Harmonic Scale

The Harmonic Scale is a "super-Just" musical scale allowing extended just intonation, beyond 5-limit to the 19th harmonic (<phonos file="19th harmonic on C.mid">Play</phonos>), and free modulation through the use of synthesizers. Transpositions and tuning tables are controlled by the left hand on the appropriate note on a one-octave keyboard.[1]
For example, if the harmonic scale is tuned to a fundamental of C then harmonics 16-32 are as follows:
Notation | Harmonics[2] | Cents | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
C | C | C | <phonos file="Unison on C.mid">16</phonos> | 0 |
C♯ | C17♯ | D♭ | <phonos file="Minor diatonic semitone on C.mid">17</phonos> | 104.96 |
D | D | D♮ | <phonos file="Major tone on C.mid">18</phonos> | 203.91 |
E♭ | E19♭ | E♭ | <phonos file="19th harmonic on C.mid">19</phonos> | 297.51 |
E♮ | E♮ | E↓ | <phonos file="Just major third on C.mid">20</phonos> | 386.31 |
F | F![]() |
F![]() |
<phonos file="Twenty-first harmonic on C.mid">21</phonos> | 470.78 |
F♯ | F↑ | Fx14px♯ | <phonos file="Eleventh harmonic on C.mid">22</phonos> | 551.32 |
G | G | G | <phonos file="Just perfect fifth on C.mid">24</phonos> | 701.96 |
A♭ | A![]() |
A![]() |
<phonos file="Tridecimal neutral sixth on C.mid">26</phonos> | 840.53 |
A♮ | A♮+ | A♮ | <phonos file="Pythagorean major sixth on C.mid">27</phonos> | 905.87 |
B♭ | B![]() |
B![]() |
<phonos file="Harmonic seventh on C.mid">28</phonos> | 968.83 |
B♮ | B♮ | B♮↓ | <phonos file="Just major seventh on C.mid">30</phonos> | 1088.27 |
C' | C' | C' | <phonos file="Perfect octave on C.mid">32</phonos> | 1200 |
Some harmonics are not included:[1] 23, 25, 29, & 31. The 21st is a natural seventh above G, but not a great interval above C and the 27th is a just fifth above D. Audio file "Harmonic Scale diatonic on C.mid" not found
It was invented by Wendy Carlos and used on three pieces on her album Beauty in the Beast (1986); Just Imaginings, That's Just It, and Yusae-Aisae. Versions of the scale have also been used by Ezra Sims and Frans Richter Herf.[3]
Number of notes
Though described by Carlos as containing, "144 [=122] distinct pitches to the octave,"[4] the twelve scales include 78 (=12(12+1)⁄2) notes per octave.
Technically there should then be duplicates and thus 57 (=78-21) pitches (21=6(6+1)⁄2). For example, a perfect fifth above G (D) is the major tone above C.
References
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External links
- "Wendy Carlos Harmonic scale", Microtonal-Synthesis.com.
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- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Milano, Dominic (November 1986). "A Many-Colored Jungle of Exotic Tunings", Keyboard.
- ↑ Benson, Dave (2007). Music: A Mathematical Offering, p.212. ISBN 9780521853873.
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