A list of puns related to "Triadic"
Hi, so I'm trying to make a java project that has a class called Suspect among others.
Each Suspect has an ArrayList<Suspect> that holds information about the suspect's associates.
How can I accomplish the following ?
As you can see, if Suspect A is connected to suspects B and Ξ, and suspect Ξ is connected to suspects Ξ, Ξ and Ξ, then the method I'm trying to create should return an ArrayList with suspect E inside.
Respectively, is the method is called on suspect E, then the method should return an ArrayList with suspect Ξ inside.
I have gotten as far as making the method return both Ξ and Ξ when called upon E, but I can't figure out how to make it so that it returns only Suspect Ξ.
Any help is greatly appreciated, thanks in advance!
https://i.imgur.com/2oAZmSs.jpg
This is a rough draft I made by hand. Apologies if itβs an eye sore.
Each of the 12 circles is a pitch class row. The first row at the bottom is C and the last row at the top is B. These rows are the roots of triads. The columns are different major and minor keys, arranged in order by key signature. You can trace how a triad with the same root changes quality over the course of shifting keys, eg from major to minor to diminished to augmented, etc.
I color coded the the cells based on their chord quality. Green is major. Blue is minor. Red is augmented and purple is diminished. I also outlined tonic and dominant chords.
My intention in making this was for visualizing all the chords that might be useful to use as pivots between keys. If this wheel proves helpful I might make a more polished one in a design program.
Appreciate any feedback! π
Update: Hereβs an Excel version https://www.icloud.com/iclouddrive/0x9aoiXgUgu4UIXbr5QmColkg#Circle_of_Chords
Hi all, was listening to the first minute of Caoineadh and noticed that the consistency and texture really related to early 17th century Gesualdo like sounds. Here is an example
I was wondering if anyone else has noticed this, or Chris if you have any insight I would love to know. I recently have been deep diving to analyzing CAD.
https://youtu.be/tEcTUVlxh5A
Prepare to have your mind blown once again
-- Edit with a possible solution at the end, leaving this here if anyone has an easier way to solve this. --
So here I go again:
I now have a nice app in paintrack that tells me what colors fit together and there's also several colorwheels on the net that show me.
Only issue with all of the ones I found: You get a hex code or a square of the color and I'm just sitting there and curse my DNA, so if anyone knows of a colorwheel site or app that actually writes what kind of color it's trying to show me OR at least something where I can enter the hex code and it does that, I would be veeery thankful!
If nothing like that exists: right now I'm trying to find good color combinations for Game Color Royal Purple.
Edit: I found out I can use https://color.adobe.com/de/explore/?filter=most-popular&time=month to find fitting colors and then post the hexcode into https://www.colorhexa.com/144a26 and it tells me at least that it's whatever-kind-of-green, so at least I know that green somehow fits in the scheme. That is already a big help, even though a little unprecise and complicated.
The concept is pretty simple; if you have a hexatonic, then *maybe* you can divide it into two triads, such that both triads are one of the four common shapes (maj, min, dim, aug).
They're described here, as "polychords" by Frans Absil, December 2019
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xZauAnrqw6g
The word "bitriadic hexatonic" was used by Seth Burrows. Blog post from Oct 29, 2017
http://sethburrows.com/bi-triadic-hexatonic-scales/
I also found them mentioned by mDecks, posted June 7, 2017
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tmHhabJ-o4M
And hence also used in their Tessitura software.
This seems very aligned with 12-tone set theory and all the work that Cohn et al have done with chopping the dodecaspace into triads. But I've searched through a lot of stuff and haven't found any indication of 1) where that concept originated, and 2) who gave it that name, or 3) what other names have been used. Was the term "bitriadic hexatonic" coined by "mDecks", whoever that is?
Because hey, I'm going to teach other people about this stuff, and I'm kind of diligent about using the right words, and crediting the inventors.
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