Cent (music)

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One cent compared to a semitone on a truncated monochord. Cent versus semitone monochord ET.png
One cent compared to a semitone on a truncated monochord.
4Octaves.and.Frequencies.svg
Octaves increase exponentially when measured on a linear frequency scale (Hz).
4Octaves.and.Frequencies.Ears.svg
Octaves are equally spaced when measured on a logarithmic scale (cents).

The cent is a logarithmic unit of measure used for musical intervals. Twelve-tone equal temperament divides the octave into 12 semitones of 100 cents each. Typically, cents are used to express small intervals, to check intonation, or to compare the sizes of comparable intervals in different tuning systems. For humans, a single cent is too small to be perceived between successive notes.

Contents

Cents, as described by Alexander John Ellis, follow a tradition of measuring intervals by logarithms that began with Juan Caramuel y Lobkowitz in the 17th century. [lower-alpha 1] Ellis chose to base his measures on the hundredth part of a semitone, 12002, at Robert Holford Macdowell Bosanquet's suggestion. Making extensive measurements of musical instruments from around the world, Ellis used cents to report and compare the scales employed, [1] and further described and utilized the system in his 1875 edition of Hermann von Helmholtz's On the Sensations of Tone. It has become the standard method of representing and comparing musical pitches and intervals. [2] [3]

History

Alexander John Ellis' paper On the Musical Scales of Various Nations, [1] published by the Journal of the Society of Arts in 1885, officially introduced the cent system to be used in exploring, by comparing and contrasting, musical scales of various nations. The cent system had already been defined in his History of Musical Pitch, where Ellis writes: "If we supposed that, between each pair of adjacent notes, forming an equal semitone [...], 99 other notes were interposed, making exactly equal intervals with each other, we should divide the octave into 1200 equal hundrecths[ sic ] of an equal semitone, or cents as they may be briefly called." [4]

Ellis defined the pitch of a musical note in his 1880 work History of Musical Pitch [5] to be "the number of double or complete vibrations, backwards and forwards, made in each second by a particle of air while the note is heard". [6] He later defined musical pitch to be "the pitch, or V [for "double vibrations"] of any named musical note which determines the pitch of all the other notes in a particular system of tunings." [7] He notes that these notes, when sounded in succession, form the scale of the instrument, and an interval between any two notes is measured by "the ratio of the smaller pitch number to the larger, or by the fraction formed by dividing the larger by the smaller". [8] Absolute and relative pitches were also defined based on these ratios. [8]

Ellis noted that "the object of the tuner is to make the interval [...] between any two notes answering to any two adjacent finger keys throughout the instrument precisely the same. The result is called equal temperament or tuning, and is the system at present used throughout Europe. [9] He further gives calculations to approximate the measure of a ratio in cents, adding that "it is, as a general rule, unnecessary to go beyond the nearest whole number of cents." [10]

Ellis presents applications of the cent system in this paper on musical scales of various nations, which include: (I. Heptatonic scales) Ancient Greece and Modern Europe, [11] Persia, Arabia, Syria and Scottish Highlands, [12] India, [13] Singapore, [14] Burmah [15] and Siam,; [16] (II. Pentatonic scales) South Pacific, [17] Western Africa, [18] Java, [19] China [20] and Japan. [21] And he reaches the conclusion that "the Musical Scale is not one, not 'natural,' nor even founded necessarily on the laws of the constitution of musical sound, so beautifully worked out by Helmholtz, but very diverse, very artificial, and very capricious". [22]

Use

Comparison of equal-tempered (black) and Pythagorean (green) intervals showing the relationship between frequency ratio and the intervals' values, in cents. Music intervals frequency ratio equal tempered pythagorean comparison.svg
Comparison of equal-tempered (black) and Pythagorean (green) intervals showing the relationship between frequency ratio and the intervals' values, in cents.

