Iring Out The Horses Unnecessarily
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

The cent is a
logarithmic Logarithmic can refer to: * Logarithm, a transcendental function in mathematics * Logarithmic scale, the use of the logarithmic function to describe measurements * Logarithmic spiral, * Logarithmic growth * Logarithmic distribution, a discrete pr ...
unit of measure used for
musical intervals 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 ha ...
. Twelve-tone equal temperament divides the
octave In music, an octave ( la, octavus: eighth) or perfect octave (sometimes called the diapason) is the interval between one musical pitch and another with double its frequency. The octave relationship is a natural phenomenon that has been refer ...
into 12 semitones of 100 cents each. Typically, cents are used to express small intervals, or to compare the sizes of comparable intervals in different tuning systems, and in fact the interval of one cent is too small to be perceived between successive notes. Cents, as described by
Alexander John Ellis Alexander John Ellis, (14 June 1814 – 28 October 1890), was an English mathematician, philologist and early phonetician who also influenced the field of musicology. He changed his name from his father's name, Sharpe, to his mother's maiden na ...
, follow a tradition of measuring intervals by logarithms that began with Juan Caramuel y Lobkowitz in the 17th century. Ellis chose to base his measures on the hundredth part of a semitone, , at Robert Holford Macdowell Bosanquet's suggestion. He made extensive measurements of musical instruments from around the world, using cents extensively to report and compare the scales employed, and further described and employed 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.


History

Alexander John Ellis Alexander John Ellis, (14 June 1814 – 28 October 1890), was an English mathematician, philologist and early phonetician who also influenced the field of musicology. He changed his name from his father's name, Sharpe, to his mother's maiden na ...
' paper ''On the Musical Scales of Various Nations'', 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 of an equal semitone, or ''cents'' as they may be briefly called." Ellis defined the pitch of a musical note in his 1880 work ''History of Musical Pitch'' 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". He later defined musical pitch to be "the pitch, or V or "double vibrations"of any named musical note which determines the pitch of all the other notes in a particular system of tunings." He notes that these notes, when sounded in succession, form the
scale Scale or scales may refer to: Mathematics * Scale (descriptive set theory), an object defined on a set of points * Scale (ratio), the ratio of a linear dimension of a model to the corresponding dimension of the original * Scale factor, a number ...
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".
Absolute Absolute may refer to: Companies * Absolute Entertainment, a video game publisher * Absolute Radio, (formerly Virgin Radio), independent national radio station in the UK * Absolute Software Corporation, specializes in security and data risk manage ...
and relative pitches were also defined based on these ratios. 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 An equal temperament is a musical temperament or tuning system, which approximates just intervals by dividing an octave (or other interval) into equal steps. This means the ratio of the frequencies of any adjacent pair of notes is the same, wh ...
or tuning, and is the system at present used throughout Europe. 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." 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, Persia, Arabia, Syria and Scottish Highlands, India, Singapore, Burmah and Siam,; (II. Pentatonic scales) South Pacific, Western Africa, Java, China and Japan. 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"..


