of 20:27 which is an out of tune wolf interval. The fourth A D was ruined out of necessary in order to gain all pure thirds and sixths. There are both major and minor whole tones in this scale. The three primary triads: G, C, and F are in Just intonation. Ptolemy’s Diatonic Syntonon is the ancestor of the Common Model Just Tuning as outlines in Marpug’s Monochord No.1. The Ptolemy diatonic scale is more harmonious than the Eratosthenes diatonic scale, but lacks the utility of the Eratosthenes. This conflict between harmoniousness and utility lead to the difference between the Meantone temperament and the Well temperament.” Diatonic Hemiolon of Claudius Ptolemy (140 AD) Still quoting Jorgenson, page 31: “This is a descending scale with the interval ratios of E 9:10 D 10:11 C 11:12 B 8:9 A 9:10 G 10:11 F 11:12 E. The cent value in round numbers for the interval between pitches is 182 - 165 - 151 - 204 - 182 - 165 - 151.” Music Theory of Anicius Manlius Boethius (520 AD) Boethius read a reference that stated that Pythagoras had perfected a diatonic scale based on fifths (not possibly true) and Boethius tried to find this scale. Boethius found Eratosthenes Diatonic scale instead and incorrectly named it the Pythagorean Diatonic; so from this time on, to avoid additional confusion Eratosthenes scale is now called the Medieval Pythagorean Diatonic scale. Boethius also got caught in the confusion of whether Greek scales ascend or descend and he got it wrong. Next he got the names of the Greek Modes incorrect. But Borthius was not the only Medieval Music Theorist that got the Greek Modes names incorrect. The modes known as the Church Modes are the results of this mistake. Medieval Pythagorean Scale (of Boethius) This scale is called in error the Medieval Pythagorean Diatonic Scale. This is wrong for two reasons: one, Boethius misnamed the Diatonic Scale of Eratosthenes and two this scale is more than a diatonic scale it has four chromatic notes added: Bb, Eb, F# and C#. But it is a very useful scale and is a good scale in which to compose. Quoting Jorgenson, page 45: “This is the Eratosthenes diatonic scale with four chromatic tones added. There are still no wolf interval. In this tuning there are eighteen major and minor triads to the octave, and all of them contain proportional beat speeds. The C# minor, C# major, E major, F minor G# minor and Ab major triads still do not exist in this scale. The line of Just fifths is: Eb, Bb, F, C, G, D, A, E, B, F#, C#. In this scale, there is a new kind of interval created which is known as a schisma interval. These intervals are each altered from Just intonation by the extremely small amount of one schisma, which in round numbers is only 2 cent in size. With Schisma intervals it is almost impossible to tell that they are different from Just interval. They are altered intervals, but they are never directly tempered by ear. Schisma intervals exist because they are the end result of lines or groups of other pure intervals. The diminished fourths: C# to F, F# to Bb and B to Eb all sound quasi pure because they are actually narrow major thirds. The augmented seconds: Bb to C#, and Eb to F# both sound quasi pure because they are actually wide schisma minor thirds.” Tuning Steps for Medieval Chromatic Pythagorean Scale: (quote from Jorgenson, page 48) Use the eleven steps for tuning the Eratosthenes scale (from this paper, page 25) then 12. Tune Bb below middle C pure to F below middle C. 13. Test 14. Tune Eb above middle C pure to Bb below middle C. 15. Test 16. Tune F# below middle C pure to B below middle C. 17. Test 18. Tune C# above middle C pure to F# below middle C. 19. Test Medieval Modes and Music Theory of Guido of Arezzo (1050 AD) Developed four line staff and the Ut Re Mi Scale. Established the Church Modes as Dorian, Phrygian, Lydian, Mixolydian and maybe the Locrian (some authorities deny that the Locrian is a mode). No matter, the scales of Guido were different from the correct Greek modes. The correct knowledge was still readily available in Constantine (Eastern Roman Empire, official language was Greek), so it is a wonder that no one bothered to go obtain it? Christian Monks and people in trade were making the trip. Medieval Twelve Tone Chromatic “Pythagorean” (changes up to 1482) Quoting Jorgenson, page 53: “The medieval twelve tone chromatic Pythagorean tuning has been the most universally used tuning method in modern music history (before the adaptation of the 12 Equal) because of its basic, simple means of tuning and its great utility musically. If the last note added (G#) had not happened to create the wolf problem, then the history of tuning might have ceased at this point. The medieval chromatic Pythagorean tuning contains two great virtues; first, there are twenty-two useable major and minor triads to the octave; secondly there are three major triads and three minor triads (schisma triads) that are very close to Just intonation, the ultimate in harmoniousness. The later two virtues are the cause of the two separate branches of tuning evolution which began their division at this point. One branch of the evolution was initiated by Henricus Grammateusin 1518. The purpose of the Grammatean branch was to not only retain the twenty-two useable major and minor triads to the octave, but also to increase the number of useable major and minor triads to the ultimate of twenty-four to the octave. The Grammarian branch leads through all the Well Temperaments to the Equal Temperament. The other branch of evolution was initiated by Bartolomenus Ramis de Pareja in 1482. The purpose of the Ramis branch was not only to retain the three quasi Just major and three quasi Just minor triads, but to also transpose them from the rarely used keys to the more commonly used keys and then to increase the number of these harmonious type major and minor triads from six to sixteen to the octave. The Ramis branch lead through all the Meantone Temperaments to Equal Temperament. At Equal Temperament, both branches met again.” The line of fifths are: Ab Eb Bb F C G D A E B F# C# . Tuning (Quoting Jorgenson page 51:)” 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Tune C to the tuning fork. Tune F below middle C pure to middle C. Tune G below middle C pure to middle C. Tune D above middle C pure to G below middle C. Test 6. 7. Tune A below middle C pure to D above middle C. Test 8. Tune E above middle C and also E below middle C pure to A below middle C. This creates the interval E F which is the first semitone. The inversion of E F is F E which is the first major seventh. 9. Test 10. Tune B below middle C pure to E above and E below. This creates the interval F B which is the first tritone. 11. Test 12. Tune Bb below middle C pure to F below middle C. 13. Test 14. Tune Eb below middle C pure to Bb below middle C. 15. Test 16. Tune F# below middle C pure to B below middle C. 17. Test 18. Tune C# above middle C pure to F# below middle C. 19. Test 20. Tune G# below middle C pure to C# above middle C. 21. Test” Music Theory of Henricus Glareanus (1547) Quotating from Sachs Our Musical Heritage pg. 149: “Music had reached a critical point at which contrapuntal was yielding to harmonic conception, and the ‘Church Modes’ were changing to the more modern Major and Minor modes. The Swiss Herricus Glareanus wrote the Dodekachordon (1547), which presented a ‘twelve mode’ system by adding to the age-old eight ‘Church Modes’ four additional modes: The Aeolian on A and the Ionian on C and each with its hypo parallel, that is Hypoaeolian on E and Hypoionian on G.” Hericus Grammateus ½ Diatonic Comma Pythagorean Quoting Jorgenson, page 238: “This is the Eratosthenes diatonic with Meantone, and it is also the Juan Bermundo’s temperament of 1555 and the Heinrich Schreyber Temperament of 1518. The diatonic comma is divided in to two parts in order to dissipate the wolf among the two fifths. The great advantage of the Grammateus temperament over the other Pythagorean temperaments is there is no harmonic waste caused by narrow major thirds or wide minor thirds. Thus, the total number of the beat speeds are reduced. Other special characteristic of the Grammateus temperament are that it completely preserves the traditional Eratosthes diatonic scale on the long keys (piano white keys) and