A cent is a unit of measure for the ratio between two frequencies. An equally tempered semitone (the interval between two adjacent piano keys) spans 100 cents by definition. An octave—two notes that have a frequency ratio of 2:1—spans twelve semitones and therefore 1200 cents. The ratio of frequencies one cent apart is precisely equal to 211200 = 12002, the 1200th root of 2, which is approximately 1.0005777895. Thus, raising a frequency by one cent corresponds to multiplying the original frequency by this constant value. Raising a frequency by 1200 cents doubles the frequency, resulting in its octave.

If one knows the frequencies and of two notes, the number of cents measuring the interval from to is:

Likewise, if one knows and the number of cents in the interval from to , then equals:

Comparison of major third in just and equal temperament

The major third in just intonation has a frequency ratio 5:4 or ~386 cents, but in equal temperament is 400 cents. This 14 cent difference is about a seventh of a half step and large enough to be audible.

Piecewise linear approximation

As x increases from 0 to 112, the function 2x increases almost linearly from 1.00000 to 1.05946, allowing for a piecewise linear approximation. Thus, although cents represent a logarithmic scale, small intervals (under 100 cents) can be loosely approximated with the linear relation 1 + 0.0005946  instead of the true exponential relation 2c1200. The rounded error is zero when is 0 or 100, and is only about 0.72 cents high at =50 (whose correct value of 2124  1.02930 is approximated by 1 + 0.0005946 × 50  1.02973). This error is well below anything humanly audible, making this piecewise linear approximation adequate for most practical purposes.

Human perception

Waveforms of a unison (blue) versus a cent (red), nearly indistinguishable. Unison versus cent waveform.png
Waveforms of a unison (blue) versus a cent (red), nearly indistinguishable.

It is difficult to establish how many cents are perceptible to humans; this precision varies greatly from person to person. One author stated that humans can distinguish a difference in pitch of about 5–6 cents. [23] The threshold of what is perceptible, technically known as the just noticeable difference (JND), also varies as a function of the frequency, the amplitude and the timbre. In one study, changes in tone quality reduced student musicians' ability to recognize, as out-of-tune, pitches that deviated from their appropriate values by ±12 cents. [24] It has also been established that increased tonal context enables listeners to judge pitch more accurately. [25] "While intervals of less than a few cents are imperceptible to the human ear in a melodic context, in harmony very small changes can cause large changes in beats and roughness of chords." [26]

When listening to pitches with vibrato, there is evidence that humans perceive the mean frequency as the center of the pitch. [27] One study of modern performances of Schubert's Ave Maria found that vibrato span typically ranged between ±34 cents and ±123 cents with a mean of ±71 cents and noted higher variation in Verdi's opera arias. [28]

Normal adults are able to recognize pitch differences of as small as 25 cents very reliably. Adults with amusia, however, have trouble recognizing differences of less than 100 cents and sometimes have trouble with these or larger intervals. [29]

Other representations of intervals by logarithms

Octave

The representation of musical intervals by logarithms is almost as old as logarithms themselves. Logarithms had been invented by Lord Napier in 1614. [30] As early as 1647, Juan Caramuel y Lobkowitz (1606-1682) in a letter to Athanasius Kircher described the usage of base-2 logarithms in music. [31] In this base, the octave is represented by 1, the semitone by 1/12, etc.

Heptamerides

Joseph Sauveur, in his Principes d'acoustique et de musique of 1701, proposed the usage of base-10 logarithms, probably because tables were available. He made use of logarithms computed with three decimals. The base-10 logarithm of 2 is equal to approximately 0.301, which Sauveur multiplies by 1000 to obtain 301 units in the octave. In order to work on more manageable units, he suggests to take 7/301 to obtain units of 1/43 octave. [lower-alpha 2] The octave therefore is divided in 43 parts, named "merides", themselves divided in 7 parts, the "heptamerides". Sauveur also imagined the possibility to further divide each heptameride in 10, but does not really make use of such microscopic units. [32]

