this post was submitted on 14 Aug 2024
9 points (100.0% liked)
Music
8609 readers
112 users here now
founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
record a video of you jamming on it and explaining it. there's nothing intuitive here.
Looked around to see what could be least clear.
Marked that the faint pink boundary in the center is the minor scale / aeolian mode (i believe), as opposed to the main thick boundary, of the ionian mode.
Changed the violet vertical bars along the right edge of G4 and left edge of F4, standing for that excepting for the locrian and lydian modes, all modes contain the main P5 and P4 intervals. Fair, they may have suggested an absence, evoking a dash. Replaced them with ~~five~~ six (filled) bullets, representing the ~~five~~ six modes.
(I may yet change the execution of those.)
As for the large blue boundary, it is just to help me visualize that all simple intervals form a quadrangle.
its possible that this is a brilliant breakthrough somehow, but it looks to me like a chemist is trying to invent a musical periodic table.
walk us through it, how would we play it?
As i said in a Tumblr note, this is really a companion pic for a pair of (libre) apps called 'Hexiano' and 'DesignOverlay'.
https://github.com/lrq3000/hexiano
https://github.com/Manabu-GT/DesignOverlay-Android