the raised keys (black keys on a piano) are tuned as Meantones between the long keys. Therefore, the raised keys support tones which are enharmonically free in the manner of standard Equal temperament. …. In the theoretically correct method this temperament, twenty of the twenty-four major and minor triads to the octave contain proportional beat speeds and the diatonic comma is divided into two equal parts which are shared by two fifths. In the equal-beating variation of this tuning, twenty-one of the twenty-four major and minor triads to the octave contain proportional beat speeds, but the diatonic comma is divided unevenly. …. Like in the other ½ diatonic comma Pythagorean temperaments, all the major and minor triads are musically useable. The line of fifths is: Gb Db Ab Eb Bb tempered F C G D A E B tempered F# C# G# D# A# (in this diatonic/meantone scale the sharps and flats are enharmonic). Major sixths, the two tempered fourths and the major thirds are wide. The two tempered fifths and all the minor thirds are narrow. …. Unless the fourth interval F Bb sounds like a wolf in the piece of interest, the equal beating method of the Grammateus temperament is superior to the theoretically correct.” Jorgenson gives the advantages and disadvantages of the two methods of Grammateus to each other and to the other Just tunings on page 238 and 239. All and all the Grammateus compares favorably. The method of tuning the equal beating Henricus Grammateus ½ diatonic comma Pythagorean temperament starts on page 240; the theoretically correct Grammateus method starts on page 242. Summary of Jorgenson’s technique for equal beating Grammateus: First, use the eleven steps for tuning the Eratosthenes scale (from this paper, page 25) then; 12. Tune F# pure to B, and then proceed to lower F# until the interval between F# and B beats exactly the same as the interval between D F#. Both F# B and D F# should be wide. 13. Test F# - B and F# - D should beat equal (4.6), F - A should beat at 10.9, F# - A should beat 6.9 and D - F should beat at 10.9. 14. Tune Db pure to F#. 15. Test F# beats 4.6 with D; G beats 6.9 with Db; F beats 10.9 with A; E beats 5.2 with Db; d beats 9.2 with A. 16. Tune Ab pure to Db. 17. Test. 18. Tune Eb pure to Ab. 19. Test. 20. Tune Bb pure to Eb. 21. Test.” Note: The above, F# to B step as given is difficult as the lowering is very slight and easy to jump over. When testing if the interval from the natural to the accidental is wide and the accidental to the natural is narrow, then the F# B interval got the wrong upper partial. When F# is roughly pure to B it is at 376 hertz and when it is lowered it is at 372.516 hertz. Music Theory of Gioseffo Zarlino (1558) Quotation from Sachs Our Musical Heritage pg. 149: “ Gioseffo Zarlino (1517-1590), Cypriano de Rore’s successor as the chapel master of St. Mark’s in Venice, wrote Le Istitutioni harmoniche. It established both the major and minor third as the dual fundament of all harmonic and the arithmetic division of a vibrating string. The harmonic division consisted of the progression 2:1, 3:2, 4:3, 5:4 … and the arithmetic division, in the progression 6:1, 6:2, 6:3, 6:4, 6:5 … From Zarlino, the road of harmonic theory lead to Jean-Phippe Rameau and his Traite de l’Harmonie of 1722.” Advice from Jorgenson on Selecting a Just Pythagorean Tuning: (from page 58) “In choosing a Just Pythagorean tuning for musical performance, it is important to analyze the music to see which triads are not used. If the following Triads are NOT used Then tune the instrument in the following : B major and minor E major and minor A major and minor D major and minor Agricola in A major Erlangen adjusted to D major Erlangen in G major Erlangen adjusted to C major or else Agricola transposed into C major. Ramis or improved Ramis in F major. G major and minor If all triads must be used , then the Hericus Grammateus Pythagorean temperament is recommended for all early music through Purcell (if music is still diatonic, use the Eratosthenes Diatonic scale). For other music and eighteenth century music a switch to Well Temperament is recommended.” The Just Temperaments are octave scales that contain sharps and flats. In these scales the Sharp is not at the same pitch as the enharmonic flat, the difference is that the sharp is about 21 cent higher pitch than its enharmonic flat. If all the sharps and flats were accounted for there would be 17 tones to the octave. In the derivation, below only one set of enharmonic sharp or flat is chosen. In the Solomon de Caus Just, there is a problem; if you try it and it does not come out right, you are probably correct. I have doubled checked against the text and what I have is what is given in Jorgenson. The first problem that I have with the tuning method is inherent to the scale, the E is hard to find the right partial to zero beat, and I keep going past it and picking the wrong upper partial and have to start over. The C F G and Bb tones are easy, the C F interval is a perfect fourth and the second harmonic of C easily beats with the third harmonic of F. So I had to go back and reset E to near its correct pitch by playing C D E F. The E F semitone is easy to hear to get E near the right pitch, it is just that the fifth harmonic of the E is hard to hear against the third harmonic of the A. Next something is wrong with the step that is to tune G# to E, I really think this is an error, it gives Ab rather than G# which are not equal (Ab is 204.4, while G# is 209.3 in this Just tuning). My thinking is this should read tune G# pure to D. G# being flat makes C# and D# flat as well. Ramis de Paraja Transposed Pythagorean Just (1482) and Improved Ramis In order to move the desirable harmonious triads into the more commonly used keys a series of transpositions were performed. See Jorgenson pages 54 to 56 for how it was done. Ramis final work is named the Just Pythagorean Tuning. This was carried further by Agricola. At the same time Erlanger was doing similar work, but his translation was rotating from the other direction. Quoting Jorgenson, page 63: “This tuning is the medieval Pythagorean tuning into Cb Major. The line of fifths from the original Pythagorean tuning in Cb major/Ab minor is Ebb Bbb Fb Cb Gb Db Ab Eb Bb F C G (12 tones). … After the original quasi-Just schisma C# F#, and the B major triads from the chromatic Pythagorean tuning in C major had been transposed into the C, F, and Bb schisma major triads of Pythagorean tuning Cb major, either Ramis of his predecessors improved the quasi-Just schisma triads by changing them into completely Just triads. Since tonality was now around these Just triads because of the increased in vertical third and sixth usage, the new Ramis Just Pythagorean of F major and A minor was created. The great miracle of the Ramis Just Pythagorean is that the total number of beat speeds of all the intervals are reduced in number when compared to the number of beat speeds in the original Pythagorean even though no tempering is done.“ The line of fifths are: D A E B F# C# schisma Ab Eb Bb F C G. Tuning (see Jorgenson page 66): 1. 2. Tune middle C to the tuning folk. Tune G below middle C pure to middle C. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. Tune F below middle C pure to middle C. Tune Bb below middle C pure to F below middle C. Test Bb to F for zero beat; G to Bb for a beat of 14.5. Tune Eb above middle C pure to Bb below middle C. Test Bb to Eb for zero beat; G to Bb for a 14.5 beat; C to Eb for a 19.4 beat. Tune Ab below middle C pure to Eb above middle C. Test Ab to Eb zero beat; that both Ab to C and F to Ab beat at the same speed (12.9); G to Bb beats at 14.5. Tune A below middle C pure to F below middle C. Test Tune D above middle C pure to A below middle C. Test Tune E below middle C and E above middle C pure to A below middle C. Test Tune B below middle C pure to E above middle C and also E below middle C. Test Tune F# below middle C pure to B below middle C. Test Tune C# above middle C pure to F# below middle C.” Improved Ramis Just Pythagorean (12 tone). Quoting Jorgenson page 69: “The line of fifths are D A E schisma Gb Db Ab Eb Bb F C schisma Abb. 1. Tune middle C to tuning folk. 2. Tune F below middle C pure to middle C. 3. Tune Bb below middle C pure to F below middle C. 4. Tune Eb above middle C pure to Bb below middle C. 5. Test F to C for zero beat; F to Bb for zero beat; Bb to Eb for zero beat; c to Eb for a beat of 19.4. 