decab

(10/9) <=> (16/15) transform of decaa

Properties

Notes10
Period1200.0 ¢
Just7-limit
Source Mailing lists
Referencehttps://yahootuninggroupsultimatebackup.github.io/tuning-math/topicId_4563.html#4563
Thread4 scales
Tone Tone (¢) Step Step (¢)
21/20 84 21/20 84
28/25 196 16/15 112
6/5 316 15/14 119
4/3 498 10/9 182
7/5 583 21/20 84
3/2 702 15/14 119
8/5 814 16/15 112
42/25 898 21/20 84
28/15 1081 10/9 182
2/1 1200 15/14 119

Similar scales

FileNotesRotationMax diff (¢)
decac 10 5 0.0
secac 10 5 9.6
secab 10 0 9.6
xen18-erlich-srutal-10 10 9 20.2
secad 10 8 21.6
xen18-erlich-pajara-10 10 4 22.1
jubilee10asym1 10 4 23.5

Parent scales

FileNotesMax diff (¢)
syndia4 12 7.7
tgm 12 10.9
meantune 16 7.9
meanquar_16 16 8.4
ozancirc 12 13.6
asbru 12 13.7
12highschool1 12 13.8
xen06-polansky-study-1 12 13.8
kred12_5 12 13.8
xen18-schulter-didymic-1-4-17 17 8.4

Child scales

FileNotesMax diff (¢)
Vietnam_Bac 5 7.2
prop19_7b 7 7.4
xen09-chalmers-tritriadic-10-14-15 7 7.7
hirajoshi2 5 7.7
mavchrome4 7 7.7
xen15-gilson-pythagorean-pentatonic 5 7.7
Uganda_Xylophone_a 5 10.8
xen10-wilson-purvi-10a-02 7 13.8
xen15-gilson-just-pentatonic 5 13.8
xen09-chalmers-tritriadic-3-4-5 7 13.8
Mailing list post
From: Gene W Smith (2002-07-31)
Subject: Four 10-note, 7-limit JI scales

If we take (10/9)^2 (15/14)^2 (16/15)^2 (21/20)^3 = 2 as scale steps, and
simplify the scale-finding problem by assuming 4/3 and 3/2 both belong to
the scale, we obtain four scales, the third and fourth of which are the
inverted forms of the first and second. A version of the major/minor
transformation, exchanging 10/9 with 16/15, which is equivalent to saying
2-->2, 3-->3, 5-->24/5, 7-->168/25, exchanges the first and second, as
well as the third and fourth. The first "decaa", and fourth, "decad", are
major versions, having two major tetrads and a minor tetrad, while
"decab" and "decac" have two minor and one major tetrad. In any system
where 50/49~1 the exchange transform sends tetrads to tetrads and can be
considered major/minor. In 22-et in particular, each scale becomes the
symmetrical decatonic. All of the scales have 23 intervals, 17 triads and
3 tetrads.

! decad.scl
! [15/14, 10/9, 21/20, 16/15, 15/14, 21/20, 10/9, 15/14, 16/15, 21/20]
inversion of decab
10
!
15/14
25/21
5/4
4/3
10/7
3/2
5/3
25/14
40/21
2/1

! decab.scl
! [21/20, 16/15, 15/14, 10/9, 21/20, 15/14, 16/15, 21/20, 10/9, 15/14]
(10/9) <==> (16/15) transform of decaa
10
!
21/20
28/25
6/5
4/3
7/5
3/2
8/5
42/25
28/15
2/1

! decac.scl
! [15/14, 16/15, 21/20, 10/9, 15/14, 21/20, 16/15, 15/14, 10/9, 21/20]
inversion of decaa
10
!
15/14
8/7
6/5
4/3
10/7
3/2
8/5
12/7
40/21
2/1

! decad.scl
! [15/14, 10/9, 21/20, 16/15, 15/14, 21/20, 10/9, 15/14, 16/15, 21/20]
inversion of decab
10
!
15/14
25/21
5/4
4/3
10/7
3/2
5/3
25/14
40/21
2/1
Full thread (2 messages)
From: Gene W Smith (2002-07-31)
Subject: Four 10-note, 7-limit JI scales

If we take (10/9)^2 (15/14)^2 (16/15)^2 (21/20)^3 = 2 as scale steps, and
simplify the scale-finding problem by assuming 4/3 and 3/2 both belong to
the scale, we obtain four scales, the third and fourth of which are the
inverted forms of the first and second. A version of the major/minor
transformation, exchanging 10/9 with 16/15, which is equivalent to saying
2-->2, 3-->3, 5-->24/5, 7-->168/25, exchanges the first and second, as
well as the third and fourth. The first "decaa", and fourth, "decad", are
major versions, having two major tetrads and a minor tetrad, while
"decab" and "decac" have two minor and one major tetrad. In any system
where 50/49~1 the exchange transform sends tetrads to tetrads and can be
considered major/minor. In 22-et in particular, each scale becomes the
symmetrical decatonic. All of the scales have 23 intervals, 17 triads and
3 tetrads.

! decad.scl
! [15/14, 10/9, 21/20, 16/15, 15/14, 21/20, 10/9, 15/14, 16/15, 21/20]
inversion of decab
10
!
15/14
25/21
5/4
4/3
10/7
3/2
5/3
25/14
40/21
2/1

! decab.scl
! [21/20, 16/15, 15/14, 10/9, 21/20, 15/14, 16/15, 21/20, 10/9, 15/14]
(10/9) <==> (16/15) transform of decaa
10
!
21/20
28/25
6/5
4/3
7/5
3/2
8/5
42/25
28/15
2/1

! decac.scl
! [15/14, 16/15, 21/20, 10/9, 15/14, 21/20, 16/15, 15/14, 10/9, 21/20]
inversion of decaa
10
!
15/14
8/7
6/5
4/3
10/7
3/2
8/5
12/7
40/21
2/1

! decad.scl
! [15/14, 10/9, 21/20, 16/15, 15/14, 21/20, 10/9, 15/14, 16/15, 21/20]
inversion of decab
10
!
15/14
25/21
5/4
4/3
10/7
3/2
5/3
25/14
40/21
2/1
From: Gene W Smith (2002-07-31)
Subject: Re: [tuning-math] Four 10-note, 7-limit JI scales

These scales also work well with the {225/224, 441/440} temperament,
whose mean square optimal values are essentially those of the 72-et. I
give a 72-et version of the first scale below (33 intervals 44 triads);
the third and fourth are modes of the first and second, so the second is
just a mode of the inversion of the first scale. Qm(3) is not knocked off
its perch, but these are a nice suppliment.

! mecaa.scl
! [5, 11, 7, 7, 5, 7, 11, 5, 7, 7]
{225/224, 441/440} tempering of decad, 72-et version
10
!
83.33333333
266.6666667
383.3333333
500.0000000
583.3333333
700.0000000
883.3333333
966.6666667
1083.333333
2/1

Raw file

! decab.scl
! [21/20, 16/15, 15/14, 10/9, 21/20, 15/14, 16/15, 21/20, 10/9, 15/14]
(10/9) <=> (16/15) transform of decaa
10
!
21/20
28/25
6/5
4/3
7/5
3/2
8/5
42/25
28/15
2/1
!
! https://yahootuninggroupsultimatebackup.github.io/tuning-math/topicId_4563.html#4563
!
! [info]
! source = Mailing lists
! file = tuning-math/messages/yahoo_tuning-math_messages_api_raw_2440-7444.json
! topic_id = 4563
! msg_id = 4563