source file: m1411.txt Date: Sun, 10 May 1998 00:12:58 -0400 Subject: interval qualities; prime/odd From: monz@juno.com (Joseph L Monzo) > But what about steely coldness? Is it there when the > power is zero? Does a unison contain all potential > interval qualities, to a greater degree than the intervals > themselves? It would seem hard to argue that way. This is a very intriguing way of posing the question. My response would be that an exponent of 0 for both numbers in the ratio of the interval (for any prime bases), which will always give a unison, seems to have a unique quality not shared by any other exponent-number. Perhaps the fact that negative exponents give the complementary intervals of their complementary positive exponents, and therefore the same effect/ affect, lends support to this idea. For example (I am describing intervals here, that is, dyads): 3^1 is equivalent to 3/2 3^-1 " 4/3 3^1 * 5^-1 " 6/5 3^-1 * 5^1 " 5/3 I don't think anyone would dispute that these pairs of intervals exhibit exactly similar effect/ affect in a symmetrical way. So perhaps a zero exponent (= 1/1), because it has no complement, exhibits either a different property or no property at all in this regard. > 2 is the only prime that's even, but is that really all that > important? 3 is the only prime that's a multiple of 3, and > 5 is the only prime that's a multiple of 5. I think it _is_ important. My statement about 2 having special properties because it's the only even prime was in response to the debate over whether the important limits in harmony are the prime numbers or simply the _odd_ numbers. Any even-numbered harmonic identity is assumed to represent the odd number to which it can be reduced by dividing by 2. If 2 is divided by 2, it's plain to see that it represents 1, which, however, is not a prime, but in musical mathematics, is the _identity_, the number which, when multiplied by any other number, gives a product which is always that number itself. This makes it obvious to me that 2 has special properties in music which are possessed by no other number, prime or composite-odd. Joseph L. Monzo monz@juno.com _____________________________________________________________________ You don't need to buy Internet access to use free Internet e-mail. Get completely free e-mail from Juno at http://www.juno.com Or call Juno at (800) 654-JUNO [654-5866]