6. Tune Ab below middle C pure to Eb above middle C. 7. Test Bb to Eb for zero beat; F to Bb for 12.9 beat; C to Eb for 19.4 beat; test that Bb to C and F to Bb beat at the same speed (12.9). 8. Tune Db above middle C pure to Ab below middle C. 9. Test 10. Tune Gb below middle C pure to Db above middle C. 11. Test 12. Tune Cb below middle C pure to Gb below middle C. 13. Test 14. Tune Abb below middle C pure to Cb below middle C. 15. Test 16. Tune A below middle C pure to F below middle C. 17. Test 18. Tune D above middle C pure to A below middle C. 19. Test 20. Tune E below middle C pure to A below middle C. 21. Test 22. Tune E above middle C pure to E below middle C. Transposed Agricola Just (1539) To quote Jorgenson: “In the Martin Aricola Just tuning twenty-two major and minor triads to the octave are useable. Twenty major and minor triads to the octave contain proportional beat speeds. The wolf fifth D A is one Syntonic comma narrow. The line of fifths is A E B F# schism Db Ab Eb Bb F C G D. This tuning is an alteration of the Medieval Pythagorean tuning transposed into Gb Major. The line of fifths from the original Pythagorean tuning is: Bbb Fb Cb Gb Db Ab Eb F C G D. The Aricola tuning restores the just intonation triads to the three primary triads. The Transposed Agricola is superior to the Ramis Just Pythagorean tuning for the following reasons: 1) One more primary triad is in the Just intonation. Results in all the primary triads in Just intonation. 2) The wolf is removed off the dominant triad and placed in the less used super tonic triad. 3) The tonality is in the basic key of C Major. 4) The balance is better because of the schisma fifth. The minor third F#-A exhibits poor balance, avoid. The bearing octave is E below Middle C. Except for the pure intervals; major sixths, fourths and major thirds are wide and fifths and minor thirds are narrow.” Agricola Just Pythagorean Tuning Transposed into the Acoustic Tonality of A Major/C# Minor see page 73. (12 tones) The tuning notes are: C, G below to C, F below to C, D above to G, A below to D, E above and below to A, B below to E, Bb below to F, G# to E below, C# above to G#, F# below to C#, D# above to G#. C Major/E Minor see page 77. The tuning notes are: G below to C, D above to G, F below to C, Bb below to F, Eb above to Bb, Ab below to Eb, Db above to Ab, A below to F, E above to A, E below to E, B below to E and E, F# below to B. Erlangen Monochord Just Pythagorean Quoting Jorgenson page 79: “At the same time as Ramis Just Pythagorean was created by means of five transpositions through the sharps, the Erlangen Monochord was created by five transpositions through the flats. In this tuning, twenty-two major and minor triads to the octave are musically useable. These twenty-two triads contain proportional beat speeds. The wolf fifth A to E is one Erlanger comma narrow. The line of fifths is: E B schisma Gb Db Ab Eb Bb F C G schisma Ebb Bbb … The Erlangen Monochord eliminated all harmonic waste caused by the narrow schisma major thirds and wide schisma wide minor thirds in the original Pythagorean by making all these intervals pure except for one minor third. The harmonic waste on this particular minor third (B to D) was eliminated because the Erlanger Monochord changed this minor third to be exactly the same amount narrow as it was wide in the original Pythagorean. The Erlanger Just Pythagorean tuning is an improvement over both the Ramis and Agricola tunings because the wolf is reduced by two schisms instead of just one. The Erlanger tuning reduces the wolf from 8.9 beats to 7.4 beats per second and without using any tempering. Also the Erlanger tuning is superior to the Ramis because the wolf is transposed off the dominant triad onto the lessor used submedinat triad, yet the C major triad is still pure and the G major triad is almost pure.” See Jorgensen, page 81 for more benefits. For tuning of the Erlenger Monochord Just Pythagorean Scale in the Acoustic Tonality of G Major/B Minor see Jorgensen, page 83. Tuning notes are: G below to C, F above to C, Bb below to F, Eb above to Bb, Ab below to Eb, Db above to Ab, Gb below to Gb, B below to G, Ebb above to Gb, E above to B, Bbb below to Ebb. For C Major/ E Minor see page 85. Tuning notes are: G below to C, F above to C, Bb below to F, Eb above to Bb, Ab below to Eb, Db above to Ab, Gb below and above to Db, B below to G, Ebb above to Gb, E above to B, A below to E. For D Major/F# Minor see page 88. Tuning notes are: G below to C, F above to C, Bb below to F, Eb above to Bb, Ab below to Eb, Db above to Ab, Gb below to Db, B below to G, Ebb above to Gb, Bbb below to Ebb, Fb above to Bbb. Salomon de Caus Just (1615) Quoting Jorgenson, page 92: “The changes, advantages and disadvantages between the Ramis Just Pythagorean and the Caus Just Pythagorean are as follows: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. The number of Just major thirds was doubled from four to eight to the octave by Caus. The number of Just minor thirds was doubled from three to six to the octave by Caus. The number of Just intonation major and minor triads were doubled from six to twelve in the Caus. Two fifths were ruined and made into wolf fifths in the Caus. Four of the good Ramis Pythagorean major thirds of each octave were ruined and made into wolf diminished fourths would not be considered wolf if it were that the human ear can not comprehend the ratio 7 to 9 large major thirds. 6. Ten of the useable Ramis Just Pythagorean major and minor triads of each octave were ruined and made into unusable wolf triads in the Caus.” The line of fifths is: D A E B wolf F# C# D# wolf Bb F C G wolf D A E B Tuning the Caus Just Intonation in C Major or G Major see Jorgenson, page 93. Tuning notes are: G below to C, F below to C, Bb below to F, A below to F, D above to A, E below and above to A, B below to E below, G# below to E below, C# above to G#, F# below to C#, D# above to G#. Friedrich Wilhelm Marpurg (Just) Monochord No. 1. (1776) Basically adding the C major sharps and flats to the Diatonic Syntonon of Ptolemy. Jorgenson considers it inferior to the Caus Tuning. See page 96 for comparison. The line of fifths is: Eb Bb wolf F C G D wolf A E B F# wolf C# G# wolf Eb Bb. See Jorgenson page 99 for tuning steps. Leath Gleas is a quite irregular scale, but very useful for playing Celtic/Gaelic music on the Harp. There are 30 pitch in this scale, the upper 12 (or melody pitch) are the same as the Eratosthenes Diatonic, the rest of the strings are tuned in octave to the upper strings. The scale has its semitones placed like it was in the key of G Major; with the exception of no low F#. This music only used concords for Harmony and there is no concord that required an F#, so Irish Harpers being their way, were not going to have a string they never played, no string, all lower strings moved up one. In additon there were 2 G just below middle C. No reason is given, but my oppinion is that they were required for tuning. The Leath Gleas Scale probably dates to between the 10th century and the 17th Century. John Kovac’s Paraguayan Just (1999) Collected from John’s video on Playing the Harp by Ear, from the tuning section. www.johnkovac.com . This is a very useful scale for playing solo Harp, it sound good. This is a Paraguayan Harp Scale and could date to as early as the 17th century. Selecting a Meantone Temperament to Tune Quoting Jorgenson from page 104: “The trend toward Meantone tuning gained great impetus during the sixteenth and seventh centuries because music composition in general remained very limited in the use of scale degrees. Meantone in the tonality of C Major/ A Minor has the following arrangements: the E , A, D, G, C, F, Bb and Eb major triads are the good harmonious triads; but the Ab, Db, Gb, and B major triads and also the F, Bb, Eb and G# minor triads are unusable wolf.” Quoting from page 108: “The Lodovico Fogliano, the Fogliano-Aron and the Pietro Aron system each contain the smallest number of total beat speeds of the musically useable major and minor triads compared to all other Meantone systems. In other words these are the most harmonious of