Vallotti temperament

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Círculo de quintas correspondiente al temperamento de Vallotti de 1/6 de coma, según Tartini.

The circulating temperament today referred to as Vallotti temperament (or simply Vallotti, Vallotti-Barca, Vallotti-Tartini, or Vallotti-Young) is a shifted version of Young's second temperament. Its attribution to the 18th-century organist, composer, and music theorist, Francesco Vallotti is a mistake, since there is no evidence that he ever suggested it. It is however audibly indistinguishable from a slightly different temperament that was in fact devised by Vallotti.

Vallotti's description of his temperament appears in book 2 of his treatise, Della scienza teorica e pratica della moderna musica (On the theoretical and practical science of modern music). Although he stated that he had developed his theoretical system—presumably including the details of his temperament—by 1728, the first book of his treatise was not published until 1779, the year before he died. At the time of his death, the other three books had not been published, and remained only in manuscript form until an edition of all four books was published in 1950, under the title Trattato della moderna musica (Treatise on modern music).[1]

Vallotti's temperament received very little attention during his lifetime and for some time thereafter.[2] In a treatise published in 1754,[3] Vallotti's friend and colleague Giuseppe Tartini praised the former's approach to temperament, and outlined some of its features, but without giving sufficient detail for the temperament itself to be identified.[4] In 1781, the mathematician William Jones noted Tartini's preference for Vallotti's temperament and gave a similarly vague and unspecific description.[5]

The temperament originally devised by Vallotti has six fifths tempered by 16 of a syntonic comma, five perfectly just, and one tempered by a schisma. In a manuscript which remained unpublished until 1987,[6] the Italian chemist and musical theorist, Alessandro Barca, proposed that this latter fifth be widened by 56 of a schisma, and all the pure fifths be narrowed by 16 of a schisma. Barca's version thus has six fifths tempered by 16 of a syntonic comma, and six tempered by 16 of a schisma. In the temperament now commonly misattributed to Vallotti, the odd fifth out in his original is widened by a full schisma, and each of the six tempered fifths is narrowed by a further 16 of a schisma. This modern version thus has six fifths tempered by 16 of a Pythagorean comma, and six perfectly just. More recently, Owen Jorgensen has proposed a version of Vallotti's temperament in which the beating frequencies of the tempered fifths, rather than their sizes, are chosen to be equal. In practice, none of these four versions is audibly distinguishable from any of the others,[7] because no interval in any of them differs from the corresponding interval in any of the other three by more than two cents.

In the circulating temperament today commonly misattributed to Vallotti, each of the fifths B-F, F-C, C-G, G-E, E-B, and B-F are perfectly just, while the fifths F-C, C-G, G-D, D-A, A-E, and E-B are each 16 of a Pythagorean (ditonic) comma narrower than just.[8] The exact and approximate numerical sizes of these fifths, in cents, are given by:

f1Def=1200 ( log2(3) − 1) ≈ 701.96(perfectly just)
f2Def=2600  1200 log2(3)  698.04(narrower than just by 16 of a ditonic comma)

If  sj Def= fj  600  for j = 1,2, the sizes of the major thirds in this temperament are:[9]

  Major third   F-A, C-E,
G-B
D-F,
B-D
A-C,
E-G
E-G,
G-C
B-E, F-B,
C-F
Width
exact
approx.
4 s2
 392.18 
 3 s2 + s1 
396.09
 2 s2 + 2 s1 
400 (exactly)
 s2 + 3 s1 
403.91
 4 s1 
407.82
Deviation
from just
+5.9+9.8+13.7+17.6+21.5

The following table gives the pitch differences in cents between the notes of a chromatic scale tuned with this temperament and those of one tuned with equal temperament, when the note A of each scale is given the same pitch.[10]

Note EBFCGD A EBFCG
Difference from
equal temperament
+3.9+5.9+7.8+5.9+3.9+2.00-2.0-3.9-2.00+2.0

This temperament is merely a shifted version of Young's second temperament, which also has six consecutive pure fifths and six tempered by 16 of a Pythagorean comma. In Young's second temperament, however, the sequence of tempered fifths starts from the note C, rather than from F, as they do in the temperament today commonly misattributed to Vallotti.[11]

Other versions

Notes

References

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