Success Music Studio

Intonation

 

piano, key, inside

 

The Intonation Category

 What is intonation? The Intonation category blogs talk all about tuning: retuning guitars and micro tuning synths.

 

The guitar posts explore music played with open tunings. Moreover, we will look at styles such as rock, blues, folk, country, and Hawaiian.

 

Tuning with harmonics allows the guitar open tunings to have better sounding chords than the same open tunings tuned using frets or a standard electronic tuner. Nevertheless, the pattern of harmonics for the open tunings looks different than the pattern of harmonics for standard tuning.

 

The synth posts focus on micro tuning the synth using Supplemented Equal Temperament (SET). I created SET to have better sounding chords that equal temperament (the piano’s tuning). However, it still works with normal, unmodified instruments reading standard sheet music and regular tab.

 

In other words, pop and other music groups can tune synths and guitars to SET. When tuned to SET, flexible pitch instruments can play with the SET tuned guitar and synth. Specifically, the flexible pitch instruments include the violin, brass, woodwinds, and voice.

 

Equal tempered instruments can play at least some notes with the SET tuned guitar and synth. Specifically, the fixed pitch equal tempered instruments include the piano, organ, and xylophone. However, most percussion instruments do not need special tunings. Taken together, this makes the SET ensemble.

 

The Intonation Posts

The cornerstone category article:

 

The cornerstone category article is a longer article and more technical. The post defines intonation, and discusses microtonality verses tuning theory. Also, it talks about on how SET was formed, and some of the science that went into its creation.

 

The posts can be further broken into guitar, keyboard, ensemble, and music theory articles. It does not matter so much whether you read the guitar or synth posts first. However, I suggest that you follow the order of posts shown for each instrument type.

 

Guitar, etc.:

 

Online Guitar and Ukulele Tuners:

 

Synth:

 

Ensemble:

 

Music Theory:

 

World Music:

 

See the posts below for full descriptions.

 

– Geoffrey Keith

 

© 2021 Geoffrey Keith

 

Back to the Successful Music Student Blogs page

 

The Flexibility in Supplemented Equal Temperament’s Theory - Guitarist and Keyboardists on Stage

Flexibility in Supplemented Equal Temperament’s Theory

Can Supplemented Equal Temperament help you coordinate your guitar and synth tunings so they sound good? A wide range of Supplemented Equal Temperament (SET) charts and preexisting EDOs (equal-division-of-the-octave tunings) can fit under the umbrella of SET. This gives you a lot of control over how you tune your guitars, ukuleles, banjos, and synths. This in turn will allow your whole ensemble to sound better in tune. Read more to learn about the flexibility in Supplemented Equal Temperament’s theory. Estimated reading time 5 minutes.

2112’s guitar tuning - Spaceship and wormhole

2112’s Guitar Tuning

Do you want to know how Alex Lifeson tunes his guitar in the sci-fi rock opera 2112? How does experience with playing the violin or viola impact how guitarists tunes? This space opera may be the only example of a guitarist’s tuning being included as part of the finished product. At the beginning of the section entitled Discovery the hero finds a guitar, then tunes and plays it. Read more to learn about 2112’s guitar tuning.
Estimated reading time 7 minutes.

supplemented equal temperament minor keys - two curved keyboards.jpg

How Supplemented Equal Temperament Minor Keys Work

Frustrated with your out of tune synth chords? Do you want your brass, woodwind, and string programs to sound better? It’s not only the program you select which controls how your synth sounds, the tuning has an impact as well. I created Supplemented Equal Temperament (SET) to produce chords that sound better in tune than equal temperament (the piano’s tuning). Read more to learn how SET minor keys work.
Estimated reading time 5 minutes.

Intonation and the Supplemented Equal Temperament Chart 2 - how to change keys in supplemented equal temperament

How to Change Keys in Supplemented Equal Temperament

Have you tried retuning your synth, but gotten frustrated by the limited number of keys? Do you want your keyboard’s chords to sound stronger when playing brass, string, and organ sounds? Supplemented Equal Temperament (SET) is a new and powerful tuning system that allows your chords to sound stronger and more in tune. Kurzweil’s PC3K synth also makes it a breeze to switch keys while using SET. Read more to learn how to change keys in Supplemented Equal Temperament. Estimated reading time 7 minutes.