all the Meantone systems. The Fogliano, the Fogliano-Aron, the Pietro Aron and the Francisco Salinas system are the only Meantone system whereby all the musically useable triads contain simply proportional beet speeds. In other words these are the most rhythmically harmonious of all the Meantone systems. The 1/8 Harrison comma Meantone temperament contains the most rhymethrically harmonious major triads of all the Meantone temperaments. Therefore, the best temperament for musicians that play in the ‘Happy Keys’. The minor triads sound rough. The Gioseffo Zarlino 2/7 Syntonic comma Meantone temperament contains the most harmonious minor triads. The Zarlino is the best Meantone for musicians that play in the ‘Sad Keys’. The major triads sound rough.” The 1/8 Syntonic Well contains the largest contrast between cord colors. (and most difficult to tune). The 1/12 diatonic comma standard equal is the same as the scale that Ling-Lun calculated in the twenty seventh century BC. The rest of the 13 Meantone temperaments listed are rated as a matter of taste, as they are less harmonious, their benefits are listed in Jorgenson on pages 111 and 114. If there is only one string (set) that can be raised or lowered to make sharps and flats, then a choice must be made, since sharps and flats in Meantone are not the same pitch, the choice has to be made as to whether the string is going to be tuned to a sharp or a flat. A string can not support both a sharp and a flat at the same time. Enharmonic tuning is acoustically impossible for any Meantone tuning. Example, quoting from Jorgenson, page 113: “The first step when preparing to perform a music composition is to read through the composition in order to discover what selection of sharps and flats is used. The selection of sharps and flats does not always agree with the key signature. The instrument must always be tuned to the true tonality of the composition regardless of whether or not it agrees with the key signature. A composition might have a key signature of D major, which is marked that all the F and C are to be sharp. But suppose that the composition uses a Bb instead of A# and the predominate selection of sharps and flats are Bb, D#, G#, and F#. This latter would indicate that the acoustic tonality of the composition was in G major (see figure 6, below). Major Acoustic Tonality Selection of Tones Minor Acoustic Tonality Figure 6. Chart of Tonalities for Meantone Temperament.” … When retuning or altering a tuning to its enharmonic partner, the basic Meantone rule is that most augmented or diminished intervals are wolf. This means that if it is desired to change an F# into a Gb, the Gb can not be tuned from a lower D. This would create a diminished fourth D Gb. Then an F# can only be tuned from a lower D resulting in a true major third D F#. And if a Gb is desired it can be only tuned from a higher Bb, any Cb or any Db. Gb can not be tuned from a B. Only F# can be tuned from a B. In all the Meantone temperaments, the flats are faster in frequency and higher in pitch then their equivalent enharmonic sharps. This is opposite from the condition found in the Pythagorean tuning or the Just Pythagorean tunings whereby flats are lower than the sharps. Following are the rules for changing enharmonic pairs: F# must be tuned from a lower D, any B, or any C#. Gb must be tuned from a lower Bb, any Cb, or any Db. G# must be tuned from a lower E, any C# or any D#. Ab must be tuned from a lower C, any Db, or any Eb. A# must be tuned from a lower F#, any D#, or any E#. Bb must be tuned from a lower D, any Eb, or any F. C# must be tuned from a lower A, any F#, or any G#. Db must be tuned from a lower F, any Gb, or any Ab. D# must be tuned from a lower B, any G#, or any A#. Eb must be tuned from a lower G, any Ab, or any Bb. Remember that in Meantone, the sharp of a lower note is not equal to the flat of the next higher note. This affects the Meantone tuning method. G# and Ab are two separate pitches. In Meantone temperament flats are higher than sharps (Ab is higher pitched than G#). Lodovico Fogliano Just Meantone (1529) “The Ramis Just and Salomon de Caus Just tuning contained the wolf fifth G D which ruined the dominant major triad: G B D. This G D fifth was wolf because it was narrow by a Syntonic comma, this was repaired by dividing this interval and sharing it between fifth G D and D A, which each became ½ Syntonic comma narrow. This made the G B D triad musically useable and these two intervals became known as tempered fifths. This was documented by Lodovico Fogliano in 1529. The description of the steps to alter the Caus Just or the Ramis Just are contained on Jorgensen pages 102 and 103. Quoting Jorgenson, page 103: “The great advantage of the Fogliano Meantone tuning over the Caus Just intonation was the one third increase in the number of good useable major and minor triads. Also, all the Just major thirds from Caus were saved and transposed into the acoustic tonality of C major and A minor. Four of the original Caus Just intonation triads were rendered somewhat impure (tempered) in the Fogliano Meantone; but nevertheless, the total number of Just intonation triads in the Fogliano Meantone is eight which is two more than existed in the Ramis Just Pythagorean tuning.” The sacrifices paid for correcting the dominant or supertonic wolf triads are not only the loss of six useable major and minor triads to the octave, but also many and usually all of the fourths and fifths are altered and no longer Just. In spite of the latter altering of the fourths and fifths, the increase number of pure or close to pure major thirds greatly increase the overall harmoniousness of the tuning within the sixteen good major and minor triads to the octave range. In all the later development of Meantone temperament, the sixteen good useable major and minor triads of Fogliano were never increased in number.” “There are sixteen musically useable major and minor triads to the octave; all of them contain proportional beat speeds. Eight of the triads are Just. There are three extra second inversion minor triads that are useable. The line of fifths is: A E B tem F# tem C# G# wolf Eb tem Bb tem F C G tem D tem A. The tuning method starts on Jorgenson page 118, 120 and 123” Tuning notes are: F below to C, G below to C, A below to F, E below to A, B below to E, Eb below to G, G# below to E, C# above to G#. Now the first temperament, first tune F# roughly pure to B below middle C, then proceed to lower F# until the interval Eb F# sounds as beatless as a pure ration 6:7 small minor third (lots of luck). Continue; D below to F#, D above to D below, Bb below to D above. Another method for the Lodovico Fogliano Just Meantone in C Major/A Minor: F below to C, G below to C, A below to F, E below to A, B below to E, Eb below to G, G# below to E, C# above to G#. Now the temperament, tune Bb roughly pure to Eb below, then proceed to lower Bb until the fifth Eb Bb beats exactly the same speed as the small minor third, Bb C# (2.9). Both Eb Bb and Bb C# should be narrow. Continue, D above to Bb, D below to D, F# to D. Fogliano-Aron Just Meantone (1523) Quoting Jorgenson, page 107: “The Fogliano-Aron Just Meantone tuning without temperament accomplishes more as far as expanding musical resources are concerned than any other form of Just tuning. This tuning therefore is the end results of a long history of tuning beginning with Pythagoras. Even though this is still technically a Just intonation, all music compositions which can be performed in any of the Meantone systems can also be performed in this tuning. Quoting Jorgenson, page 129: “There are sixteen useable major and minor triads to the octave, and all of them contain proportional beat speeds. Four of the triads are Just intonation. There are also three extra second inversion minor triads that are useable. The only Just fifths are C G and E B.” The tuning method is given on page 129. G below to C, Eb below to G, B below to G, E below to B, G# below to E. First temperament, tune F below middle C roughly pure to middle C, then proceed to raise F until the interval F G# sounds as beatless as a pure 6:7 small minor third. Second temperament, tune F# below middle C roughly pure to B below middle C, then proceed to lower F# until the interval Eb F# sounds