Pythagorean Comma: Derivation Size Circle of Fifths and Enharmonic Change History See Also Notes References
Pythagorean Comma: Derivation Size Circle of Fifths and Enharmonic Change History See Also Notes References
Pythagorean Comma: Derivation Size Circle of Fifths and Enharmonic Change History See Also Notes References
Pythagorean comma
In musical tuning, the Pythagorean comma (or ditonic comma[a]), named after the
Pythagorean comma (531441:524288) on C Play .
ancient mathematician and philosopher Pythagoras, is the small interval (or comma)
existing in Pythagorean tuning between two enharmonically equivalent notes such as C and
12
B ♯ ( Play ), or D ♭ and C ♯ .[1] It is equal to the frequency ratio (1.5) ⁄27 = 531441⁄524288 ≈
1.01364, or about 23.46 cents, roughly a quarter of a semitone (in between 75:74 and
74:73[2]). The comma that musical temperaments often refer to tempering is the
Pythagorean comma.[3]
Pythagorean comma on C using
The Pythagorean comma can be also defined as the difference between a Pythagorean Ben Johnston's notation. The
apotome and a Pythagorean limma[4] (i.e., between a chromatic and a diatonic semitone, as note depicted as lower on the
determined in Pythagorean tuning), or the difference between twelve just perfect fifths and staff (B♯+++) is slightly higher in
seven octaves, or the difference between three Pythagorean ditones and one octave (this is pitch (than C♮).
the reason why the Pythagorean comma is also called a ditonic comma).
Derivation
As described in the introduction, the Pythagorean comma may be derived in multiple ways:
Difference between two enharmonically equivalent notes in a Pythagorean scale, such as C and B♯ ( Play ), or D♭ and C♯ (see below).
Difference between Pythagorean apotome and Pythagorean limma.
Difference between twelve just perfect fifths and seven octaves.
Difference between three Pythagorean ditones (major thirds) and one octave.
A just perfect fifth has a frequency ratio of 3:2. It is used in Pythagorean tuning, together with the octave, as a yardstick to define, with respect
to a given initial note, the frequency ratio of any other note.
Apotome and limma are the two kinds of semitones defined in Pythagorean tuning. Namely, the apotome (about 113.69 cents, e.g. from C to
C♯) is the chromatic semitone, or augmented unison (A1), while the limma (about 90.23 cents, e.g. from C to D♭) is the diatonic semitone, or
minor second (m2).
A ditone (or major third) is an interval formed by two major tones. In Pythagorean tuning, a major tone has a size of about 203.9 cents
(frequency ratio 9:8), thus a Pythagorean ditone is about 407.8 cents.
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Size
The size of a Pythagorean comma, measured in cents, is
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G♯ 8 6561 : 256 25.62890625
In the following table of musical scales in the circle of fifths, the Pythagorean comma is visible as the small interval between e.g. F♯ and G♭.
The 6♭ and the 6♯ scales* are not identical - even though they are on the piano keyboard - but the ♭ scales are one Pythagorean comma lower.
Disregarding this difference leads to enharmonic change.
* The 7♭ and 5♯, respectively 5♭ and 7♯ scales differ in the same way by one Pythagorean comma. Scales with seven accidentals (http://www.cisdur.de/e_index.html)
are seldom used, because the enharmonic scales with five accidentals are treated as equivalent.
This interval has serious implications for the various tuning schemes of the chromatic scale, because in Western music, 12 perfect fifths and
seven octaves are treated as the same interval. Equal temperament, today the most common tuning system used in the West, reconciled this
by flattening each fifth by a twelfth of a Pythagorean comma (approximately 2 cents), thus producing perfect octaves.
Another way to express this is that the just fifth has a frequency ratio (compared to the tonic) of 3:2 or 1.5 to 1, whereas the seventh semitone
(based on 12 equal logarithmic divisions of an octave) is the seventh power of the twelfth root of two or 1.4983... to 1, which is not quite the
same (out by about 0.1%). Take the just fifth to the twelfth power, then subtract seven octaves, and you get the Pythagorean comma (about
1.4% difference).
History
The first to mention the comma's proportion of 531441:524288 was Euclid, who takes as a basis the whole tone of Pythagorean tuning with
the ratio of 9:8, the octave with the ratio of 2:1, and a number A = 262144. He concludes that raising this number by six whole tones yields a
value G which is larger than that yielded by raising it by an octave (two times A). He gives G to be 531441.[5] The necessary calculations read:
Calculation of G:
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Chinese mathematicians had been aware of the Pythagorean comma as early as 122 BC (its calculation is detailed in the Huainanzi), and circa
50 BC, Ching Fang discovered that if the cycle of perfect fifths were continued beyond 12 all the way to 53, the difference between this 53rd
pitch and the starting pitch would be much smaller than the Pythagorean comma. This much smaller interval was later named Mercator's
comma (see: history of 53 equal temperament).
In George Russell's Lydian Chromatic Concept of Tonal Organization (1953) the half step between the Lydian Tonic and ♭2 in his Altered
Major and Minor Auxiliary Diminished Blues scales is theoretically based on the interval of a Pythagorean comma.[6]
See also
Syntonic comma
Schisma
Holdrian comma
Notes
a. not to be confused with the diatonic comma, better known as syntonic comma, equal to the frequency ratio 81:80, or around 21.51 cents.
See: Johnston B. (2006). "Maximum Clarity" and Other Writings on Music, edited by Bob Gilmore. Urbana: University of Illinois Press.
ISBN 0-252-03098-2.
References
1. Apel, Willi (1969). Harvard Dictionary of Music, p.188. ISBN 978-0-674-37501-7. "...the difference between the two semitones of the
Pythagorean scale..."
2. Ginsburg, Jekuthiel (2003). Scripta Mathematica, p.287. ISBN 978-0-7661-3835-3.
3. Coyne, Richard (2010). The Tuning of Place: Sociable Spaces and Pervasive Digital Media, p.45. ISBN 978-0-262-01391-8.
4. Kottick, Edward L. (1992). The Harpsichord Owner's Guide, p.151. ISBN 0-8078-4388-1.
5. Euclid: Katatome kanonos (lat. Sectio canonis). Engl. transl. in: Andrew Barker (Ed.): Greek Musical Writings. Vol. 2: Harmonic and
Acoustic Theory, Cambridge Mass.: Cambridge University Press, 2004, pp. 190–208, here: p. 199.
6. Russell, George (2001) [1953]. George Russell's Lydian chromatic concept of tonal organization. Volume One: The art and science of
tonal gravity (Fourth (Second printing, corrected, 2008) ed.). Brookline, Massachusetts: Concept Publishing Company. pp. 17, 57-59.
ISBN 0-9703739-0-2.
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