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Generalized keyboards are musical
keyboards Keyboard may refer to: Text input * Keyboard, part of a typewriter * Computer keyboard ** Keyboard layout, the software control of computer keyboards and their mapping ** Keyboard technology, computer keyboard hardware and firmware Music * Musi ...
, a type of
isomorphic keyboard An isomorphic keyboard is a musical input device consisting of a two-dimensional grid of note-controlling elements (such as buttons or keys) on which any given sequence and/or combination of musical intervals has the "same shape" on the keyboard wh ...
, with regular, tile-like arrangements usually with rectangular or hexagonal keys, and were developed for performing music in different tunings. They were introduced by Robert Bosanquet in the 1870s, and since the 1960s
Erv Wilson Ervin Wilson (June 11, 1928 – December 8, 2016) was a Mexico, Mexican/United States, American (dual citizen) music theory, music theorist. Early life Ervin Wilson was born in a remote area of northwest Chihuahua (state), Chihuahua, Mexico, wher ...
has developed new methods of using and expanding them, proposing keyboard layouts (and some notations) including any scale made of a single generator within an "octave" (or more generally, ''period'') of any size. The generalized keyboard is one kind of symmetrical arrangement that represents pitches according to their relationship to each other - rather than their positions in specific scales such as in the familiar piano and organ keyboard - as well as in sequence of pitch, unlike arrangements such as duet systems for concertinas and the
array system An array is a systematic arrangement of similar objects, usually in rows and columns. Things called an array include: {{TOC right Music * In twelve-tone and serial composition, the presentation of simultaneous twelve-tone sets such that the ...
keyboard. Bosanquet used chains of fifths to generate the mapping of the keys, with the pitches transposed into the space of an octave (or more generally, ''period'') so that pitch determined the lateral position of keys, and the number of fifths, or any other interval used as ''generators'', from the starting pitch its vertical position in the keyboard. The coordinates of a key can be calculated using the size of the generator (in cents), where the vertical position is the number of generators away from the starting pitch, (positive or negative depending on whether they are in the sharp or flat direction), which Bosanquet rounded to the nearest semitone, giving 12 vertically aligned rows of keys in each octave. Wilson introduced alternate arrangements with combinations of seven or five (and in some cases, i.e., a division of the octave in 13 tones, eight) vertical lines of keys, and so ''Bosanquet keyboard'' sometimes is used to distinguish the original arrangement. The angle between keys originally depended on the shape of the key and relative size of the generating fifth, but Bosanquet discovered fingering could sometimes be improved by reversing this angle; the angle can also be straightened out, or the spacing changed to better represent the keys' pitches, which alters vertical alignment. Generalized keyboards usually duplicate pitches mapped close to the front and rear edges of the arrangement in order to organize pitches for consistent fingering. This can result in very large arrangements depending on the shape of the keys and any modifications made to the basic design. The possibility of the duplication of pitches occurs because the generalized keyboard is, in principle, a mapping of pitches onto a closed space in which intervals and chords have fixed shapes under transposition across the keyboard; thus a generalized keyboard is a useful tool for the analysis of harmonic structures.


