Tritoni V Lya Bemolj Mazhore
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Thys Co., 379 U.S. 29 (1964), was a 1964 decision of the United States Supreme Court holding that a contract calling for payment of patent royalties after the expiration of the licensed patent was misuse of the patent right and unenforceable under the. Mi bemol (ba'-mol). Was the mediaeval objurgation against the tritone (q. V.), mi being B natural in the hard hexa- chord. Their festivals of contest are reproduced in V;iguer's ' Tann- hauser. Vide INTERVAL, MAJOR, MODE,.
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Actually it depends on the instrument. Some instruments can produce different notes for A# and Bb, others can not. There are different ways to intonate.
On one side you have a just or harmonic intonation which is built on harmonics scale (each tone has a a matemathical relation between the base tone), this makes each tonality have its own intonation; on the other side you have temperate intonation which makes a compromise between frequencies and different keys, dividing the interval octave in equally distance semi-tones, to make possible one instrument to play in different keys, always using the same notes. Is a good explanation about this. Alsto worth to read. In practical terms, to be able to fine tune a chord (just/harmonic intonation in the guitar or different instruments playing/singing together) you must raise or lower some tones. Often the third in the chord needs adjustment. For example the third in F# chord (A#) should be higher than a Bb.
If your instrument can't play it (like a piano) you land on tempered intonation, if you can play it (or bend the tone guitar/harmonica/etc) then you can get a just/harmonic intonated chord. Posted this very clear table on his to. Notice how the third in the chord is higher or lower depending on the intonation model you are using. (the A# in my example of the F# major chord). About the mathematical relation between tones in the harmonic scale: (source ). I'll add that the difference isn't only in pitch. Even in equal intonation, in which the pitches of A# and Bb are the same, you would use one or the other in certain contexts.
You don't have a Bb in the F# major scale, except as an accidental, because it already has a B natural. Even as an accidental, it has a different meaning than an A#: it's a diminished 4th, not a major third (though they happen sound the same in equal intonation). This might not make sense to many amateur musicians, but when you start seeing music in terms of phrases and not just individual notes, it becomes important.
– Apr 24 '15 at 20:07 •. Enharmonic notes are different, e.g. G# and A-flat, even though it is not always the case that instruments make different sounds for these different notes. These different note names are used to indicate differences in terms of the melodic or harmonic content of the music.