Meantone temperament produces a frequency ratio of approximately 5 by means of four fifths, so that the major third (for instance C–E) is obtained from two successive whole tones.
Septimal meantone produces the frequency ratio of 56 ( 7 × 23 ) by ten fifths, so that the interval 7:4 is reached by five successive tones. Hence C–A♯, not C–B♭, represents a 7:4 interval in septimal meantone.
A♯+++ ≈ B♭
C |
G |
D |
A+ |
E+ |
B+ |
F♯++ |
C♯++ |
G♯++ |
D♯++ |
A♯+++ |
C |
≈G |
≈D |
≈A+ |
≈E+ |
≈B+ |
≈F♯++ |
≈C♯++ |
≈G♯++ |
≈D♯++ |
=B♭ |
There are several slightly adjusted meantone tunings very nearly equivalent to exact quarter comma meantone, which all have good renditions of harmonic seventh intervals, always through an augmented sixth of the chord's tonic note. They are exact quarter tone (pure major thirds), quarter tone modified for exact Aug 6 = harm 7, and 31 tone equal temperament.
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31 equal temperament does excellently for both of the others: It has augmented sixths only 1.1 cent flat of a purely harmonic seventh, and its major third is only 1.2 cents sharper than a pure fifth harmonic; while the fifth is 5.2 cents flat from the third harmonic. The differences are so small that the distinction is mainly academic.[citation needed]
Septimal meantone tempers out not only the syntonic comma of 81:80, but also the septimal semicomma of 126:125, and the septimal kleisma of 225:224 . Because the septimal semicomma is tempered out, a chord with intervals 6:5 – 6:5 – 6:5 – 7:6, spanning the octave, is a part of the septimal meantone tuning system. This chord might be called the septimal semicomma diminished seventh. Similarly, because the septimal kleisma is tempered out, a chord with intervals of size 5:4 – 5:4 – 9:7 spans the octave; this might be called the septimal kleisma augmented triad, and is likewise a characteristic feature of septimal meantone.
Septimal meantone of course has major and minor triads, and also diminished triads, which come in both an otonal, 5:6:7 form, as for instance C–E♭–F♯, and an inverted utonal form, as for instance C–D♯–F♯. As previously remarked, it has a septimal diminished seventh chord, which in various inversions can be C–E♭–G♭–B, C–E♭–G♭–A, C–E♭–F♯–A or C–D♯–F♯–A. It also has a septimal augmented triad, which in various inversions can be C–E–G♯, C–E–A♭ or C–F♭–A♭. It has both a dominant seventh chord, C–E–G–B♭, and an otonal tetrad, C–E–G–A♯; the latter is familiar in common practice harmony under the name German sixth. It likewise has utonal tetrads, C–E♭–G–B, which in
the arrangement B–E♭–G–C becomes Wagner's Tristan chord. It has also the subminor triad, C–D♯–G, which is otonal, and the supermajor triad, C–F♭–G, which is utonal. These can be extended to subminor tetrads, C–D♯–G–A and supermajor tetrads C–F♭–G–B♭.