Definitions of tuning terms

© 1998 by Joseph L. Monzo

All definitions by Joe Monzo unless otherwise cited


dekamu, 10mu


    A term I and a few other tuning theorists coined in July 2003, based on an idea by Aaron Hunt, to describe one a family of terms referring to units of resolution in MIDI tuning, in which the prefix specifies the exponent of 2 which describes the number of MIDI tuning units per semitone and the final "mu" is an acronym for "MIDI unit".

    The tetradekamu is specified in the MIDI spec (1983) as the smallest increment available for the pitch-bend controller. bits mu/semi edo ratio cents 10 1024 12288 1.00005641 0.09765625

    At the setting for dekamu pitch-bend resolution, a semitone is divided into 210 = 1024 pitch-bend units. Thus there are 1024 * 12 = 12288 dekamus in an "octave", so the dekamu measurement system may be thought of as 12288-EDO tuning, with a dekamu being one degree of 12288-EDO.

    A dekamu is calculated as the 12288th root of 2, or 2(1/12288), with a ratio of approximately 1:1.00005641. It is an irrational number, but is extremely close to the ratio 17728:17727 : the difference is less than 1/500,000 of a cent, making them for all intents and purposes identical. 2 1169/2599 3 2.449788411 2.997121435 2 4/9 3


    A dekamu is

    • exactly 125/1536 (= 0.081380208333... = ~ 1/12 ) of a milli8ve,

    • exactly 25/256 (= 0.09765625 = ~ 1/10 ) of a cent,

    • exactly 1325/1536 (= 0.862630208333... = ~ 6/7 ) türk-sents,

    • exactly 2 5527/12288 (= 2.449788411458333... = ~ 2 1/2 ) jots,

    • approximately 3 (= ~ 2.997121435 ) tuning units.


    The formula for calculating the _amu-value of any ratio is:

    dekamus = log10(ratio) * [ (210 * 12) / log10(2)]

    For practical use in tuning MIDI-files, an interval's semitone value must first be calculated. The nearest integer semitone is translated into a MIDI note-number (which can generally also be described by letter-name plus optional accidental: A, Bb, C#, etc., followed by an "octave" register-number). Then the remainder or deficit is converted into dekamus plus or minus, respectively. These give the correct tuning to a tolerance that is far better than anything that the human auditory system can detect, or indeed far better than what is available in the output of any electronic instruments.

    See also:

    MIDI tuning units
    enamu
    doamu
    triamu
    tetramu
    pentamu
    hexamu
    heptamu
    oktamu
    enneamu
    endekamu
    dodekamu
    tridekamu
    tetradekamu
    cawapu
    midipu
    my Gentle Introduction to the MIDI Tuning Specification
    the Official MIDI Tuning Specification.

    [from Joe Monzo, JustMusic: A New Harmony]


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