75 votes

An introduction to microtonal music (including a long list of recommendations)

I love microtonal music. Ever since discovering the concept about 6 years ago, I’ve become deeply fascinated by alternate tuning systems and have sought out and listened to microtonal music wherever I can. Most people I’ve talked to are not familiar with microtonal music, or have had a bad experience with it, so I wanted to make a post that explains what it is, and how one might appreciate and eventually acquire a taste for it, along with providing a variety of examples to choose from. All discussion related to microtonal music welcome!

What is microtonal music?

In short, microtonal music is any music that contains notes or intervals not found in the standard Western tuning system. Of course, this invites the question: what is the standard Western tuning system? If you are a musician, you are probably intimately familiar with it: the division of the octave into 12 equally-spaced steps, to which we typically give letter names like C or E flat (etc.). Most people come to unconsciously use these notes as the baseline for determining whether a note or interval is in tune or out of tune.

However, there is nothing intrinsically ‘correct’ about the Western tuning system. In fact, by some standards, it can be quite out of tune. If you listen carefully, you may even notice that our major thirds are ‘wobbly’ - the notes come close to a 5:4 ratio of frequencies, but the interval is about 14 cents too wide, which causes a subtle wobbly sound. We find these slightly ‘off’ intervals acceptable in part due to sheer familiarity. But it turns out, you can familiarize yourself with almost any interval!

There are a great many ways to design a tuning system that produces notes and intervals which are different from what we’re used to. Some of these might be more ‘in tune’, others less so. And there are even those that are in tune with respect to ratios that don’t even exist in the Western tuning system. As a result of these unfamiliar features, microtonal music may give the uninitiated listener the general impression of being ‘out of tune’. But if you give it a chance, it may surprise you - the only way to develop the familiarity that governs taste, after all, is to keep listening.

I think it also helps to know a bit about different tuning systems, to ‘see what’s going on under the hood’, so to speak. This conceptual familiarity may eventually support a degree of aesthetic familiarity.

Tuning Systems

Equal Division Tunings

Where the Western tuning system chose 12 steps, we can also divide the octave into some other number of equally spaced steps. These tunings are often referred to ‘EDOs’ (Equal Division of the Octave) - e.g., the Western tuning system could also be called 12-EDO.

Globally, perhaps the most common EDO (other than our very familiar 12-EDO) is 24-EDO, which is used by many musical traditions in the Arab world, such as Turkish, North African, Persian, or Arab itself. Conceptually, 24-EDO is interesting because it ‘contains’ all the notes of 12-EDO, plus 12 new notes exactly in between the other 12. As a result, it can be used to play all the intervals we are familiar with, and music which strongly relies on this feature is definitely on the more accessible end.

I tend to refer to 24-EDO music as simply being ‘quarter-tonal’ (the 12 semitones of 12-EDO being divisible into 24 quarter-tones). This distinction is useful since in many cultures, quarter-tonal tunings are not precisely 24-EDO, but some slightly sharp or flat variation of the general 24 notes per octave structure. It can be hard to distinguish the two, so ‘quarter-tonal’ is probably most accurate.

You could divide the octave equally into any number of notes, though - I’ve seen as low as 5 and as high as 500. Each has a unique sound depending on what intervals the division produces. Some EDOs, such as 19-EDO, 31-EDO, and 53-EDO produce very similar intervals to what we have in 12-EDO. Played with some restraint, they can be difficult to distinguish from 12-EDO, though they also have the option to play unfamiliar notes as well.

Other EDOs, such as 17-EDO, 22-EDO, and 27-EDO sound quite different from 12-EDO, producing lots of unfamiliar intervals while ‘missing’ ones you’d expect to hear in 12-EDO. And finally, there are of course EDOs such as 10-EDO, 13-EDO, 23-EDO (and many more) that produce few truly ‘good’ sounding intervals. Nevertheless, this doesn’t stop people from trying to extract something decent-sounding from them!

Just Intonation

In short, just intonation is the practice of tuning different intervals to exact ratios of frequencies. Instead of trying to accommodate or work around ‘out of tune’ notes you might find in EDOs, why not just make every note perfectly in tune, after all? The result of this is notes that harmonize perfectly with each other, even if these harmonies are at first unfamiliar to the untrained ear. Often, just intonation produces intervals or whole chords that have a very clear, resonant quality.

The downside of this, though, is that since the notes do not equally divide an octave, you cannot simply transpose scales and chords to a new key. You may have made everything in tune with respect to, say, B flat, but it may turn out that with respect to D, the ratios are far more complicated and their sound commensurately dissonant. To compensate for this shortcoming, a lot of just intonation music tends to play in only one key, or perhaps a few related keys. Certain genres of music, such as drone music, or modal examples of rock and folk, better lend themselves to this technique.

