Quarter-Tone Harmony/Harmonic Basis

The quarter-tone system also provides certain advantages from an acoustic standpoint, despite the system's dissonant reputation among composers.

Harmonic Series

The harmonic series is a series of pitches that occur naturally within common instruments and soundwaves, and it consists of all harmonics or overtones of any given pitch. Mathematically, the harmonic series of a frequency consists of all frequencies that are integer multiples of , or all where .

  • String players and guitarists can play harmonics by lightly touching a string such that the string naturally vibrates in halves, thirds, fourths, etc., producing the harmonic series.
  • Brass players know harmonics as "partials;" they can move their lips or change their embouchure to access different harmonics of a harmonic series, allowing them to play a wide range of pitches with only three or four valves.

Musically, the harmonic series is considered the "standard" for Western harmony, with the history of Western tuning theory consisting of various attempts to approximate it to some degree.

The Eleventh Harmonic

A natural horn, an instrument which can only produce tones of the harmonic series

The first ten harmonics are reasonably approximated by the conventional system, although the seventh harmonic is quite inaccurate:


\new Staff {
\cadenzaOn \hide Staff.Stem \hide Staff.TimeSignature
\clef bass
c,,1 c,4 g, c e g bf c' d' e'
}

However, the eleventh harmonic cannot be properly approximated with the conventional system. Theorists and composers in the past have used either of the pitches F or F, which are equally inaccurate. The eleventh harmonic is, however, very accurately approximated with the quartertonal note Fhalf sharp.

Natural Horns

As Wyschnegradsky states in his Manual:

It is interesting to note that we have occasion to hear the eleventh harmonic each time natural horns or trumpets are given the fourth degree of the major scale. Since these instruments do not possess any tones other than that of the harmonic series, and the fourth degree of the major scale (the fifth below the fundamental) does not enter in the harmonic series, they must replace it with the eleventh harmonic.

He cites such an example:


\new Staff {
\fixed c' {
\hide Staff.TimeSignature
\time 6/8
\partial 8
g8 <e c'>8. <g d'>16 <c' e'>8 <d' f'>8 8 8
8 <c' e'>8 <g d'> <c' e'>8. <d' f'>16 <c' e'>8
<g d'>2.
}}

If this passage were to be played by natural horns, the players would be forced to replace all occurences of the note F with Fhalf sharp, the approximate eleventh harmonic of the C to which the horns are tuned:


\new Staff {
\fixed c' {
\hide Staff.TimeSignature
\time 6/8
\partial 8
g8 <e c'>8. <g d'>16 <c' e'>8 <d' fqs'>8 8 8
8 <c' e'>8 <g d'> <c' e'>8. <d' fqs'>16 <c' e'>8
<g d'>2.
}}

Further Approximation

Also, though still somewhat inaccurate, the quartertonal note Bthree quarter flat is a better approximation for the seventh harmonic, since the eleventh harmonic is about a sixth of a whole tone lower than a typical B.

The harmonic series can now be very reasonably approximated up to the twenty-fifth harmonic, which roughly splits the difference between Ghalf sharp and G:


\new Staff {
\cadenzaOn \hide Staff.Stem \hide Staff.TimeSignature
\clef bass
c,,1 c,4 g, c e g btqf \clef treble c' d' e' fqs' g' aqf' btqf' b' c'' cs'' d'' ef'' e'' fqf'' fqs'' g''
}