- In music, two
written notes have
enharmonic equivalence if they
produce the same
pitch but are
notated differently. Similarly,
written intervals, chords...
- In
music theory, an
enharmonic scale is a very
ancient Gr****
musical scale which contains four
notes tuned to
approximately quarter tone pitches, bracketed...
-
three genera: the diatonic,
chromatic (also
called chroma, "colour"), and
enharmonic (also
called ἁρμονία [harmonia]). The
first two of
these were subject...
- An
enharmonic keyboard is a
musical keyboard,
where enharmonically equivalent notes do not have
identical pitches. A
conventional keyboard has, for instance...
-
otherwise diatonic method. An
enharmonic modulation takes place when a
chord is
treated as if it were
spelled enharmonically as a
functional chord in the...
-
instead as the
enharmonic key of G-sharp minor,
since A-flat minor,
which contains seven flats, is not
normally used. Its
enharmonic, G-sharp major,...
- the two
smaller intervals are
equal semitones, e.g. A–G♭–F–E.
Enharmonic An
enharmonic tetrachord has a
characteristic interval that is
greater than about...
- E, B, F♯, C♯, G♯, D♯, A♯, F)
which is the
circle of fifths. This is
enharmonically equivalent to: (C, G, D, A, E, B, G♭, D♭, A♭, E♭, B♭, F).
Equal temperament...
-
relative minor is A-sharp
minor (or
enharmonically B-flat minor), its
parallel minor is C-sharp minor, and its
enharmonic equivalence is D-flat major. The...
-
difference of
pitch distinctly smaller than a semitone",
including "the tiny
enharmonic melodic intervals of
ancient Greece, the
several divisions of the octave...