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- Centitone abstract "A centitone (also Iring) is a musical interval (21/600) of two cents (22/1200) proposed as a unit of measurement (About this sound Play ) by Widogast Iring in Die reine Stimmung in der Musik (1898) as 600 steps per octave 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.".
- Centitone wikiPageID "38433897".
- Centitone wikiPageRevisionID "538212810".
- Centitone hasPhotoCollection Centitone.
- Centitone subject Category:Intervals.
- Centitone subject Category:Units_of_measurement.
- Centitone comment "A centitone (also Iring) is a musical interval (21/600) of two cents (22/1200) proposed as a unit of measurement (About this sound Play ) by Widogast Iring in Die reine Stimmung in der Musik (1898) as 600 steps per octave 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). ".
- Centitone label "Centitone".
- Centitone sameAs m.0ql2g4z.
- Centitone sameAs Q5060165.
- Centitone sameAs Q5060165.
- Centitone wasDerivedFrom Centitone?oldid=538212810.
- Centitone isPrimaryTopicOf Centitone.