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by blockchaincloud
2834 days ago
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Thank you, that was a detailed answer that gave me a lot of new things and I have a new question and some old questions- You are saying there are 8 notes in an octave, but we only selected 7 notes after selecting 7th semi tone 7 times. I think you said the 8 note is 2x the original. Is that correct understanding? So I got the point about 2^(1/12), what I didn't get is the staring point for A major and the jump structure. I thought all jumps are selecting 7th semi tone. So what is meant by "jump down one 7-semitone step and up 5"? You partially answered my second question I think- saying that for chords it's okay to go from n <-> 2n scale to 2n <-> 4n scale. My question is for non chord music is this a common occurrence? Thank you again! |
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C to the same C is "unison" (You may need to instruments to play two identical C notes at the same time.)
C to C#/Db (this note has two names) is "small second"
C to D is "large second". And so on.
C to the next higher C is "perfect octave".
So if we take the C major scale, it has 7 different notes. But if we also include the next higher up C, you can pair the base C with 8 different notes, when we include pairing with itself, and pairing with the higher C. When you have two instruments playing, these are the pairings you can make when you play two notes at the same time.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interval_(music)#Comparison