as beatless as a pure 6:7 small minor third. Continue, D below to F#, D above to D, A below to F, Bb below to D above, C# to A. Francisco Salinas 1/3 Syntonic Comma Meantone (1577) Quoting Jorgenson, page 138: “The Salinas temperament belongs to a negative Meantone temperament; it represents the furthest backwards development ….” Page 139: “There are sixteen musically useable major and minor triads; all of them contain proportional beat speeds. The Syntonic comma is divided into three equal parts and shared by the three basic fifths. “ The C Major tuning method starts on page 139 or 143. C below to C, Eb below to C, Eb above to Eb, A below to Eb, F# above to A, F# below to F#, D above to A, Bb below to D. First temperament, tune G below middle C roughly pure to D above middle C and then proceed to raise G until the fifth G D beats exactly the same speed as the major third Eb G below middle C. Eb G and G D should both be narrow (4.2 speed). Continue, tune G above to G. Second temperament, raise and retune D above middle C until the major third Bb D beats at exactly the same speed as the fourth D G above middle C. Both Bb below middle C to D above middle C; and D above middle C to G above middle C should be wide and beat at exactly 4.2. Also the interval D above middle C to G above middle C should beat at exactly 4.2 beats. Both G below middle and C below middle C; and G below middle C to D above middle C should both beat at exactly 2.1 beats. The four following pairs on tones should also beat at 4.2 beats: G below to middle C; D above to G above; Eb below to G below; Bb below to D above. Continue, tune D below to D above, B below to D below, B (an octave lower than below middle C) to B below, F below to D above, G# below to B (an octave below). Third temperament, raise and retune Bb below middle C pure to G above middle C. Continue, tune E above to G below, E below to E above, C# above to E below, C# below to C# above. 1/8 Harrison comma Meantone (1749) Quoting Jorgenson, page 152: “There are sixteen musically useable triads to the octave, and eight of them contain proportional beat speeds. Each fifth is narrowed by roughly 1/8 Harrison comma, and the ratio of each fifth is 1.494530180. The bearing section is D below middle C to G above middle C. Major sixths and fourths are wide. Fifths, major thirds, minor thirds and small minor thirds are narrow. “ The tuning method starts on page 153. Tune F above to C, Bb below to F, D above to Bb. First tempering, tune G below middle C roughly pure to middle C, then proceed to lower G until the fourth G C beats at exactly the same speed as the fifth G D, 4.2 beats. Continue; tune G above to G below. Second tempering, raise and retune D above middle C until the major third Bb D beats at exactly the same speed as the fourth D G above middle C. Both Bb below D above and D above and G above should beat at exactly 4.2 beats. As well as the three following pairs: C middle to G above; C middle to G below; D above to G above. Continue, tune D below to D above. Third tempering, tune F below middle C roughly pure to middle C, then proceed to raise F until the fifth F C beats at exactly the same speed as the minor third, D F below middle C, 2.1 beats. Fourth tempering, raise and retune F above middle C to F below. Fifth tempering, raise and retune Bb below middle C until the major third, Bb D beats exactly the same speed as the minor third, D F above middle C, 2.3 beats. Sixth tempering, tune Eb roughly pure to G below middle C and then proceed to raise Eb until the major third Eb G beats at exactly the same speed as the minor third, G Bb, 1.8 beats. Continue; tune Eb above to Eb below. Seventh tempering, tune A below middle C roughly pure to F below, then proceed to lower A until the major third F A beats at exactly the same speed as the minor third A C, 1.2 beats. Continue, tune F# above to F# below. Eight tempering, tune B below middle C roughly pure to G below middle C, then proceed to lower B until the major third G B beats at exactly the same speed as the minor third B D, 2.1 beats. Ninth tempering, tune E above middle C roughly pure to middle C, then proceed to lower E until the major third, C E beats at exactly the same speed as the minor third E G, 4.2 beats. Continue, tune E below to E above. Tenth tempering, tune G# below middle C roughly pure to E below middle C, then proceed to lower G# until the major third E G# beats exactly the same speed as the minor third G# B, 2.1 beats. Eleventh tempering, tune C# above middle C roughly pure to A below middle C, then proceed to lower C# until the major third A C# beats at exactly the same speed as the minor third C# E, 2.7 beats. It helps to look at the musical score at the bottom of Jorgenson page 156 to see what happened. Zarlino 2/7 Syntonic Comma Meantone (1558) Quoting Jorgenson, page 168: “There are sixteen musically useable triads to the octave, and eight of them contain proportional beat speeds. Each fifth is narrowed by 2/7 Syntonic comma. The bearing section is A below an octave lower than middle C to E above middle C. Major sixths and fourths are wide. Fifths, major thirds, minor thirds, and small minor thirds are narrow.” Tuning method starts on page 163. Tune C below to middle C, Eb below to middle C, F below to middle C, Db below to middle C. First tempering, tune Bb (below an octave below middle C) roughly pure to Eb below middle C, then proceed to lower Bb until the fourth Bb Eb beats at exactly the same speed as the fifth Bb F, 2.5 beats. Continue; tune Bb below to Bb (below an octave below). Second tempering, retune and lower Eb below middle C until the fourth Bb Eb beats at exactly the same speed as the major sixth Eb C. The following three pairs should beat at exactly the same rate: Bb Eb; Eb C; Eb C (an octave below), 1.6 beats. Third tempering, retune and raise F below middle C until the major third Db F beats at exactly the same speed as the fourth F Bb, 2.5 beats. Fourth tempering, tune G below middle C roughly pure to Eb, then proceed to lower G until the major third Eb G beats exactly the same as the major sixth Eb C, 1.6 beats. Fifth tempering, tune D below middle C roughly pure to Bb (below an octave below middle C), then proceed to lower D until the major third Bb D beats at exactly the same speed as the major sixth Bb G, 0.8 beats. Continue, tune D above to D below. Sixth tempering, tune A below middle C roughly pure to F below middle C, then proceed to lower A until the major third beats exactly the same as the major sixth F D, 1.9 beats. Continue, tune A (below an octave lower than middle C) to A below. Seventh tempering, tune E below middle C roughly pure to C below middle C, then proceed to lower E until the major third C E beats at exactly the same speed as the major sixth C A, 0.9 beats. Continue; tune B below to G, B (below an octave lower) to B below. Eight tempering, tune F# below roughly pure to D below middle C, then proceed to lower F# until the major third F# D beats exactly same speed as the major sixth D B, 1.9 beats. Ninth tempering, retune and lower C# below middle C roughly pure to A (below an octave below middle C) then proceed to lower C# until the major third A C# beats at exactly the same speed as the major sixth A F#, 1.0 beats. Continue, tune C# above to C# below. Tenth tempering, tune G# below middle C roughly pure to E below middle C, then proceed to lower G# until the major third E G# beats exactly the same speed as the major sixth E C#, 0.7 beats.” It helps to see the music score by Jorgenson page 173 to see what happened. The 1/8 Syntonic Well (inspite of the name this is a Meantone, 1758) contains the largest contrast between cord colors. Quoting Jorgenson, page 197: “Tuning the Theoretically Correct Jean Baptiste Romieu 1/8 Syntonic Comma Well temperament in the Acoustic Tonality of C Major/A Minor. All the major and minor triads are musically useable. There are no proportional beating triads. Each fifth is narrowed by 1/8 Syntonic Comma. The bearing octave is E below middle C to E above middle C. Major sixths, fourths, major thirds and small minor thirds are wide. Fifths and minor thirds are narrow. This is a complete temperament with no tunings done except for octave. Tuning C to tuning fork. (see Jorgenson, starting on page 197 for complete