Comma (music)


In music theory, a comma is a very small interval, the difference resulting from tuning one note two different ways. Traditionally, there are two most common commata; 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. Pitches separated by either comma are considered the same note because conventional notation does not distinguish Pythagorean intervals from 5-limit intervals. Other intervals are considered commas because of the enharmonic equivalences of a tuning system. For example, in the harmonic seventh B and A are both approximated by the same interval although they are a septimal kleisma apart.

Etymology

Translated in this context, "comma" means "a hair" as in "off by just a hair". The word "comma" came via Latin from Greek [wikt:κόμμα#Ancient_Greek|], from earlier *: "the result or effect of cutting".

Description

Within the same tuning system, two enharmonically equivalent notes may have a slightly different frequency, and the interval between them is a comma. For example, in extended scales produced with five-limit tuning an A tuned as a major third below C5 and a G tuned as two major thirds above C4 are not exactly the same note, as they would be in equal temperament. The interval between those notes, the diesis, is an easily audible comma.
Commas are often defined as the difference in size between two semitones. Almost all of the meantone tuning systems produce two different characteristic semitones: A diatonic semitone for short steps in the scale, and chromatic semitone between a natural note, N, and its sharp, N. Their ratio is a comma; its size is unique to each meantone tuning. The same is true for Pythagorean tuning.
In just intonation, more than two kinds of semitones may be produced. Thus, a single tuning system may be characterized by several different commas. For instance, a commonly used version of five-limit tuning produces a 12-tone scale with four kinds of semitones and four commas.
The size of commas is commonly expressed and compared in terms of cents – fractions of an octave on a logarithmic scale.

Commas in different contexts

In the column below labeled "Difference between semitones", 2 is the minor second, 1 is the augmented unison, and S, S, S, S are semitones as defined here. In the columns labeled "Interval 1" and "Interval 2", all intervals are presumed to be tuned in just intonation. Notice that the Pythagorean comma and the syntonic comma are basic intervals that can be used as yardsticks to define some of the other commas. For instance, the difference between them is a small comma called schisma. A schisma is not audible in many contexts, as its size is narrower than the smallest audible difference between tones.
Many other commas have been enumerated and named by microtonalists.
The syntonic comma has a crucial role in the history of music. It is the amount by which some of the notes produced in Pythagorean tuning were flattened or sharpened to produce just minor and major thirds. In Pythagorean tuning, the only highly consonant intervals were the perfect fifth and its inversion, the perfect fourth. The Pythagorean major third and minor third were dissonant, and this prevented musicians from freely using triads and chords, forcing them to write music with relatively simple texture. Musicians in late Middle Ages recognized that by slightly tempering the pitch of some notes, the Pythagorean thirds could be made consonant. For instance, if you decrease the frequency of E by a syntonic comma, C–E and E–G become just: C–E is flattened to a just ratio of
and at the same time E–G is sharpened to the just ratio of
This led to the creation of a new tuning system, known as quarter-comma meantone, which permitted the full development of music with complex texture, such as polyphonic music, or melodies with instrumental accompaniment. Since then, other tuning systems were developed, and the syntonic comma was used as a reference value to temper the perfect fifths throughout the family of syntonic temperaments, including meantone temperaments.

Alternative definitions

In quarter-comma meantone, and any kind of meantone temperament tuning system that tempers the fifth to a size smaller than 700 cents, the comma is a diminished second, which can be equivalently defined as the difference between:
In Pythagorean tuning, and any kind of meantone temperament tuning system that tempers the fifth to a size larger than 700 cents, the comma is the opposite of a diminished second, and therefore the opposite of the above-listed differences. More exactly, in these tuning systems the diminished second is a descending interval, while the comma is its ascending opposite. For instance, the Pythagorean comma can be computed as the difference between a chromatic and a diatonic semitone, which is the opposite of a Pythagorean diminished second.
In each of the above-mentioned tuning systems, the above-listed differences have all the same size. For instance, in Pythagorean tuning they are all equal to the opposite of a Pythagorean comma, and in quarter comma meantone they are all equal to a diesis.

