Friday, August 15, 2025

Hanson[34]

Scales generated by a minor third support traversing the kleisma, a comma tempered out by 53edo. Larry Hanson built keyboards that exploited this fact, so the scales are called Hanson scales. Hanson[19] is a common size such scale. Starting from pitch class 0, a sequence of eighteen minor thirds generates a scale with 19 notes per octave. The last pitch class in the series is 40. The whole sequence can be shifted by a minor third, by ommitting the starting pitch class, 0, and adding one more pitch class at the end, pitch class 1. Thus the shift is accomplished by sharpening 0 by a single step of 53edo.

With scale sizes of 7, 11, 15, and 34, shifting the sequence ahead a minor third is accomplished by flattening the 0 pitch class. For a scale size of 7, the 0 pitch class would be flattened to pitch class 45. For a scale size 11, 0 is flattened to 48; for size 15, to 51; for 34, to 52. Hanson[34] is largest such scale, a scale that can be shifted by sharpening or flattening a pitch class to an adjacent pitch class.

Here is an algorithmic piece in Hanson[34].

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