description). Temper E above middle C from middle C so that the major third C E is wide and beating at 8.2 beats per second. Temper G below middle C from middle C so that the fourth G C is wide and beats 1.2. Test, it is essential that the following have correct beat speed: G C 1.2 beats; C E 8.2 beats; and G E 7.6 beats. Tune D above middle C roughly pure to A below middle C and then proceed to raise D until the fourth A D beats 1-1/2 times as fast as the fifth G D. Also the fourth A D beats approximately 1-1/3 times as fast as the fifth A E. (lots of luck) Test, G D 0.9 beats; A E 1.0 beats; G C 1.2 beats; F D 1.4 beats; C E 8.2 beats; G E 7.6 beats and A C 10.2 beats. Tune E below middle C pure to E above middle C. Test Temper Bb below middle C from D above middle C so that the major third Bb D is wide and beating 7.3 per second. Test Tune F below middle C roughly pure to Bb below middle C and then proceed to lower F until the fourth F Bb beats approximately 1-1/3 times as fast as the fifth F C. Test Temper B below middle C from G below middle C so that the major third G B is wide and beating at 6.1 beats per second. Test Temper C# above middle C from A below middle C so that the major third A C# is wide and beats 6.8. Test Tune F# below middle C roughly pure to B below middle C and then proceed to lower F# until the fourth F# B beats approximately 1-1/2 times as fast as the fifth E B and also the fourth F# B beats 1-1/3 times as fast as the fifth F# C#. F# B should be wide and F# C# should be narrow. Test Temper G# below middle C from E below middle C so that the major third E G# is wide and beating at 5.1. Test Temper Eb above middle C from Bb below middle C so that the fourth Bb Eb is wide and beating at 1.5.” It is helpful to look at the score in Jorgenson, page 200 to see what happened. The 1/12 diatonic comma standard equal (Ancient) is the same as the scale that Ling-Lun calculated in the twenty seventh century BC. Quarter Comma Meantone (1523) (This is the ¼ Syntonic Comma Meantone by Pietro Aron) Quoting Jorgenson, page 177: “There are sixteen musically useable triads to the octave, and all of them contain proportional beat speeds. There are also three extra second inversion minor triads which are useable. The syntonic comma is divided into four equal parts which are shared by four basic fifths.” Selecting a Well Temperament to Tune Quoting Jorgenson, page 245: “Well Temperament is not synonymous with Equal Temperament. J.S. Bach wrote for the Well Tempered Clavier, not the Equal Tempered. Well temperament had to be known in the time of Grammateus, although theorist did not start to write about it until 1690. …. There are no wolf intervals in Well Temperament, and all the Triads are musically useable. Complete freedom of modulation exists in both Well and Equal temperament. During modulation, Equal temperament lacks the harmonic keycolor changes inherent in the unequal spaced tones of Well temperament. Modulatory key-coloring was considered essential to all those that rejected equal temperament. The basic idea of Well temperament is to preserve a Meantone type of harmonic smoothness in the commonly used keys while allowing one to modulate with every changing key-color through out the cycle of fourths to the very brilliant lesser used keys. … In the number of proportional beating triads, all the Well temperaments are superior to their equivalent comma divisions in the Meantone temperaments. This gives Well temperament an unrivaled quality of rhythmic harmoniousness. “ Jorgenson gives the method of creating twenty-eight Well Tempered Scales in his book. Quoting Jorgenson, page 248: “When choosing a Well Temperament, refer to the chart on pages 249 and 250, observe the following facts: 1. 2. 3. 4. The Bendeler ¼ diatonic and the Werckmister Well Temperaments, which divide the diatonic comma, are more suitable for music with many sharps and flats than the equivalent Well Temperaments that divide the Syntonic or Erlanger commas. However these diatonic Well Temperaments contain fewer pure intervals and less color contrasts than the equivalent Syntonic and Erlanger comma Well Temperaments In general, the smaller the number of tempering steps, the more suitable the Well Temperament is for music with few sharps and flats and it is easier to tune. In general, the larger the number of tempering steps, the more suitable the Well Temperament is for music with many sharps and flats and it is harder to tune. The equal-beating temperament methods are easier to tune than the theoretically correct and are most often more superior musically.” I have chosen to use the equal-beating. Johann Phillip Bendeler Temperament #1 Well Temperament (1690) This is a defective temperament as published. Not only was it printed in the wrong key, it had the minor third B D smaller than minor third F# A. Andrew Werckmeister repaired this according to his Correct Temperament #1 published in 1691 and Friedrich Wilhelm Marpurg solved it a different way in 1776., he tempered the fifth Eb Bb and then compensated by tuning G pure.” There are several other methods of correction. The one selected for representation here is the Equalbeating First Correction of the Johann Phillipp Bendeler Temperament #1 Well Temperament in the Acoustic Tonality of C Major. Quoting Jorgenson, page 280: “The bearing section is F below middle C to Gb above middle C. Except for the pure intervals, major sixths, fourths and major thirds are wide and fifths, minor thirds are narrow. Tuning Tune middle C to tuning folk; G below to C; F above and below to C; Bb below to F above; Eb above to Bb; Ab below to Eb; Db above to Ab; Gb below and Gb above to Db. Temper D above middle C by roughly tuning pure to F below middle C and then proceed to raise D until the major sixth F D beats at exactly the same speed as the major third D F#, 6.2 beats. Temper A below middle C roughly pure to D above middle C and then proceed to lower A until the fourth A D beats at exactly the same speed as the major third F A, 3.1 beats. Tune E above to A below; B below to E above.” Salinas Well Temperament Quoting Jorgenson, page 282: “This is the Bartolemeus Ramis de Pareja Just Temperament improved by the Martin Agricola philosophy and altered by tempering D and A. It is also the Well Temperament version of the Franscisco Salinas 1/3 Syntonic comma Meantone temperament. Plus, in 1806, Lord Charles, Earl of Stanhope, introduced the Salinas into England as the Stanhope Temperament.” Tuning, tune middle C to the tuning folk; tune G below to C; F above and F below to C; Bb below to F above; Eb above to Bb below; Ab below to Eb above; Db above to Ab below; Gb below and Gb above to Db above; b below to G below; E above to B below. Temper D above by tuning roughly pure to F below then proceed to raise D until the major sixth F D beats at exactly the same speed as the major third D F# above middle C, 6.2 beats. Temper A below by tuning roughly pure to D above and then proceed to lower A until the fourth A D beats at exactly the same speed as the major third F A, 3.1 beats.” ½ Erlanger Comma Well Temperament Quoting Jorgenson, page 266: “ In the Equal-beating method, twenty-two of the twenty -four major and minor triads per octave contain proportional beat speeds, and this is the greatest number of proportional beating triads possible. “ From page 270: “ Tune middle C to the tuning fork. Tune F above to middle C; Bb below to F; Eb above to Bb. Test the following pairs: Bb F zero beat; Bb Eb zero beat; C F zero beat; C Eb 19.4 beat. Tune Ab below to Eb; Db above to Ab; Gb above to Db; Cb below to Gb; Abb below to Cb below; Rename Abb to G. Tune G above to G below; E above to middle C; A below to E above. Temper D above middle C by tuning roughly pure to G above then proceed to lower D until the fourth D G beats at exactly the same speed as the major third Bb D.” Note Erlanger was J. S. Bach’s student. Bach did not publish much about the temperaments that he used. Erlanger could be improving and publishing what he learned from Bach. Andrew Werckmister Well Quoting Jorgenson, page 307: “Tune middle C to tuning folk. Tune Bb below to middle C; Eb above to Bb; Ab below to Eb; Db above to Ab; Gb below to Db; Gb above to Gb below. Temper D above tune roughly pure to Bb below and then