Ellis's Duodene and a "best-fit" meantone
©2001 by Joe Monzo
Message 2347 From: "monz"
Date: Mon Dec 31, 2001 3:52 pm Subject: Re: [tuning-math] Re: coordinates from unison-vectors Hi J! > From: unidala > To: > Sent: Monday, December 31, 2001 8:05 AM > Subject: [tuning-math] Re: coordinates from unison-vectors > > > ... > > J Gill: So your (dynamite presentation!) XLS Spreadsheet > will allow determination of mean-tone "coefficients" which > "best fit" any 5-limit periodicity block? [Click this link to download my spreadsheet relating Duodene with -2/9- and -1/4-comma meantones.] Well... the spreadsheet *allows* determination of the meantone coordinates and axis... but it still can't *make* the determination! The user still has to do some of the work. The spreadsheet automatically figures out where to close the meantone chain, at (+/- 1/2 determinant) generators. But I haven't yet "coordinated" [groan pun intended] the mathematics to determine the "best-fit" meantone automatically. So far, you can only try out different values and see what they look like. > Not being very adept with this PB stuff you guys apply, Have patience, J... I've spent the night working on a terrific graphic which will go into a Dictionary entry webpage for "Transformation". That should clear up a lot of the fog for you. > what are the mean-tone "coefficients" which represent > a "best-fit" for Ellis' "Duodene", with 12 pitches at: > > 1/1--16/15--9/8--6/5--5/4--4/3--45/32--3/2--8/5--5/3--9/5--15/8 > and > 16/15--9/8--6/5--5/4--4/3--45/32--3/2--8/5--5/3--9/5--15/8--2/1 > > and for > 1/1--16/15--9/8--6/5--5/4--4/3--7/5--3/2--8/5--5/3--9/5--15/8 > and > 16/15--9/8--6/5--5/4--4/3--7/5--3/2--8/5--5/3--9/5--15/8--2/1 > > > Curiously, J Gill Well, as I said, I don't have mathematics to do the job, so I just try a few by eye and intuition, and see what looks good. First of all, the first two of your Duodenes are equivalent to each other on my lattice, because it's 2-dimensional for prime-factors 3 and 5, with 2 ignored. Secondly, I could use only that first pair, because the second pair are 7-limit, making the lattice 3-dimensional, and my spreadsheet doesn't handle that ... yet ... So: Ellis's Duodene is a 12-tone set defined by the unison-vectors 128:125 = [0 3] (the diesis) and 81:80 = [4 -1] (the syntonic comma), as Paul shows in his "Gentle Introduction to Fokker Periodicity Blocks, part 2". JI pitch-classes enclosed within the parallelogram: coordinates ratio ~cents ( 0 0 ) 1/1 0 (-1 -1 ) 16/15 111.7312853 ( 2 0 ) 9/8 203.9100017 ( 1 -1 ) 6/5 315.641287 ( 0 1 ) 5/4 386.3137139 (-1 0 ) 4/3 498.0449991 ( 2 1 ) 45/32 590.2237156 ( 1 0 ) 3/2 701.9550009 ( 0 -1 ) 8/5 813.6862861 (-1 1 ) 5/3 884.358713 ( 2 -1 ) 9/5 1017.596288 ( 1 1 ) 15/8 1088.268715 -1/4-comma meantone pitch-classes enclosed within the parallelogram: generator coordinates ~cents -6 ( 0 -3/2) 620.5294292 -5 ( 0 -5/4) 117.1078577 -4 ( 0 -1 ) 813.6862861 -3 ( 0 -3/4) 310.2647146 -2 ( 0 -1/2) 1006.843143 -1 ( 0 -1/4) 503.4215715 0 ( 0 0 ) 0 1 ( 0 1/4) 696.5784285 2 ( 0 1/2) 193.1568569 3 ( 0 3/4) 889.7352854 4 ( 0 1 ) 386.3137139 5 ( 0 5/4) 1082.892142 6 ( 0 3/2) 579.4705708 Below is a graphic of the -1/4-comma meantone lattice. The reference pitch is C = n0. Note that it is based on the unit-square, expressed in matrix form as [1 0] [0 1] of the array or grid of prime-factors 3 and 5, with 3 on the horizontal axis and 5 on the vertical. Expressed as "8ve"-equivalent ratios, the unit-square matrix is: [ 3/2 1/1 ] [ 1/1 5/4 ] This makes it different from my usual lattice formula. Legend: * pink: outlines the parallelogram boundaries of the periodicity-block according to the shape defined by the pair of unison-vectors, centered on (0,0) = 1:1 ratio; * blue: plots the coordinates of the twelve 5-limit JI pitch-classes of Ellis's "Duodene" which lie within the boundaries of the periodicity-block, and shows where the JI "wolves" lie (this actually didn't work here... I have to fix that); * yellow: plots the more-or-less arbitrarily chosen meantones, whose chains are closed according to the interval spanned by one of the unison-vectors, symmetrical on either side of (0,0) = 1/1; * green: connects each meantone pitch-class with its closest JI relative within the periodicity-block, closeness measured in pitch-height. (I drew those green lines in by hand... so if you change the meantone in the spreadsheet, the lines won't adjust.) Note that this periodicity-block has three pitch-classes which fall right on the eastern boundary: (2,-1) = 9/5, (2,0) = 9/8 and (2,1) = 45/32. All three of these thus have alternates a comma lower -- in other words, by the -[4,-1] = 80:81 unison-vector--, and the alternate pitch-classes fall on the western boundary: (-2,0) = 16/9, (-2,1) = 10/9, and (-2,2) = 25/18, respectively. Also, since (-2,2) = 25/18 and (2,1) = 45/32 happen to fall right on the northwest and northeast *corners* of the boundary (respectively), they also have lower alternates at the distance of the *other* unison-vector -[0 3] = 64:125, which would place the alternates at (-2,-1) = 64/45 and (2,-2) = 36/25, respectively. With a total of 17 possible pitch-classes which may be used to define this periodicity-block, the only meantone which goes right down the middle of all of them is -1/4-comma. That's why I chose to use that for the graphic. Below is another example of the same Duodene periodicity-block, this time with a "best fit meantone" of -2/9-comma. If one keeps the JI pitches in place, and moves the bounding unison-vectors and the meantone 1/2-step to the right along the 3-axis, so that the boundaries enclose only 12 pitches (the minimal set for this pair of unison-vectors) and the meantone is exactly centered and symmetrical to those 12 pitches, the entire system is centered and symmetrical around the ratio 3(1/2), or in terms of "8ve"-equivalent ratios, the square-root of 3/2 :
In fact this structure more accurately portrays what the meantone really represents: because of the disappearance of the syntonic comma unison-vector, this flat lattice should be imagined to wrap around as a cylinder, so that the right and left edges connect. Thus the centered meantone may imply either of any pair of pitches which would be separated by a comma on the flat lattice, and each of those pairs of points on the flat lattice map to the same point on a cylinder . -monz See also: my Lattice diagrams comparing rational implications of various meantone chains.
Updated: 2001.12.31, 2002.1.24
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