Comma pump: Difference between revisions
From Xenharmonic Reference
mNo edit summary |
mNo edit summary |
||
| Line 14: | Line 14: | ||
There is some ambiguity in this term depending on whether the comma in question is tempered out or not. If the comma is tempered out the chord progression could be called a '''comma cycle'''. | There is some ambiguity in this term depending on whether the comma in question is tempered out or not. If the comma is tempered out the chord progression could be called a '''comma cycle'''. | ||
Given a comma, a comma pump may be constructed by stacking root movements by basic intervals in the JI group in question to that comma. Reordering movements of a comma pump creates another valid comma pump. | |||
Revision as of 20:46, 24 February 2026

A comma pump is a JI or tempered chord progression whose starting and ending points differ by a comma.
The I-vi-ii-V-I progression is a Meantone or 81/80 comma pump:
CEG -> ACEA (down by 6/5) -> DFA (up by 4/3) -> GDGB (down by 3/2) -> CEGC (up by 4/3)
In non-Meantone tunings, attempting this comma pump results in the end point flatter by 81/80 relative to the starting point.
There is some ambiguity in this term depending on whether the comma in question is tempered out or not. If the comma is tempered out the chord progression could be called a comma cycle.
Given a comma, a comma pump may be constructed by stacking root movements by basic intervals in the JI group in question to that comma. Reordering movements of a comma pump creates another valid comma pump.