Implementations

Bosanquet's 1873 harmonium has rectangular keys more or less horizontal and aligned vertically with 12 lines in each octave. The width of octaves is slightly compressed from usual, and the keys are narrow and undercut at the front.
Arthur von Oettingen Arthur Joachim von Oettingen ( – 5 September 1920) was a Baltic German physicist and music theorist. He was the brother of theologian Alexander von Oettingen (1827–1905) and ophthalmologist Georg von Oettingen (1824–1916). Biography ...
's 1914 ''Omnitonophonium'' harmonium has keys similar to Bosanquet's, but which aren't undercut (like Jankó's 1883 patent for his 12-tone keyboard). Arthur Fickénscher patented a keyboard in 1941 with rectangular keys overlapping in 12 staggered diagonal rows each representing the same named tones. Larry Hanson devised keyboards in 1942 with rectangular, as well as staggered "7"-shaped keys.
Adriaan Fokker Adriaan Daniël Fokker (; 17 August 1887 – 24 September 1972) was a Dutch physicist. He worked in the fields of special relativity and statistical mechanics. He was the inventor of the Fokker organ, a 31-tone equal-tempered (31-TET) organ. ...
's 1951 31-tone organ used relatively short rectangular keys with sides relieved toward their fronts to form T-shaped playing surfaces, as well as longer rectangular keys in a concave arrangement for a pedalboard. Erv Wilson patented a keyboard in 1967 with five perpendicular chromatic lines of keys in an octave, using fourths as generators.
Robert Moog Robert Arthur Moog ( ; May 23, 1934 – August 21, 2005) was an American engineer and electronic music pioneer. He was the founder of the synthesizer manufacturer Moog Music and the inventor of the first commercial synthesizer, the Moog synthesi ...
built a prototype with undercut round front rectangular keys.
-> Herman van der Horst built the first of four staggered square key ''Archiphones'' in 1970 for Anton de Beer.
George Secor George Secor (November 8, 1943 – March 2, 2020) was an American musician, composer and music-theorist from Chicago. He was the discoverer of miracle temperament and eponym of the secor. As an inventor, Secor and Hermann Pedtke's ''Motorola Scala ...
's 1974 generalized keyboards for the Motorola Scalatron used oval keys skewed in diagonal rows. Scott Hackleman and Erv Wilson designed a 19-tone generalized keyboard clavichord with oblong hexagonal keys in 1975, and marketed it as a kit.
Michel Geiss Michel Geiss is a French sound engineer, instrument designer and musician who was a long-time collaborator of Jean Michel Jarre. He has also collaborated with other famous French artists such as Marc Lavoine, Patrick Bruel or Laurent Voulzy L ...
, :fr:Christian Braut and Philippe Monsire built the ''Semantic Daniélou'', a 36-tone (out of 53 just intonation notes listed in the book "Sémantique Musicale" by
Alain Daniélou Alain Daniélou (4 October 1907 – 27 January 1994) was a French historian, Indologist, intellectual, musicologist, translator, writer, and notable Western convert to and expert on the Shaivite sect of Hinduism. In 1991 he was awarded the Sa ...
) electronic instrument, on behalf of the author, using staggered square key button keyboards from two Cavagnolo Midy 20 master keyboards, where each parallel row of keys offers a transposition by one comma.
Harold Fortuin Harold Fortuin (born 1964 in Mount Clemens, Michigan) is an American composer, pianist, and designer of hardware and software for electronic music. He has written both traditional instrumental and vocal music as well as electronic and computer mu ...
's 1994 ''Clavette'' midi controller uses straight alternating rows of switches which can be customized for different tunings by programming and with key overlay sheets. Bert Bongers built versions with 122 and 124 keys. Harvey Starr manufactures ''Wilson Microzone'' skewed row hexagonal key midi controllers in 248 and 810-key models that can be programmed and the key surfaces organized into generalized as well as many other arrangements. Dylan Horvath manufactures a 280-key MIDI controller with skewed hexagonal keys based on designs by Siemen Terpstra. This is now become the Lumatone Isomorphic Keyboard.
Hex
is a free software MIDI sequencer, which uses a generalized keyboard in place of the standard piano keyboard. Lanes are extended from the keys and MIDI notes can be drawn into each lane, and edited, with the mouse (as in a standard MIDI sequencer like Logic, Reaper, SONAR, etc.). The layout can be sheared to ensure that the vertical height of each key (and note lane) is proportional to its pitch height—regardless of the tuning used. A wide variety of isomorphic layouts are possible, including Bosanquet and Wicki.Prechtl, A., Milne, A. J., Holland, S., Laney, R., and Sharp, D. B. (2012)
A MIDI sequencer that widens access to the compositional possibilities of novel tunings
Computer Music Journal, 36(1):42–54.


See also

*
Isomorphic keyboard An isomorphic keyboard is a musical input device consisting of a two-dimensional grid of note-controlling elements (such as buttons or keys) on which any given sequence and/or combination of musical intervals has the "same shape" on the keyboard wh ...
*
Linear temperament Regular temperament is any tempered system of musical tuning such that each frequency ratio is obtainable as a product of powers of a finite number of generators, or generating frequency ratios. For instance, in 12-TET, the system of music most c ...
*
Pitch space In music theory, pitch spaces model relationships between pitches. These models typically use distance to model the degree of relatedness, with closely related pitches placed near one another, and less closely related pitches placed farther apa ...
*
Chromatic button accordion A chromatic button accordion is a type of button accordion where the melody-side keyboard consists of rows of buttons arranged chromatically. The bass-side keyboard is usually the Stradella system or one of the various free-bass systems. Incl ...


References


Notations

*R. H. M. Bosanquet (1876) ''An Elementary Treatise on Musical Intervals and Temperament'' Macmillan & Co. London *R. H. M. Bosanquet (1879) "On the Hindoo division of the octave, with additions to the theory of higher orders" ''Proceedings of the Royal Society of London'' vol. 26. pp. 272–284. *Arthur Fickénscher, "Polytone Keyboard" United States Patent 2,232,600. February 18, 1941 * Adriaan (Daniël) Fokker (1955
"Equal Temperament and the Thirty-one-toned Organ"
Stichting Huygens-Fokker *B. J. A. Pel
"L'orgue accordé en cinquièmes de ton du Musée Teyler a Haarlem"
Stichting Huygens-Fokker *Erv Wilson (1974
"The Bosanquetian 7-rank Keyboard after Poole and Brown"
''Xenharmonikon'' v. which preceded more important papers on keyboards found i

*Hanson, Larry (1989
"Development of a 53-tone Keyboard Layout"
''Xenharmonikon'' v. 12 *John S. Allen (1997

*
Joseph A. Paradiso Joseph Paradiso is the Alexander W. Dreyfoos (1954) Professor at MIT's Program in Media Arts and Sciences. He directs the MIT Media Lab's Responsive Environments Group, which explores how sensor networks augment and mediate human experience, intera ...
(1999
"Keyboard and Tactile Interfaces: American Innovations in Electronic Musical Instruments"
NewMusicBox *Wolfgang Fuhrmann (2001

Berliner Zeitung Online


Footnotes


External links

*Antonia Weisse
"Orthotonophonium"
(Bildarchiv Preussischer Kulturbesitz)
Keyboard of Bosanquet's Enharmonic Harmonium"
(Science and Society Picture Library) *Dave Keena

(Keyboard mapping spreadsheet) *Gene Ward Smit

*Stichting Huygens-Fokke

*Harold Fortui

*Alain Danielou Cente

*Cortex Desig
Lumatone Isomorphic Keyboard
*Peter Davie
Opal Chameleon
{{Musical keyboards Isomorphic keyboard layouts Microtonality