Septimal major third

Septimal major third
Inverseseptimal minor sixth
Name
Other namesSupermajor third
AbbreviationS3, SM3
Size
Semitones~4½
Interval class~4½
Just interval9:7
Cents
Equal temperament400
24 equal temperament450
Just intonation435
9/7 major third from C to E7 upside-down This, "extremely large third", is also found between C and E7 upside-down and may resemble a neutral third or blue note.

In music, the septimal major third play , also called the supermajor third (by Hermann von Helmholtz among others) and sometimes Bohlen–Pierce third is the musical interval exactly or approximately equal to a just 9:7 ratio of frequencies, or alternately 14:11. It is equal to 435 cents, sharper than a just major third (5:4) by the septimal quarter tone (36:35) (play ). In 24-TET the septimal major third is approximated by 9 quarter tones, or 450 cents (play ). Both 24 and 19 equal temperament map the septimal major third and the septimal narrow fourth (21:16) to the same interval.

The septimal major third has a characteristic brassy sound which is much less sweet than a pure major third, but is classed as a 9-limit consonance. Together with the root 1:1 and the perfect fifth of 3:2, it makes up the septimal major triad, or supermajor triad play . However, in terms of the overtone series, this is a utonal rather than otonal chord, being an inverted 6:7:9, i.e. a 99:97:96 chord. The septimal major triad can also be represented by the ratio 14:18:21. The septimal major triad contains an interval of a septimal minor third between its third and fifth ( 3:2 / 9:7 = 7:6 ). Similarly, the septimal major third is the interval between the third and the fifth of the septimal minor triad.

In the early meantone era the interval made its appearance as the alternative major third in remote keys, under the name diminished fourth. Tunings of the meantone fifth in the neighborhood of Zarlino's 27-comma meantone will give four septimal thirds among the twelve major thirds of the tuning; this entails that three septimal major triads appear along with one chord containing a septimal major third with an ordinary minor third above it, making up a wolf fifth.

22 equal temperament has a very close match to this interval. In this temperament, four fifths minus two octaves equals a septimal major third, not an ordinary major third.


This page was last updated at 2023-06-24 09:01 UTC. Update now. View original page.

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