Use

A cent is a unit of measure for the ratio between two frequencies. An
equally tempered An equal temperament is a musical temperament or tuning system, which approximates just intervals by dividing an octave (or other interval) into equal steps. This means the ratio of the frequencies of any adjacent pair of notes is the same, w ...
semitone (the interval between two adjacent piano keys) spans 100 cents by definition. An
octave In music, an octave ( la, octavus: eighth) or perfect octave (sometimes called the diapason) is the interval between one musical pitch and another with double its frequency. The octave relationship is a natural phenomenon that has been refer ...
—two notes that have a frequency ratio of 2:1—spans twelve semitones and therefore 1200 cents. Since a frequency raised by one cent is simply multiplied by this constant cent value, and 1200 cents doubles a frequency, the ratio of frequencies one cent apart is precisely equal to , the 1200th root of 2, which is approximately . If one knows the frequencies ''a'' and ''b'' of two notes, the number of cents measuring the interval from ''a'' to ''b'' may be calculated by the following formula (similar to the definition of a
decibel The decibel (symbol: dB) is a relative unit of measurement equal to one tenth of a bel (B). It expresses the ratio of two values of a power or root-power quantity on a logarithmic scale. Two signals whose levels differ by one decibel have a po ...
): :n = 1200 \cdot \log_2 \left( \frac \right) Likewise, if one knows a note ''a'' and the number ''n'' of cents in the interval from ''a'' to ''b'', then ''b'' may be calculated by: :b = a \times 2 ^ \frac To compare different tuning systems, convert the various interval sizes into cents. For example, in
just intonation In music, just intonation or pure intonation is the tuning of musical intervals Interval may refer to: Mathematics and physics * Interval (mathematics), a range of numbers ** Partially ordered set#Intervals, its generalization from numbers to ...
, the major third is represented by the frequency ratio 5:4. Applying the formula at the top shows that this is about 386 cents. The equivalent interval on the equal-tempered piano would be 400 cents. The difference, 14 cents, is about a seventh of a half step, easily audible.


Piecewise linear approximation

As ''x'' increases from 0 to , the function 2''x'' increases almost linearly from to . The exponential cent scale can therefore be accurately approximated as a piecewise linear function that is numerically correct at semitones. That is, ''n'' cents for ''n'' from 0 to 100 may be approximated as 1 + ''n'' instead of 2. The rounded error is zero when ''n'' is 0 or 100, and is about 0.72 cents high when ''n'' is 50, where the correct value of 2 = is approximated by 1 + × 50 = 1.02973. This error is well below anything humanly audible, making this piecewise linear approximation adequate for most practical purposes.


Human perception

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. 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. It has also been established that increased tonal context enables listeners to judge pitch more accurately. "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." When listening to pitches with vibrato, there is evidence that humans perceive the mean frequency as the center of the pitch. 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. 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.


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. 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. In this base, the octave is represented by 1, the semitone by 1/12, etc.


Heptamerides

Joseph Sauveur Joseph Sauveur (24 March 1653 – 9 July 1716) was a French mathematician and physicist. He was a professor of mathematics and in 1696 became a member of the French Academy of Sciences. Life Joseph Sauveur was born in La Flèche, the son of a ...
, 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. 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.


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. This value often is rounded to 1/301 or to 1/300 octave.


Prony

Early in the 19th century, Gaspard de Prony proposed a logarithmic unit of base \sqrt 2/math>, where the unit corresponds to a semitone in equal temperament. 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, the interval that separated them from a theoretical pitch of 370 Hz, taken as point of reference.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.


Centitones

A centitone (also Iring) is a
musical interval 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 ha ...
(2, \sqrt 00/math>) equal to two cents (2) proposed as a unit of measurement () by Widogast Iring in ''Die reine Stimmung in der Musik'' (1898) as 600 steps per
octave In music, an octave ( la, octavus: eighth) or perfect octave (sometimes called the diapason) is the interval between one musical pitch and another with double its frequency. The octave relationship is a natural phenomenon that has been refer ...
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). 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). For example: Equal tempered perfect fifth = 700 cents = 175.6 savarts = 583.3 millioctaves = 350 centitones.


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. , beat frequency = 0.16 Hz
, beat frequency = 1.53 Hz
, beat frequency = 3.81 Hz


See also

*
Degree Degree may refer to: As a unit of measurement * Degree (angle), a unit of angle measurement ** Degree of geographical latitude ** Degree of geographical longitude * Degree symbol (°), a notation used in science, engineering, and mathematics ...
* Gradian * Microtonal music * Radian


References


Footnotes


Citations


Sources

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *


External links


Cent conversion: Whole number ratio to cent
ounded to whole numberbr>Cent conversion: Online utility with several functions
{{DEFAULTSORT:Cent (Music) Equal temperaments Intervals (music) Units of measurement Logarithmic scales of measurement 100 (number)