Definitions of tuning terms
© 1998 by Joseph L. Monzo
All definitions by Joe Monzo unless otherwise cited
triamu, 3mu
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".
At the setting for triamu pitch-bend resolution, a
semitone is
divided into 23 = 8 pitch-bend units.
Thus there are 8 * 12 = 96 triamus in an
"octave",
so the triamu measurement system may be thought of
as 96-EDO
tuning, with a triamu being one
degree
in 96-EDO.
A triamu is calculated as the 96th root of 2, or 2(1/96),
with a ratio of approximately 1:1.007246412.
It is an irrational number, but it
is extremely close to the ratio 139:138 : the difference is
only ~ 1/16,000 of a
cent, making them for all
intents and purposes identical.
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 triamus 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:
[from Joe Monzo, JustMusic: A New Harmony]
A triamu is
The formula for calculating the triamu-value of any ratio is:
triamus = log10(ratio) * [ (23 * 12) / log10(2)]
MIDI tuning units
enamu
doamu
tetramu
pentamu
hexamu
heptamu
oktamu
enneamu
dekamu
endekamu
dodekamu
tridekamu
tetradekamu
cawapu
midipu
my Gentle
Introduction to the MIDI Tuning Specification
the Official
MIDI Tuning Specification.
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