There are many possible tunings within the broad category of just intonation. Usually a musician selects, say, 9 different notes that form specific frequency ratios with each other, and limit themselves to that. So describing specific just intonation tunings often comes down to a list of ratios, which can be hard to interpret without experience in microtonal music.

Free Intonation

Enough of ratios and equal divisions - maybe you just have a particular sound in mind, and you’ll know it when you hear it. This practice of tuning notes semi-arbitrarily, is known as free intonation. The notes chosen may simply sound good to the musician playing them, and at times they may even come close to the just intonation ratios. At other times, they may be chosen because they are out of tune. Maybe the ‘beating’ quality of out of tune notes provides a desirable texture, or maybe a certain ugliness itself is desired.

Free intonation per se is somewhat less common than the other two categories of microtonality. However, some musical traditions are actually more similar to free intonation than anything else, the difference being that instead of the ‘ad hoc’ quality of free intonation, the specific tunings are passed down from generation to generation.

Examples of cultures that use non-just, non-EDO tuning (for lack of a better name) include Indonesian gamelan music, Georgian liturgical music, and lots of different types of African and Asian music, just to name a few. If you needed proof of the notion that microtones are, in principle, capable of becoming familiar, even ‘normal’, these long-lasting traditions of unsystematically tonal music should suffice.

Examples

After listening to a lot of microtonal music, some good, some bad, some very bad, I have amassed quite a collection. Below I have listed what I feel to be prime introductory examples of microtonal music in a variety of genres. A lot of it is very approachable to people unfamiliar with microtones, and I hope you can find something you enjoy among the albums listed.

Of course ‘microtonal music’ is such a broad category I can’t hope to be even close to exhaustive. In many cases I am summing up a huge subcategory (such as Turkish psych rock or Arab dance music) with one or two representative examples.

For any other fans of microtonal music out there, please post your favorite albums or tracks! I’m sure there is some great stuff I’ve missed, and I would love to expand my collection further.

Rock

Altın Gün - On
YouTube / Bandcamp
Altın Gün - Aşk
YouTube / Bandcamp
A lot of Turkish folk music uses a tuning similar to the quarter-tonal tuning used in the rest of the Arab world, and a lot of modern Turkish rock music (especially starting in the 70’s and 80’s) features these same tunings. I think Altın Gün is probably the best example of the ‘Turkish Psychedelic Folk’ style from the past decade or so. Some songs on these albums, in part or in whole, focus more on the normal Western tunings. But pay attention to the vocal parts and the baglama (similar to a guitar) and you’ll hear lots of quarter-tonal inflections. These two albums are a very accessible introduction to quarter-tonal tunings, in my opinion.

Balungan - Kudu Bisa Kudu
YouTube / Bandcamp
This album is a juxtaposition of Javanese gamelan music (explained in detail at the very bottom of this list) with RIO-style avant-rock (featuring the drummer of French band Etron Fou Leloublon) that uses the more typical 12-EDO. Bombastic and strange without being too inaccessible.

Brendan Byrnes - Neutral Paradise
YouTube playlist / Bandcamp
Brendan Byrnes - 2227
YouTube / Bandcamp
Brendan Byrnes has some excellent microtonal rock music which generally uses a lot of electronic elements as well (synthesizers, digital effects, and occasionally drum machines). Sometimes this recalls synthwave, but genre-wise it’s very much its own thing. He uses a variety of tunings, particularly 22-EDO, but also 27-EDO and just intonation, among others. His guitar work fuses these exotic tunings with fluent, articulate playing that is a joy to hear.

Compro Oro - Simurg
YouTube / Bandcamp
Another great modern example of Turkish psychedelic folk, from a psych / funk / fusion band whose other albums do not use microtones (most of them exploring a more ‘Ethio jazz’-influenced style). As with a lot of music in this style, the microtones often play a more ornamental role, which makes them more accessible to the uninitiated listener.

Feeding Fingers - Do Owe Harm
YouTube playlist / Bandcamp
Some very fresh-sounding post-punk / darkwave that uses quite a diverse selection of exotic tunings (listed on their Bandcamp page). This album has that dour, ‘Joy Divison’ sound, and the use of microtonality alternately lightens the sentimentality or darkens the menace that music in this genre evokes.

Horse Lords - Interventions
YouTube / Bandcamp
Horse Lords - Comradely Objects
YouTube playlist / Bandcamp
Horse Lords are one of the most exciting, interesting microtonal rock bands out there, in my opinion. They primarily use just intonation tuning, and a lot of their tracks even use other compositional elements to point out the mathematical features of this tuning (for instance, using a 3 on 5 on 7 polymeter, with instruments that play the 3rd, 5th, and 7th harmonics of a note). Polymeters and polyrhythms are a regular feature in their music, and along with other cool techniques such as hocketing, change ringing, and repetitive riff structures reminiscent of North African music, they serve as a fascinating, unique vehicle for exploring just intonation. These two albums are probably the best examples, but pretty much everything this band has put out is excellent.