Savart

Félix Savart (1791-1841) took over Sauveur's system, without limiting the number of decimals of the logarithm of 2, so that the value of his unit varies according to sources. With five decimals, the base-10 logarithm of 2 is 0.30103, giving 301.03 savarts in the octave. [33] This value often is rounded to 1/301 or to 1/300 octave. [34] [35]

Prony

Early in the 19th century, Gaspard de Prony proposed a logarithmic unit of base Failed to parse (SVG (MathML can be enabled via browser plugin): Invalid response ("Math extension cannot connect to Restbase.") from server "http://localhost:6011/en.wikipedia.org/v1/":): {\sqrt[{12}]{2}}, where the unit corresponds to a semitone in equal temperament. [36] Alexander John Ellis in 1880 describes a large number of pitch standards that he noted or calculated, indicating in pronys with two decimals, i.e. with a precision to the 1/100 of a semitone, [37] the interval that separated them from a theoretical pitch of 370 Hz, taken as point of reference. [38]

Centitones

A centitone (also Iring) is a musical interval (21600, ) equal to two cents (221200) [39] [40] proposed as a unit of measurement ( Play ) by Widogast Iring in Die reine Stimmung in der Musik (1898) as 600 steps per octave and later by Joseph Yasser in A Theory of Evolving Tonality (1932) as 100 steps per equal tempered whole tone.

Iring noticed that the Grad/Werckmeister (1.96 cents, 12 per Pythagorean comma) and the schisma (1.95 cents) are nearly the same (≈ 614 steps per octave) and both may be approximated by 600 steps per octave (2 cents). [41] Yasser promoted the decitone, centitone, and millitone (10, 100, and 1000 steps per whole tone = 60, 600, and 6000 steps per octave = 20, 2, and 0.2 cents). [42] [43]

For example: Equal tempered perfect fifth = 700 cents = 175.6 savarts = 583.3 millioctaves = 350 centitones. [44]

CentitonesCents
1 centitone2 cents
0.5 centitone1 cent
21600221200
50 per semitone100 per semitone
100 per whole tone200 per whole tone

Sound files

The following audio files play various intervals. In each case the first note played is middle C. The next note is sharper than C by the assigned value in cents. Finally, the two notes are played simultaneously.

Note that the JND for pitch difference is 5–6 cents. Played separately, the notes may not show an audible difference, but when they are played together, beating may be heard (for example if middle C and a note 10 cents higher are played). At any particular instant, the two waveforms reinforce or cancel each other more or less, depending on their instantaneous phase relationship. A piano tuner may verify tuning accuracy by timing the beats when two strings are sounded at once.

Play middle C & 1 cent above , beat frequency = 0.16 Hz
Play middle C & 10.06 cents above , beat frequency = 1.53 Hz
Play middle C & 25 cents above , beat frequency = 3.81 Hz

See also

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Equal temperament</span> Musical tuning system with constant ratios between notes

An equal temperament is a musical temperament or tuning system that approximates just intervals by dividing an octave into steps such that the ratio of the frequencies of any adjacent pair of notes is the same. This system yields pitch steps perceived as equal in size, due to the logarithmic changes in pitch frequency.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Just intonation</span> Musical tuning based on pure intervals

In music, just intonation or pure intonation is the tuning of musical intervals as whole number ratios of frequencies. An interval tuned in this way is said to be pure, and is called a just interval. Just intervals consist of tones from a single harmonic series of an implied fundamental. For example, in the diagram, if the notes G3 and C4 are tuned as members of the harmonic series of the lowest C, their frequencies will be 3 and 4 times the fundamental frequency. The interval ratio between C4 and G3 is therefore 4:3, a just fourth.