Notation

In the years 2000–2004, Marc Sabat and Wolfgang von Schweinitz worked together in Berlin to develop a method to exactly indicate pitches in staff notation. This method was called the extended Helmholtz-Ellis JI pitch notation. Sabat and Schweinitz take the "conventional" flats, naturals and sharps as a Pythagorean series of perfect fifths. Thus, a series of perfect fifths beginning with F proceeds and so on. The advantage for musicians is that conventional reading of the basic fourths and fifths remains familiar. Such an approach has also been advocated by Daniel James Wolf and by Joe Monzo, who refers to it by the acronym HEWM. In the Sabat-Schweinitz design, syntonic commas are marked by arrows attached to the flat, natural or sharp sign, septimal commas using Giuseppe Tartini's symbol, and undecimal quartertones using the common practice quartertone signs. For higher primes, additional signs have been designed. To facilitate quick estimation of pitches, cents indications may be added. The convention used is that the cents written refer to the tempered pitch implied by the flat, natural, or sharp sign and the note name. One of the great advantages of any such a notation is that it allows the natural harmonic series to be precisely notated. A complete legend and fonts for the notation are open source and available from Plainsound Music Edition. Thus a Pythagorean scale is, while a just scale is.
Composer Ben Johnston used a "−" as an accidental to indicate a note is lowered a syntonic comma, or a "+" to indicate a note is raised a syntonic comma; however, Johnston's "basic scale" is tuned to just-intonation and thus already includes the syntonic comma. Thus a Pythagorean scale is, while a just scale is.

Tempering of commas

Commas are frequently used in the description of musical temperaments, where they describe distinctions between musical intervals that are eliminated by that tuning system. A comma can be viewed as the distance between two musical intervals. When a given comma is tempered out in a tuning system, the ability to distinguish between those two intervals in that tuning is eliminated. For example, the difference between the diatonic semitone and chromatic semitone is called the diesis. The widely used 12 tone equal temperament tempers out the diesis, and thus does not distinguish between the two different types of semitones. On the other hand, 19 tone equal temperament does not temper out this comma, and thus it distinguishes between the two semitones.
Examples:
The following table lists the number of steps used that represent various just intervals in various tuning systems. Zeros indicate that the interval is a comma in that particular equal temperament. For example, the zero in the row labeled and the column labeled 12 means that is represented with zero steps in 12 , making it a comma in that temperament. Because commas are often thought of as the ratio between two different ways to tune the same note and, so the fact that this corresponds to zero steps in 12 means that in 12 , [Octave|] is represented with zero more steps than three copies of [Major third|]. Analogously, the 1 in the same row in the column labeled 19 means that 19 represents with one more step than three copies of, the 2 in the same row in the column labeled 41 means that 41 represents with two more steps than three copies of, and so on. Analogously, the -1 in the same row in the column labeled 5 means that 5 represents with one fewer step than three copies of. Specifically, 5 represents with five steps and each copy of with two steps. Because is slightly less than but is represented in 5 by, 5 's representation of is significantly sharper than the justly-intoned version, hence the -1. Thus, in 5 , going up by a factor of would require one to go down by one scale step.
Each of the frequency ratios in the first column are linked to its respective article.
The comma can also be considered to be the fractional interval that remains after a "full circle" of some repeated chosen interval; the repeated intervals are all the same size, in relative pitch, and all the tones produced are reduced or raised by whole octaves back to the octave surrounding the starting pitch. The Pythagorean comma, for instance, is the difference obtained, say, between A and G after a circle of twelve just fifths. A circle of three just major thirds, such as produces the small diesis between G and A. A circle of four just minor thirds, such as produces an interval of between A and G, etc. An interesting property of temperaments is that this difference remains whatever the tuning of the intervals forming the circle.
In this sense, commas and similar minute intervals can never be completely tempered out, whatever the tuning.

Comma sequence

A comma sequence defines a musical temperament through a unique sequence of commas at increasing prime limits.
The first comma of the comma sequence is in the -limit, where is the ‑th odd prime and is the number of generators. Subsequent commas are in prime limits, each the next prime in sequence above the last.

Other intervals called commas

There are also several intervals called commas, which are not technically commas because they are not rational fractions like those above, but are irrational approximations of them. These include the Holdrian and Mercator's commas,
and the pitch-to-pitch step size in.