King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard - Flying Microtonal Banana
YouTube playlist / Bandcamp
King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard - K.G.
YouTube playlist / Bandcamp
King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard - L.W.
YouTube / Bandcamp
King Gizzard is probably one of the biggest-name artists on this list, and while only 3 of their albums (out of like 20-something) are exclusively microtonal, they are a great example of heavy psych rock or garage rock that draws a lot from Turkish psychedelic rock. This is some high energy rock music for dropping acid and kicking ass. Flying Microtonal Banana, which marked the point at which I personally got very into microtonal music, is almost entirely based on the microtonal ‘Huseyni’ scale most common to Turkish folk music. The other two albums on this list have more variety, but still employ the characteristic quarter-tone tunings.

The Mercury Tree - Spidermilk
YouTube playlist / Bandcamp
Some very aggressive prog rock using the curious 17-EDO tuning. The sound of this tuning is very different from the standard 12-EDO, which gives this album a dark, otherworldly sense of harmony that fits its angular melody and unconventional rhythms. And yet, the vocal parts are very smooth and natural sounding, which is an interesting contrast. The Mercury Tree have several other albums using this tuning, but I think Spidermilk is their best work.

Secret Chiefs - Book M
YouTube / Bandcamp
Extremely eclectic music (featuring members of the bands Mr. Bungle and Estradasphere) that employs Arabic-style quarter-tones. The band wanders between folk traditionalism, speedy electronica, swanky funk rock, and industrial metal with each subsequent track, but somehow the aesthetic is all of a piece. Some really great musicianship here as well, especially the violin parts (in my opinion). A few of the band’s other albums feature microtones but I think this one is the most cohesive and approachable.

Ventifacts - Ventifacts
Bandcamp
A duo consisting of the frontmen of The Mercury Tree and Jack o’ the Clock, who play rock music which heavily features the hammer dulcimer (of all things). Stylistically, you could call it progressive rock, leaning towards acoustic but still quite intense in places. Some of the songs use quarter-tones, but others use such tunings as 10-EDO or the 17-EDO favored by The Mercury Tree.

Yossi Fine & Ben Aylon - Blue Desert
YouTube / Bandcamp
Israeli hard rock / world rock which uses the standard Arabic quarter-tone tunings. Heavy desert vibes, with simple, approachable riffs and microtonality that is way out in the open, but still very accessible.

Metal

[syzygy] - [escape]
YouTube / Bandcamp
10-EDO is a pretty wild-sounding tuning, and [syzygy] works it beautifully into some stoner doom metal. This EP unrepentantly embraces the out-of-tune feel that this tuning has, but it was surprisingly easy for me to acquire a taste for. It helps that the singer belts out a very strong performance, exactly nailing those hard-to-grasp notes. Not necessarily for beginners, but rewarding if you can get into it.

Agonanist - The Cynicism of Solitude
YouTube / Bandcamp
Atmospheric black metal with extra creepy microtones (I’m pretty sure it’s 17-EDO but I couldn’t find any information about it). The microtonality is a good fit for the genre, where the extra-dissonant parts find themselves buried among blast beats and guttural roars. Yet at times, the tuning provides a melancholic feeling that is softer than you might expect. Really interesting stuff, especially if you’re already into black metal.

Cryptic Ruse - Unfertile
Bandcamp
An impressively heavy sludge metal album featuring the super dissonant 23-EDO tuning. Cryptic Ruse has albums with other tunings, but this one is especially impressive with how well such a strange tuning works. Of course, by any reasonable standard, it’s still extremely bizarre, so tread with caution.

Jute Gyte - Perdurance
YouTube / Bandcamp
Jute Gyte - Mitrealität
YouTube playlist / Bandcamp
If there was such a thing as using quarter-tones for evil, Jute Gyte is it. Absolutely crushingly heavy avant-black metal with hyperspeed blast beats, harsher-than-harsh vocals, and the most dizzying, angular approach to quarter-tones possible. These two albums are a good place to start if you like the sound of pure madness. The liner notes on the Bandcamp page for Perdurance explain a bit of the (really crazy) compositional approach.

Kostnatění - Úpal
YouTube / Bandcamp
Blackened death metal that incorporates microtonality through the usage of fretless guitar. A lot of the microtonal sections seem to roughly follow quarter-tones, but there appears to be some free intonation stuff as well. It’s a surprisingly accessible album, at times seeming to draw a bit from (Slovakian?) folk music. A really catchy release, overall.