A musical note is an isolatable sound used as an atomic building block for creating music. This discretization facilitates performance, comprehension, and analysis. Notes may be visually communicated by writing them in musical notation.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Pythagorean tuning</span> Method of tuning a musical instrument

Pythagorean tuning is a system of musical tuning in which the frequency ratios of all intervals are based on the ratio 3:2. This ratio, also known as the "pure" perfect fifth, is chosen because it is one of the most consonant and easiest to tune by ear and because of importance attributed to the integer 3. As Novalis put it, "The musical proportions seem to me to be particularly correct natural proportions." Alternatively, it can be described as the tuning of the syntonic temperament in which the generator is the ratio 3:2, which is ≈ 702 cents wide.

In music theory, an interval is a difference in pitch between two sounds. An interval may be described as horizontal, linear, or melodic if it refers to successively sounding tones, such as two adjacent pitches in a melody, and vertical or harmonic if it pertains to simultaneously sounding tones, such as in a chord.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Chromatic scale</span> Musical scale set of twelve pitches

The chromatic scale is a set of twelve pitches used in tonal music, with notes separated by the interval of a semitone. Chromatic instruments, such as the piano, are made to produce the chromatic scale, while other instruments capable of continuously variable pitch, such as the trombone and violin, can also produce microtones, or notes between those available on a piano.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Pitch (music)</span> Perceptual property in music ordering sounds from low to high

Pitch is a perceptual property of sounds that allows their ordering on a frequency-related scale, or more commonly, pitch is the quality that makes it possible to judge sounds as "higher" and "lower" in the sense associated with musical melodies. Pitch is a major auditory attribute of musical tones, along with duration, loudness, and timbre.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Perfect fifth</span> Musical interval

In music theory, a perfect fifth is the musical interval corresponding to a pair of pitches with a frequency ratio of 3:2, or very nearly so.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Logarithmic scale</span> Measurement scale based on orders of magnitude

A logarithmic scale is a way of displaying numerical data over a very wide range of values in a compact way. As opposed to a linear number line in which every unit of distance corresponds to adding by the same amount, on a logarithmic scale, every unit of length corresponds to multiplying the previous value by the same amount. Hence, such a scale is nonlinear. In nonlinear scale, the numbers 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and so on would not be equally spaced. Rather, the numbers 10, 100, 1000, 10000, and 100000 would be equally spaced. Likewise, the numbers 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, and so on, would be equally spaced. Often exponential growth curves are displayed on a log scale, otherwise they would increase too quickly to fit within a small graph.

In musical tuning, the Pythagorean comma (or ditonic comma), named after the ancient mathematician and philosopher Pythagoras, is the small interval (or comma) existing in Pythagorean tuning between two enharmonically equivalent notes such as C and B, or D and C. It is equal to the frequency ratio (1.5)1227 = 531441524288 ≈ 1.01364, or about 23.46 cents, roughly a quarter of a semitone (in between 75:74 and 74:73). The comma that musical temperaments often "temper" is the Pythagorean comma.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Semitone</span> Musical interval

A semitone, also called a half step or a half tone, is the smallest musical interval commonly used in Western tonal music, and it is considered the most dissonant when sounded harmonically. It is defined as the interval between two adjacent notes in a 12-tone scale(or half of a whole step), visually seen on a keyboard as the distance between two keys that are adjacent to each other. For example, C is adjacent to C; the interval between them is a semitone.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Minor third</span> Musical interval

In music theory, a minor third is a musical interval that encompasses three half steps, or semitones. Staff notation represents the minor third as encompassing three staff positions. The minor third is one of two commonly occurring thirds. It is called minor because it is the smaller of the two: the major third spans an additional semitone. For example, the interval from A to C is a minor third, as the note C lies three semitones above A. Coincidentally, there are three staff positions from A to C. Diminished and augmented thirds span the same number of staff positions, but consist of a different number of semitones. The minor third is a skip melodically.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Major sixth</span> Musical interval

In music from Western culture, a sixth is a musical interval encompassing six note letter names or staff positions, and the major sixth is one of two commonly occurring sixths. It is qualified as major because it is the larger of the two. The major sixth spans nine semitones. Its smaller counterpart, the minor sixth, spans eight semitones. For example, the interval from C up to the nearest A is a major sixth. It is a sixth because it encompasses six note letter names and six staff positions. It is a major sixth, not a minor sixth, because the note A lies nine semitones above C. Diminished and augmented sixths span the same number of note letter names and staff positions, but consist of a different number of semitones.