proceed to raise D until the major third Bb D beats exactly the same speed as the major third D F# above. Temper G below roughly pure to middle and then proceed to lower G until the fourth G C beats at exactly the same speed as the fifth G D. Temper A below roughly pure to D above then proceed to lower A until the fourth A D beats at exactly the same speed as the major third F A. Tune E above middle C pure to A below; B below to E above. It helps to get this right to be able to do the tests between each step and it helps to see what happened to look at the score on Jorgenson, page 309. The detail is important but just tooo long for this article. In 1681 Andreas Werckmeister published Orget-Probe which contained 4 musical scales that he was promoting as corrections to the Just Musical Scale. Wreckmeister was a student of J.S. Bach and Werckmeister’s musical thought just might reflect Bach’s musical thought. Bach is silent on what musical scale he composed in. But, Bach did write on one of his manuscripts that it was not to be played in Equal Temperament. The KORG Model OT-120 Electronic Tuner has the Werckmister scales built in, so using this Tuner to tuning to Werckmister is easy. Kirnberger ½ Syntonic Comma Well This is the Martin Agricola Just tuning transposed into the key of C and altered by one temperament, the resulting Well temperament is actually in G major. This temperament was published in 1779, but was know years earlier. This temperament is not quite a Well temperament, because the fourth from A below middle C to D above middle C is still basically a wolf. The Kirnberger selected is just one of the four that Jorgenson describes and is the Equal-Beating Johann Phillipp Kirnberger Well Temperament Transposed into the Acoustic Tonality of C Major. Quoting Jorgenson, page 263: “Tune middle C to the tuning folk. Tune G below to C; F above to C; Bb below to F; Eb above to Bb below; Ab below to Eb above; Db above to Ab below; Gb below and Gb above to Db above; A below to middle C; E above to A below; B below to E above. Temper D above by tuning roughly pure to Bb below and then proceeding to raise D until the major third Bb D beats at exactly the same speed as the major third D F# above, 7.3 beats.” Again the test that Jorgenson gives and the score on page 265 helps a lot, but too much for this quote. Quarter Comma Well Temperament Quoting Jorgenson, page 296: “This is the eighteenth century temperament of Dr. George Sargent transposed into the tonality of C major. The theoretically correct method has sixteen of the twentyfour major and minor triads to the octave containing proportional beat speeds and the diatonic comma is divided into four equal parts which are shared by four of the fifths. The tempered fifths beat slower than the Bendeler, Salinas or Harrison Well temperaments. In the equal-beating method there are the same number of proportional beating triads, but the diatonic comma is not divided evenly among the four fifths. Tune middle C to the tuning folk. Tune F above to C; Bb below to F; Eb above to Bb; Ab below to Eb; Db above to Ab; Gb below to Db; Cb below to Gb. Temper G below middle C from middle C so that the fourth G C is wide and beating at 2.7 beats per second. (good luck .. at telling a beat to .7!). Temper D above middle C from G below so that the fifth G D is narrow and beating at 2.0 beats per second. Tune A below to D.” Irregular Temperaments The background for these miscellaneous scales is the desire for composers to have new material to explore when their current work is starting to be the same thing over again. There are primitive scales that existed for a while and then were overcome by more modern replacements. Only in very remote regions do these earlier scales have a chance of still existing before being superseded. The most primitive still in existence in the early twentieth century is the Javanese with 5 equal tones per octave. Another closely related but later is the Siamese with seven equal tones per octave. Then there are later historic scales that did not get enough of a following to be able to gain dominance over the octave scale and while these lesser historic scales are not disappearing, they are not gaining any new converts either; two of these scales are the Arabian at 17 equal tones per harmonic, the Hindu at 22 equal tones per harmonic. Plus there are numerous modern experimental scales that have not gone anywhere and have little use in tuning Replica Instruments. Jorgenson 5/7 Tuning Quoting Jorgenson, page 377: “The five and seven temperament is a new language based on the melodic series, then the historical tunings such as the Pythagorean, Just; Meantone and Well Temperament can all be viewed as dialects of one common language based on the harmonic series...” Quoting Jorgenson, page 378: “In order to understand what the five and seven temperament is, it is helpful to review how the standard 12 equal temperament is arranged on a keyboard. Each of the twelve intervals or tonal distances between C, C#, D, D#, E, F, F#, G, G#, A, A#, B and C are named semitones or half steps. In equal temperament they are all the same size. All other intervals are constructed by adding together various number of these semitone. Notice in particular that the interval D# F# is 1-1/2 times as large as the interval C# D#. Also notice that the interval F G is exactly twice as large as the interval E F. Therefore in the standard equal temperament, neither the tones on the black keys nor the white keys are equally spaced. In the five and seven the equal temperament interval D G# has been preserved, and the frequencies of the tones D and G# are identical to the tones of D and G# in the equal temperament. However, all the remaining tones have been arranged as follows: 1. 2. The intervals between the successive black keys are all made exactly the same size. Thus, D# F# is made the same size as F# G# and A# C# is made the same size as G# A#. The originals equal tempered black keys minor thirds become smaller and the original equal tempered black key whole tones become larger. The interval between the successive white keys are all made exactly the same. Thus, E F is made the same size as F G; and B C is the same size as C D. The original white key equal tempered semitones become larger and the equal tempered white key whole equal tempered whole tones become smaller. All of this results in the five intervals between the black keys and the seven intervals between the white keys of the octave being exactly equally spaced. This latter quality accounts for the name “five and seven”. As in the standard equal temperament, it is also true in the five and seven that G# is exactly midway between G and A; Gb and Bb; F and B; E and C; Eb and Db; and finally a lower D and a upper D. Also, D is exactly midway between Db and Eb; C and E; B and F; Bb and Gb; A and G and finally a lower G# and a upper G#. Thus G# and D are the center.” Quoting Jorgenson, page 380: “The exact number of cents between each tone in the five and seven temperament is: D 120 Eb 51-3/7 E 171-3/7 F 17-1/7 F# 1542/7 G 85-5/7 G# 85-5/7 A 154-2/7 Bb 17-1/7 B 171-3/7 C 51-3/7 C# 120 D. … then the exact amount in cents that each tone deviates from the same tone in 12 equal temperament is D Eb E F 0 +20 -28 4/7 +42 6/7 F# G G# -40 +14 2/7 0 A Bb B C C# D -14 2/7 +40 -42 6/7 +28 4/7 -20 0” If the Jorgenson five and seven is tuned on one piano and 12 equal temperament on a second, the two playing together sound interesting. Also a two keyboard stack of electronic keyboards is interesting. Partch’s 43 The 43 pitches first in ratio of small integers from the tonic: 1:1 81:80 33:32 21:20 16:15 12:11 11:10 10:9 9:8 8:7 7:6 32:27 6:5 11:9 5:4 14:11 9:7 21:16 4:3 27:20 11:8 7:5 10:7 16:11 40:27 3:2 32:21 14:9 11:7 8:5 18:11 5:3 27:16 12:7 7:4 16:9 9:5 20:11 11:6 15:8 40:21 64:33 160:81 2:1. Next these same 43 pitches in cents from the tonic: 0 21.5 53.2 84.5 111.7 150.6 165.0 182.4 203.9 231.2 266.9 294.1 315.6 347.4 ??? (do 5:4) 417.5 435.1 470.8 496.0 519.5 551.3 582.5 617.5 648.7 680.5 702.0 729.2 764.9 782.5 813.7 852.6 884.4 905.9 933.1 968.8 996.1 1017.6 1035.0 1049.4 1088.3 1115.5 1146.8 1178.5 1200. 19-Tone Equal The cents from the tonic are: 0 63.2 126.3 189.5 193.1 252.6 315.8 378.9 442.1 505.3 568.4 631.6 694.7 757.9 821.1 884.2 947.4 1010.5 1073.7 1136.8 1200. 