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Okay, so a series of 12 just perfect fifths up from a pitch and 7 octaves up from the same pitch are seperated by a Pythagorean comma. These intervals, when brought into the range of an octave, give us 12 slightly unequal tones per octave.
My question is is what happens if you were to use just major thirds rather than perfect fifths. I know a series of 3 major thirds gives us the interval 125/64 which is seperated from the octave by a diesis (128/125, 41 cents). However if you were to keep stacking thirds what comma would you reach that is closer than the diesis, and how many major thirds would be used in the series to get there? Then when all the intervals from these thirds are brought into the span of an octave, how many would there be per octave?
I'm mainly interested in how many tones would be in the scale. I've worked out the first 12 or so and it looks like somewhere in the region of 30-36 because there are still a lot of gaps.
My question is is what happens if you were to use just major thirds rather than perfect fifths. I know a series of 3 major thirds gives us the interval 125/64 which is seperated from the octave by a diesis (128/125, 41 cents). However if you were to keep stacking thirds what comma would you reach that is closer than the diesis, and how many major thirds would be used in the series to get there? Then when all the intervals from these thirds are brought into the span of an octave, how many would there be per octave?
I'm mainly interested in how many tones would be in the scale. I've worked out the first 12 or so and it looks like somewhere in the region of 30-36 because there are still a lot of gaps.