Hi, I noticed that in cage.scale, the "H" and "h" settings (presumably "hexatonic", at least according to the help patch) actually generate whole-tone scales.
I guess it would be really useful to have whole-tone AND hexatonic scales coming out of this object?
Thanks again for a really amazing package -- the whole thing is totally blowing my mind -- best wishes always --- paul
cage.scale — hexatonic scale?
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Re: cage.scale — hexatonic scale?
Hello and thanks!
There are a lot of hexatonic scales, the whole tone scale being perhaps the simplest one
Which one did you mean? The diatonic scale with a step removed? With cage.scale you can set the scale intervals yourself by hand: say, 200 200 100 200 200 300.
There are a lot of hexatonic scales, the whole tone scale being perhaps the simplest one
Which one did you mean? The diatonic scale with a step removed? With cage.scale you can set the scale intervals yourself by hand: say, 200 200 100 200 200 300.
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Re: cage.scale — hexatonic scale?
I apologize for the confusion!
Yes indeed, the WT scale is a hexatonic scale. I was used to Richard Cohn's more specific formulation of a "hexatonic scale", which has become pretty standard terminology at least in Anglo-American music theory discourse (see "Maximally Smooth Cycles, Hexatonic Systems, and the Analysis of Late-Romantic Triadic Progressions", Music Analysis, Vol. 15, No. 1 (Mar., 1996), p. 18, of which a tiny snippet is attached.)
In Cohn's formulation, the "hexatonic scale" is the union of two augmented triads [048] at T1 or T3. You could go a step further and generalize the "whole tone scale" as two [048]s at T2.
For some people, Cohn may be too specific. I do see the utility in the cage object's more general formulation.
The cage object is obviously a simple shortcut (and as you pointed out, there are many other great ways to generate scales in bach/cage!) Even so, it might be nice to differentiate between them a little further? I hope I'm not making a tempest in a teapot!
Yes indeed, the WT scale is a hexatonic scale. I was used to Richard Cohn's more specific formulation of a "hexatonic scale", which has become pretty standard terminology at least in Anglo-American music theory discourse (see "Maximally Smooth Cycles, Hexatonic Systems, and the Analysis of Late-Romantic Triadic Progressions", Music Analysis, Vol. 15, No. 1 (Mar., 1996), p. 18, of which a tiny snippet is attached.)
In Cohn's formulation, the "hexatonic scale" is the union of two augmented triads [048] at T1 or T3. You could go a step further and generalize the "whole tone scale" as two [048]s at T2.
For some people, Cohn may be too specific. I do see the utility in the cage object's more general formulation.
The cage object is obviously a simple shortcut (and as you pointed out, there are many other great ways to generate scales in bach/cage!) Even so, it might be nice to differentiate between them a little further? I hope I'm not making a tempest in a teapot!