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- Newsgroups: comp.speech
- Path: sparky!uunet!noc.near.net!mv!jlc!john
- From: john@jlc.mv.com (John Leslie)
- Subject: Re: Fundamental Frequencies of the Musical Notes
- Message-ID: <1993Jan02.181751.9301@jlc.mv.com>
- Organization: John Leslie Consulting, Milford NH
- References: <1993Jan1.105401.46023@kuhub.cc.ukans.edu> <TED.93Jan1134723@lole.nmsu.edu> <TED.93Jan1173824@lole.nmsu.edu>
- Date: Sat, 02 Jan 1993 18:17:51 GMT
- Lines: 81
-
- In article <TED.93Jan1173824@lole.nmsu.edu> ted@nmsu.edu writes:
- >
- > i am sure that there are quite a number
- > of people out there who can correct me in the places that i go wrong.
- > please feel free to do so, if you know better than i.
- >
- >> Could you tell me, is there agreement on the absoulute frequencies?
- >
- > 440 A and 256 C define slightly different scales that are used in
- > slightly different situations. i think that most pianos are usually tuned
- > with 256 = C, while orchestras (in my limited experience) invariably
- > use 440 = A
-
- Sorry, wrong on both counts. Pianos, on the average, are tuned close
- to A-440. Orchestras like to tune sharp of that -- A-444 was fairly common
- the last I checked. Of course, many individual pianos have been tuned well
- flat of A-440. A lot were designed for 435, and may break strings if tuned
- up to 440. Others are simply in poor shape, and may be tuned most anywhere.
- Pianos rise and fall with the seasons, so piano tuners tend to tune higher
- in summer and lower in winter for the same piano.
-
- Also, early-music instruments are often tuned to the historically
- correct pitch, which is as much as two semitones higher or lower.
-
- >> Also, what is a "well tempered scale" and where can I read more on
- >> this subject?
- >
- > originally, scales were defined by going around the `circle of fifths'
- > (or the essentially equivalent circle of fourths).
-
- Well, not quite "originally". Historical evidence is that tunings
- started out "just" (pronounced like Justice), meaning geometrically exact.
- In a just tuning, the fifth (C-G) is exactly 3:2, and the third (C-E) is
- exactly 5:4. Clearly, there is no "just" tuning that satisfies all the
- keys. The "circle of fifths" was invented to allow playing in all keys,
- but it generated a "pythagorean" fifth with a ratio of 81:64, which the
- musicians really hated. The musicians settled on "meantone" tunings,
- which made the third exactly 5:4 by making the fifths quite flat. The
- battle between pure thirds and all keys playable continued for hundreds
- of years.
-
- > there are several problems with this. first, C an octave up isn't
- > right (it is 1.4% off, which is plenty enough to sound terrible).
-
- Absolutely true. The octave (2:1) is the interval most sensitive
- to tuning errors. Piano-tuners tend to stretch some octaves by one or
- two hundredths of a semitone (because the second harmonic of a piano
- string is *not* exactly an octave above the fundamental), and that's
- close to the limit of what sounds OK. Two hundredths of a semitone
- is 1.001559..., ten times smaller than the pythagorean comma.
-
- > secondly, chords other than the fifths used to construct the scale
- > sound off.
-
- Well, they do, but that's not really the point. The point is that
- the fifth (3:2) can be detuned a lot more than the octave before it
- sounds wrong. To get ahead of the story, the equal-tempered fifth
- comes out at 1.498307..., which is less than two hundredths of a
- semitone low. Piano-tuners hear the difference, but few others do.
-
- > for example F# and the C above middle C have a frequency
- > ratio of 1.42 instead of the desired 1.5
-
- Er... well... No. C to F# is a tritone, which is supposed to
- sound wrong in any tuning. 1.5 is the desired ratio for C to G.
- I think Ted means to refer to the "wolf" fifth, which is properly
- called E# to C in the tuning he gave. (E# is erroneously called
- F in *many* music textbooks.) This interval comes out 1.4798...,
- which is 1.3% low, and does indeed sound gross.
-
- I think it's important to note that anything we say about
- historical tunings *must* be only approximate, limited by the
- capabilities of the human ear to measure differences. We generally
- talk of "cents" -- hundredths of a semitone (calculated as the
- 1200th root of 2). One "cent" is considered to be the smallest
- pitch difference the human ear can resolve. Thus *no* interval
- in an historic tuning should be considered to be closer than one
- cent, and many were undoubtedly three or more cents away from
- where we claim they were.
-
- John Leslie <john@jlc.mv.com>
-