magic

magic chord test

Properties

Notes12
Period1200.0 ¢
Just7-limit
Source Mailing lists
Referencehttps://yahootuninggroupsultimatebackup.github.io/tuning/topicId_3725.html#3750
Thread1 scale
Tone Tone (¢) Step Step (¢)
28/25 196 28/25 196
8/7 231 50/49 35
6/5 316 21/20 84
5/4 386 25/24 71
4/3 498 16/15 112
7/5 583 21/20 84
10/7 617 50/49 35
8/5 814 28/25 196
5/3 884 25/24 71
7/4 969 21/20 84
25/14 1004 50/49 35
2/1 1200 28/25 196

Parent scales

FileNotesMax diff (¢)
diam7pluswoo 17 4.5
trab19_72 19 3.8
trab19marv 19 3.9
rosatimarv 21 3.9
diamond9plus-marvel 21 5.1
woz31 31 0.0
diamond9keemic 19 7.5
qx2 31 0.2
xen07-chalmers-partch 19 7.7
diamond9plus 21 7.7

Child scales

FileNotesMax diff (¢)
xen18-erlich-luna-07 7 3.0
xen18-erlich-luna-06 6 3.0
xen18-erlich-luna-05 5 3.0
xen09-wilson-marwa-14b-08 7 7.7
xen10-wilson-purvi-10b-07 7 7.7
xen09-chalmers-tritriadic-3-4-5 7 13.8
xen09-wilson-marwa-14b-09 7 13.8
xen12-chalmers-tritriadic-dm-9-5-1 7 13.8
genggong 5 13.8
edo-06 6 17.5
Mailing list post
From: Carl Lumma (1999-06-24)
Subject: Re: magic chord

Paul Erlich wrote...

>What's the VF here? Anyway, I think that 9:8 is too weak a "consonance" to
>have an audible effect here, but with the augmented triad, I definitely
>prefer the tempered over the just version.

Of course the VF is given as a distribution, and a fairly even one in this case, which is why the chord sounds as it does.  What is it?  I listened to all inversions of the just version, rather in haste...

1/1    5/4    7/5    7/4   (1)  1/1  8/5 ...
c      e      f#    a#          70   20  10

1/1   28/25   7/5    8/5   (2)  8/5  7/5 ...
c      c#     f#    g#          70   20  10

1/1    5/4   10/7   25/14  (3)  10/7 1/1 8/7
c      e      g      b          50   40  10

1/1    8/7   10/7    8/5   (4)  8/7 10/7 ...
c      d      g      g#         70   20  10

...of course the 1/1 frequency must be fixed, or you'll get tricked.  Here's the scala file to do it (1/1 is mapped to "c" above)...

! magic.scl
!
magic chord test
12
!
28/25
8/7
6/5
5/4
4/3
7/5
10/7
8/5
5/3
7/4
25/14
2/1

I compared only root-position just and tempered versions, but I doubt the VF for the tempered version differs in any significant way from the above.

As for the augmented triad, to which just version do you "prefer" 3tET...

7:9:11
8:10:13
12:15:19
16:20:25

...?

-C.
Full thread (6 messages)
From: Carl Lumma (1999-06-22)
Subject: Re: magic chord

Paul Erlich wrote...

>In 72-tone equal temperament, take the chord C E- F#- Bb-- (where - means
>flattening by 1/72 octave relative to 12-tone equal temperament). The six
>intervals in this chord are:
>
<->snip<->
>
>One cannot tune the chord in JI and have all the intervals listed in the
>rightmost column. The best one can do is to use 28:25 instead of 9:8; then
>the other five intervals can be just as shown. 28:25 is a 25-limit interval
>but is clearly a case where the limit is of far less importance than the
>proximity to simpler ratios. It is 196 cents, and has a fairly clear
>interpretation as an 8-cent flat 9:8, but it might also be heard as a
>14-cent sharp 10:9. Tuning it closer to 9:8 would increase its consonance
>and the 72-tET version shown here does so with minimal damage to the other
>intervals.
>
>So the "magic chord" is, allowing for intervals to be tempered by up to 4
>cents, a saturated 9-limit chord. Similarly, the augmented triad in 12-tET
>is, allowing intervals to be tempered by up to 14 cents, a saturated 5-limit
>chord. Neither of these chords can be expressed adequately in just
>intonation.

I agree that there are consonant chords which do not have a natural expression in JI.  But have you actually compared the two versions of this chord?  I did, in root position, and they sounded almost exactly alike.  Certainly they shared the same VF.  In no way did the 72tET version sound more consonant, in fact the just version sounded a little smoother.  I doubt anyone would resent the substitution of one of these chords for the other in a reasonably-paced piece of music.

