Excellent video. From a practical approach, harmonic content (subsets) of a scale can be one of the most effective ways to understand how dissonant/consonant, chromatic/diatonic a scale can be. Maybe tths approach can be even more effective (and practical) than the interval vector concept from Allen Forte's pc set theory. Greetings from Bogotá, Colombia.
Thanks! Harmonic major and minor have the same intervals and subsets. They do sound different of course which is why they have separate names to distinguish between them (7-32A, 7-32B), but there is no separate diagram for each of them because they have the same subsets. It makes sense that the structures within them are the same because harmonic major and minor are the same structure, one is just flipped compared to the other. You can learn more about this in the video I linked called “inversions explained”.
I explain in my set theory simplified series in the episode “navigating the Forte chart”. The 7 means there’s 7 notes. The 35 is based on an equation that’s unintuitive. It means it’s 35th on the list of 7 note sets and you pretty much have to just memorize the 35. I’ve helped create a new system for order sets that makes more intuitive sense where the major scale would be 7.1 since it’s the most even 7 note scale. I have a video on that as well in the set theory simplified series.
Woah this is so cool how interconnected this is!
Excellent video. From a practical approach, harmonic content (subsets) of a scale can be one of the most effective ways to understand how dissonant/consonant, chromatic/diatonic a scale can be. Maybe tths approach can be even more effective (and practical) than the interval vector concept from Allen Forte's pc set theory.
Greetings from Bogotá, Colombia.
Cool. I like organizing things this way. Tho i think harm minor and major should be more separate... they must sound and act different, no?
Thanks! Harmonic major and minor have the same intervals and subsets. They do sound different of course which is why they have separate names to distinguish between them (7-32A, 7-32B), but there is no separate diagram for each of them because they have the same subsets. It makes sense that the structures within them are the same because harmonic major and minor are the same structure, one is just flipped compared to the other.
You can learn more about this in the video I linked called “inversions explained”.
Best out
don’t press ur luck instead try these scales 💀
what means 7-35? Why 35?
I explain in my set theory simplified series in the episode “navigating the Forte chart”. The 7 means there’s 7 notes. The 35 is based on an equation that’s unintuitive. It means it’s 35th on the list of 7 note sets and you pretty much have to just memorize the 35.
I’ve helped create a new system for order sets that makes more intuitive sense where the major scale would be 7.1 since it’s the most even 7 note scale. I have a video on that as well in the set theory simplified series.
@@jaybeardmusic8074 Thank you very much!!! Where I can buy your book?
🎊 "promosm"