Combination product set
From Xenharmonic Reference
This is an expert page. It either assumes experience with xen theory or involves fairly technical procedures.
A combination product set (CPS) is a scale generated by the following procedure:
- A set of chosen intervals (usually odd harmonics) is the starting point.
- All the combinations of some number of intervals from the set are obtained. The same number of intervals is used for every combination.
- Each of the above combinations of intervals is stacked together.
- This results in a bunch of notes. One note is chosen as the tonic.
- The resulting intervals relative to the tonic are octave-reduced.
CPSes were developed by Erv Wilson.
Example (1, 3, 5, 7 hexany)
- In this example we choose four odd harmonics: 1, 3, 5, 7.
- We get all combinations of 2 different odd harmonics: [1, 3], [1, 5], [1, 7], [3, 5], [3, 7], [5, 7].
- For each combination of intervals, stack the intervals together: 3, 5, 7, 15, 21, 35.
- Choose 3 as the tonic. (This choice is arbitrary.) Measure all the other notes relative to the chosen tonic: 1/1, 5/3, 7/3, 15/3 = 5/1, 21/3 = 7/1, 35/3.
- Octave-reduce everything: 1/1, 5/3, 7/6, 5/4, 7/4, 35/24.
This results in the 6-note scale [1/1, 7/6, 5/4, 35/24, 5/3, 7/4, 2/1], hence "hexany".
The reason we have 6 notes is that there are 6 combinations of two elements from a set of foue elements.