5-Limit Just The 12 tones first in ratio of small integers: 1:1 16:15 9:8 6:5 5:4 4:3 45:32 3:2 8:5 5:3 16:9 15:8 2:1. Now the same 12 tones in cent from tonic: 0 111.7 203.9 315.6 386.3 498.0 590.2 702.0 813.7 884.4 996.1 1088.3 1200. Now the common names of these 12 tones: tonic, minor second, major second, minor third, major third, perfect fourth, diminished fifth, perfect fifth, minor sixth, major sixth, minor seventh, major seventh, octave. True Blues This is really a pentatonic scale trying to be an octave scale, so some of the tone positions move around. The main ratios in small integers are: 1:1 6:5 4:3 3:2 7:4 2:1, with two additional sometimes tones are: 7:6 and 5:4. The cents from the tonic are: 0 (266.9) 315.6 (386.3) 498.0 702.0 968.8 1200. Music Scale by Vallotti Francesco Antonio Vallotti (11 June 1697 – 10 January 1780) was an Italian composer, music theorist, and organist. He studied with G. A. Bissone at the church of St. Eusebius, and joined the Franciscan order in 1716. He was ordained as a priest in 1720. In 1722 he became an organist at St. Antonio in Padua, and would eventually become maestro there in 1730, succeeding maestro Calegari, and would hold that position for the next fifty years. Here he would meet and work with another theorist and composer named Giuseppe Tartini. Vallotti spent a great deal of thought on the theory of harmony and counterpoint. His theoretical endeavors would culminate in 1779 with the publishing of his 167-page, four volume work, Della scienza teorica e pratica della moderna musica (On the scientific theory and practice of modern music). The Valotti temperament has six perfect fifth intervals and six intervals with –1/6 comma. The perfect fifths are B-F#, F#-C#, C#-G#, G#-Eb, Eb-Bb and Bb-F. The –1/6 comma fifths are C-G, G-D, D-A, A-E, E-B and F-C. The frequency ratio for a perfect fifth is 1.5 and for a –1/6 comma is 1.49662. Music Scale by Young is a well temperament devised by Thomas Young, which he included in a letter to the Royal Society of London written July 9, 1799. It was read January 16, 1800 and included in the Society's Philosophical Transactions published that year. Young outlined a practical method to "make the harmony most perfect in those keys which are the most frequently used," by tuning upwards from C a sequence of six pure fourths, as well as "six equally imperfect fifths," in other words six progressively purer flat fifths. His goal was to give better major thirds in more commonly used keys, but to not have any unplayable keys. The KORG Model OT-120 Electronic Tuner has Young’s Scale built in, so using this Tuner to tuning to the Young Scale is easy. TEMPO For almost all of history, the speed that music is played has been left to the performer. The ancient Greek Chorus took a step forward and then back while singing, this might have been an effort of beating time. The ancient Greek had singing, music and religion joined together; music was mostly used to back the human voice, there were even Greek Law against purely instrumental music. There was ancient Greek written music, using Greek Letters in various forms, it was not used much among musicians as none of them could read. Nothing much happened for a thousand years, then in 1050 AD, Guido de Arezzo invents the Gran Staff and the ut re mi... scale. Arezzo’s Grand staff has only 4 staves, no bars or measures; but it was the start. The importance was that musical performance is projected to the position of symbols on a drawing. Later, the first tempo symbols on Arezzo’s Gran Staff were Red and Black ellipses that indicated long and short notes to match long and short vowels in singing. Due to the pressure to symbolize more that came from the rapid expansion of church organs, more tempo marks were soon added. Then things got real complicated: like a demisemiquaver is half of half of half a crotchet, there are 4 crotchets in a semibreve. So how many demisemiquavers are there in a semibreve? Before the 19th Century, it was not possible to divide time down to a minute. In 1452, Galileo Galilei worked out the math for the period of a pendulum. In 1696, Etienne Loulié used an adjustable pendulum in the construction of the first metronome, too expensive and impractical. In 1812. Dietrich Nikolaus Winkel invented a more practical metronome. In 1816, Johann Maelzel incorporating Winkel's ideas, and started manufacturing the metronome under his own name. By this date, music time could be measured down to beats per minute. But no more. Frequency of Pitch For almost all of history, music philosophers had to use the Monochord to measure pitch. Before the mid 19th Century measurement could not be made to a fraction of a second. Anything ancient that talks about Frequency is not correct and should be looked at more closely. When someone states that: in 1619 Pretorius gave the ‘concert pitch’ of Northern Germany as A = 567. Schnitger’s organ in St Jacobi in Hamberg (1688) was tuned A = 489. Silbermann’s organ in Strassburg Cathedral, Germany (1713) had a pitch A = 393. At Trinity College, Cambridge, Father Smith’s organ was tuned (1752) to A = 522.5. By 1859 the French government’s commission of musicians and physicists advised a standard pitch, A = 435. The Covent Gardens Orchestra in 1879 was playing a pitch of A = 450. At the same time America’s ‘concert pitch’ was A = 461.6. All this may not be true, because how could they measure these frequencies? Now in America Standard A= 440 and Concert Pitch A = 432; while in England the standard of C = 522 causes A = 438.9. Standard Music Scales Since the mid-20th Century the standard Musical Scale for all Western Musical Instruments has become the 12-tone Equal Temperament. But what was the standard Musical Scale for each place and each period in history before this? The Church Organ at St. Ann Church in Belfast Ireland during the time of Edward Bunting’s apprenticeship is of major interest to Harpers trying to understand Bunting’s musical score. Quoting from an article by Betty Truitt in The Folk Harp Journal #28, page 4: “Did you know? In 1619 Pretorius gave the ‘concert pitch’ of Northern Germany as A = 567. Schnitger’s organ in S. Jacobi in Hamberg (1688) was tuned A = 489. Silbermann’s organ in Strassburg Cathedral, Germany (1713) had a pitch A = 393. At Trinity College, Cambridge, Father Smith’s organ was tuned (1752) to A = 522.5. By1859 the French government’s commission of musicians and physicists advised a standard pitch, A = 435. The Covent Gardens Orchestra in 1879 was playing a pitch of A = 450. At the same time America’s ‘concert pitch’ went as high as A = 461.6. Now in America A= 440, while in England the standard of C = 522 causes A = 438.9.” Plus this may not be true as there is no way that they could have measured frequency at this point in history. But anyway, this points out one of the problems with using letters to indicate a note ... one has no information as to what frequency this symbol represents. Is an A equal to 440 or 432 vibrations per second. Size of Commas A musical comma is the difference between two sets of Just intervals or combinations of Just intervals. A comma always creates wolf tones. A comma always prevents an instrument from having all its tones being Justly in tune at the same time. The common ratio Just intervals are never multiples of each other. If one Just interval is not a multiple of another Just interval, then the sum of the series of one kind of interval will never equal the sum of any other kind of Just interval series no matter how far into infinity both series might be extended. One proof: 2:1 is the ratio for an octave (Just or otherwise); 3:2 is the ratio for a Just fifth; given A and B are whole numbers (arbitrary steps in a series) so (2/1)**A = (3/2) **B , then 2**(A+B) = 3**(B); but this is a contradiction, because 2 raised to any integer power has to be an even number and 3 raised to any integer power must be odd. There are an infinite number of possible musical comma. Name Aron Comma Didymic (Syntonic, Ptolemic) Comma Diatonic (Pythagorean) Comma Harrison Comma Javanese Comma Jorgenson Comma Kirnberger Comma Kirinberger plus Schisma Comma Salinas Comma Schisma (Comma) Verheijen Comma Size in Cent 74 22 24 51 90 63.15 26 28 50 2 98