The intervals from the tonic (keynote) in an upward direction to the second, to the third, to the sixth, and to the seventh scale degrees (of a major scale are called major.

The twelfth root of two or is an algebraic irrational number, approximately equal to 1.0594631. It is most important in Western music theory, where it represents the frequency ratio of a semitone in twelve-tone equal temperament. This number was proposed for the first time in relationship to musical tuning in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. It allows measurement and comparison of different intervals as consisting of different numbers of a single interval, the equal tempered semitone. A semitone itself is divided into 100 cents.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Comma (music)</span> Very small interval arising from discrepancies in tuning

In music theory, a comma is a very small interval, the difference resulting from tuning one note two different ways. Strictly speaking, there are only two kinds of comma, the syntonic comma, "the difference between a just major 3rd and four just perfect 5ths less two octaves", and the Pythagorean comma, "the difference between twelve 5ths and seven octaves". The word comma used without qualification refers to the syntonic comma, which can be defined, for instance, as the difference between an F tuned using the D-based Pythagorean tuning system, and another F tuned using the D-based quarter-comma meantone tuning system. Intervals separated by the ratio 81:80 are considered the same note because the 12-note Western chromatic scale does not distinguish Pythagorean intervals from 5-limit intervals in its notation. Other intervals are considered commas because of the enharmonic equivalences of a tuning system. For example, in 53TET, B and A are both approximated by the same interval although they are a septimal kleisma apart.

Quarter-comma meantone, or 14-comma meantone, was the most common meantone temperament in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, and was sometimes used later. In this system the perfect fifth is flattened by one quarter of a syntonic comma (81 : 80), with respect to its just intonation used in Pythagorean tuning ; the result is 3/2 × 14 = 45 ≈ 1.49535, or a fifth of 696.578 cents. This fifth is then iterated to generate the diatonic scale and other notes of the temperament. The purpose is to obtain justly intoned major thirds. It was described by Pietro Aron in his Toscanello de la Musica of 1523, by saying the major thirds should be tuned to be "sonorous and just, as united as possible." Later theorists Gioseffo Zarlino and Francisco de Salinas described the tuning with mathematical exactitude.

12 equal temperament (12-ET) is the musical system that divides the octave into 12 parts, all of which are equally tempered on a logarithmic scale, with a ratio equal to the 12th root of 2. That resulting smallest interval, 112 the width of an octave, is called a semitone or half step.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">53 equal temperament</span> Musical tuning system with 53 pitches equally-spaced on a logarithmic scale

In music, 53 equal temperament, called 53 TET, 53 EDO, or 53 ET, is the tempered scale derived by dividing the octave into 53 equal steps. Each step represents a frequency ratio of 2153, or 22.6415 cents, an interval sometimes called the Holdrian comma.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Savart</span> Unit of measurement for musical pitch intervals

The savart is a unit of measurement for musical pitch intervals. One savart is equal to one thousandth of a decade : 3.9863 cents. Musically, in just intonation, the interval of a decade is precisely a just major twenty-fourth, or, in other words, three octaves and a just major third. Today, musical use of the savart has largely been replaced by the cent and the millioctave. The savart is practically the same as the earlier heptameride (eptameride), one seventh of a meride. One tenth of an heptameride is a decameride and a hundredth of an heptameride is approximately one jot.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Five-limit tuning</span>

Five-limit tuning, 5-limit tuning, or 5-prime-limit tuning (not to be confused with 5-odd-limit tuning), is any system for tuning a musical instrument that obtains the frequency of each note by multiplying the frequency of a given reference note (the base note) by products of integer powers of 2, 3, or 5 (prime numbers limited to 5 or lower), such as 2−3·31·51 = 15/8.