-C.
From: Paul H. Erlich (1999-06-23)
Subject: Re: magic chord

>>So the "magic chord" is, allowing for intervals to be tempered by up to 4
>>cents, a saturated 9-limit chord. Similarly, the augmented triad in 12-tET
>>is, allowing intervals to be tempered by up to 14 cents, a saturated
5-limit
>>chord. Neither of these chords can be expressed adequately in just
>>intonation.

>I agree that there are consonant chords which do not have a natural
expression in JI.  But have you actually >compared the two versions of this
chord?  I did, in root position, and they sounded almost exactly alike.
>Certainly they shared the same VF.  In no way did the 72tET version sound
more consonant, in fact the just >version sounded a little smoother.  I
doubt anyone would resent the substitution of one of these chords for >the
other in a reasonably-paced piece of music.

What's the VF here? Anyway, I think that 9:8 is too weak a "consonance" to
have an audible effect here, but with the augmented triad, I definitely
prefer the tempered over the just version.
From: Carl Lumma (1999-06-24)
Subject: Re: magic chord

Paul Erlich wrote...

>What's the VF here? Anyway, I think that 9:8 is too weak a "consonance" to
>have an audible effect here, but with the augmented triad, I definitely
>prefer the tempered over the just version.

Of course the VF is given as a distribution, and a fairly even one in this case, which is why the chord sounds as it does.  What is it?  I listened to all inversions of the just version, rather in haste...

1/1    5/4    7/5    7/4   (1)  1/1  8/5 ...
c      e      f#    a#          70   20  10

1/1   28/25   7/5    8/5   (2)  8/5  7/5 ...
c      c#     f#    g#          70   20  10

1/1    5/4   10/7   25/14  (3)  10/7 1/1 8/7
c      e      g      b          50   40  10

1/1    8/7   10/7    8/5   (4)  8/7 10/7 ...
c      d      g      g#         70   20  10

...of course the 1/1 frequency must be fixed, or you'll get tricked.  Here's the scala file to do it (1/1 is mapped to "c" above)...

! magic.scl
!
magic chord test
12
!
28/25
8/7
6/5
5/4
4/3
7/5
10/7
8/5
5/3
7/4
25/14
2/1

I compared only root-position just and tempered versions, but I doubt the VF for the tempered version differs in any significant way from the above.

As for the augmented triad, to which just version do you "prefer" 3tET...

7:9:11
8:10:13
12:15:19
16:20:25

...?

-C.
From: Paul H. Erlich (1999-06-25)
Subject: Re: magic chord

>As for the augmented triad, to which just version do you "prefer" 3tET...

>7:9:11
>8:10:13
>12:15:19
>16:20:25

All -- each one has at least one interval more dissonant than the tempered
major third.
From: Carl Lumma (1999-06-26)
Subject: Re: magic chord

>>As for the augmented triad, to which just version do you "prefer" 3tET...
>
>>7:9:11
>>8:10:13
>>12:15:19
>>16:20:25
>
>All -- each one has at least one interval more dissonant than the tempered
>major third.

Don't you mean at least one interval more dissonant than the tempered 8/5?

Chords are more than the sums of their intervals.  I hear the first three of the above as clearly more consonant than the 12tET augmented triad.

Even so, I find it strange to prefer any one chord to any three.

-C.
From: Paul H. Erlich (1999-06-28)
Subject: Re: magic chord

Carl Lumma wrote,

>>>As for the augmented triad, to which just version do you "prefer" 3tET...
>
>>>7:9:11
>>>8:10:13
>>>12:15:19
>>>16:20:25

I wrote,

>>All -- each one has at least one interval more dissonant than the tempered
>>major third.

>Don't you mean at least one interval more dissonant than the tempered 8/5?

I was thinking octave equivalence, which seemed appropriate since you did
not list any inversions.

>Chords are more than the sums of their intervals. 

Agreed!

>I hear the first three of the above as clearly more consonant >than the
12tET augmented triad.

Well, you may be listening in particular for the effects of otonal-in-JI
chords, which one might call consonance. there are other ways of perceiving
consonance, and these ways are important in music.

Raw file

! magic.scl
!
magic chord test
12
!
28/25
8/7
6/5
5/4
4/3
7/5
10/7
8/5
5/3
7/4
25/14
2/1
!
! https://yahootuninggroupsultimatebackup.github.io/tuning/topicId_3725.html#3750
!
! [info]
! source = Mailing lists
! file = tuning/messages/yahoo_tuning_messages_api_raw_0-19436.json
! topic_id = 3725
! msg_id = 3750