References

Footnotes

  1. Caramuel mentioned the possible use of binary logarithms for music in a letter to Athanasius Kircher in 1647; this usage often is attributed to Leonhard Euler in 1739 (see Binary logarithm). Isaac Newton described musical logarithms using the semitone (122) as base in 1665; Gaspard de Prony did the same in 1832. Joseph Sauveur in 1701, and Félix Savart in the first half of the 19th century, divided the octave in 301 or 301,03 units. See Barbieri 1987, pp. 145–168 and also Stigler's law of eponymy.
  2. 301 can be divided only by 7 or by 43.

Citations

  1. 1 2 Ellis 1885, p. 485-527.
  2. Benson 2007, p. 166:The system most often employed in the modern literature.
  3. Renold 2004, p. 138.
  4. Ellis 1880, p. 295.
  5. Ellis 1880, p. 293-336.
  6. Ellis 1880, p. 293-294.
  7. Ellis 1880, p. 294.
  8. 1 2 Ellis 1885, p. 487.
  9. Ellis 1885, p. 491-.
  10. Ellis 1885, p. 488.
  11. Ellis 1885, p. 491-492.
  12. Ellis 1885, p. 492-500.
  13. Ellis 1885, p. 500-505.
  14. Ellis 1885, p. 505-506.
  15. Ellis 1885, p. 506.
  16. Ellis 1885, p. 506-507.
  17. Ellis 1885, p. 507.
  18. Ellis 1885, p. 507-508.
  19. Ellis 1885, p. 508-514.
  20. Ellis 1885, p. 514-520.
  21. Ellis 1885, p. 520-525.
  22. Ellis 1885, p. 526.
  23. Loeffler 2006.
  24. Geringer & Worthy 1999, pp. 135–149.
  25. Warrier & Zatorre 2002, pp. 198–207.
  26. Benson 2007, p. 368.
  27. Brown & Vaughn 1996, pp. 1728–1735.
  28. Prame 1997, pp. 616–621.
  29. Peretz & Hyde 2003, pp. 362–367.
  30. Ernest William Hobson (1914), John Napier and the invention of logarithms, 1614, Cambridge, The University Press
  31. Ramon Ceñal, "Juan Caramuel, su epistolario con Athanasio Kircher, S.J.", Revista de Filosofia XII/44, Madrid 1954, p. 134 ss.
  32. Joseph Sauveur, Principes d'acoustique et de musique ou Système général des intervalles des sons, Minkoff Reprint, Geneva, 1973; see online Mémoires de l'Académie royale des sciences, 1700, Acoustique; 1701 Acoustique.
  33. Émile Leipp, Acoustique et musique : Données physiques et technologiques, problèmes de l'audition des sons musicaux, principes de fonctionnement et signification acoustique des principaux archétypes d'instruments de musique, les musiques expérimentales, l'acoustique des salles, Masson, 1989, 4th edition, p. 16.
  34. "Ordinary savart", 1/301 octave, and "modified savart", 1/300 octave. Herbert Arthur Klein, The Science of Measurement. A Historical Survey, New York, 1974, p. 605
  35. Alexander Wood, The Physics of Music, London, 1944, ²2007, p. 53-54.
  36. Gaspard de Prony, Instruction élémentaire sur les moyens de calculer les intervalles musicaux, Paris, 1832. Online: .
  37. The precision is the same as with cents, but Ellis had not yet devised this unit.
  38. Alexander John Ellis, "On the History of Musical Pitch," Journal of the Society of Arts, 1880, reprinted in Studies in the History of Musical Pitch, Frits Knuf, Amsterdam, 1968, p. 11-62.
  39. Randel 1999, p. 123.
  40. Randel 2003, pp. 154, 416.
  41. "Logarithmic Interval Measures". Huygens-Fokker.org. Retrieved 2021-06-25.
  42. Yasser 1932, p. 14.
  43. Farnsworth 1969, p. 24.
  44. Apel 1970, p. 363.

Sources