Last Sacrament - Enantiodroma
YouTube / Bandcamp
Death metal using the 16-EDO tuning. Interestingly, this tuning preserves the tritones and minor thirds present in 12-EDO, so it’s a good fit for a genre that heavily relies on these intervals in its riff structures. At times it almost just sounds like regular death metal, though there are plenty of places (such as guitar solos) where the microtonality shines through.

Scarcity - Aveilut
YouTube playlist / Bandcamp
Atmospheric black metal using 72-EDO. With high-numbered EDOs like this one, you get so many intervals you can approximate almost anything you want, which allows this album’s droning guitars to be quite consonant - when they want to be. Long song structures allow for very gradual development of harmony, and it’s all underpinned by blast beats and screams like you might expect from the genre.

Victory Over the Sun - Nowherer
YouTube / Bandcamp
Blackened sludge metal using 17-EDO. Really dissonant, not only due to the standard screams and guitar distortion, but also along with sections that are kind of minimalist and not overwhelmingly distorted - rather, just written to be intentionally kooky and compositionally abrasive.

Electronic

Aphex Twin - London 03.06.17 [field day]
YouTube / SoundCloud
Aphex Twin is a pretty big name in electronic music in general, producing stuff in the IDM / drum & bass / acid genres, but a lot of his music is also microtonal. The London 03.06.17 EP is one where pretty much the entire thing uses microtones (I’m not sure of the tuning; it might be free intonation), but you can also find a healthy dose of microtonality on several of his other works, including Syro and Analord.

FASTFAST - New Color Bomb
YouTube playlist / Bandcamp
Bright-sounding funky synthwave which uses a wide variety of tunings. Very accessible, with some really refined-sounding, psychedelic vocals which gives even the most electronic tracks a slightly more organic quality. A lot of the chords are nearly the same as you’d hear in 12-EDO, but the changes between them occur over microtonal intervals. Neat stuff.

Lynyn - Lexicon
YouTube playlist / Bandcamp
Hyperactive drum & bass / IDM music that occasionally incorporates microtones (sometimes quarter-tones, other times more of a free-intonation thing). These harmonic qualities really fit the wonky, glitchy sound of the music, at times playing almost more of a textural role - as a result, it’s a very accessible album if you like the genre.

Omar Souleyman - To Syria, With Love
YouTube playlist / Bandcamp
The music of Omar Souleyman is like something you’d hear at a Syrian wedding party. Quarter-tones are common to most forms of pan-Arabic pop music (a huge category that would of course be hard to effectively summarize), but I’ve found that I keep coming back to this album, among others that Omar has recorded. Incredibly fun dance music (‘dabke’) with a sort of cheesy 90’s techno vibe.

Sevish - Harmony Hacker
YouTube playlist / Bandcamp
Sevish - Morphable
YouTube / Bandcamp
Sevish is a big name among electronic microtonal hobbyists, and for good reason. Bright, uber-synthetic timbres are used on these albums to deploy a wide variety of equal temperament and just intonation tunings. Alien sounding for sure, but the fun, pop drum & bass approach keeps the overall experience pretty approachable. Sevish is probably many an internet-dweller’s introduction to microtones.

Trauma Triad - A North Facing Window
Bandcamp
I feel awkward promoting my own music here, but I do honestly think my album of quarter-tonal IDM / fusion is actually pretty decent and worth a mention. Primarily using electric piano and 808 style bass synthesizer, I tried to explore quarter-tones from a more harmonic and less modal perspective. A more detailed explanation of the harmony is included with the (free!) Bandcamp download of the album, for any deeply interested parties.

Jazz

Amir ElSaffar - Rivers of Sound: The Other Shore
YouTube / Bandcamp
This album explores a combination of contemplative spiritual jazz and quarter-tonal Iraqi folk music. The large ensemble provides a huge diversity of instrumental texture, and long song structures provide a chance to let the microtonal harmonies sink in before proceeding through the sprawling yet gentle improvisation. A must for any jazz lover.

Firas Zreik - Salute
YouTube playlist / Bandcamp
The first half of this album leans towards quarter-tonal Palestinian folk music, while the latter half develops more into actual jazz. The star here is the kanun, an instrument similar to a dulcimer, which Firas absolutely shreds. The mastery of this instrument on both a rhythmic and harmonic level is really impressive. Overall quite accessible and entertaining.

Giorgi Mikadze - Georgian Microjamz
YouTube
The full album doesn’t seem to be available on YouTube or Bandcamp, but one track should at least give you a taste of the truly unusual Georgian folk harmonies. Neither equal temperament nor just intonation (nor even an approximation of either), this is some extremely strange sounding stuff, especially combined with some spacey instrumental timbres. Yet it’s ultimately buffered by a more familiar jazz fusion stylistic approach, complete with virtuosic solos and skittery rhythms.

Land of Kush - Sand Enigma
YouTube / Bandcamp
This album features Arabic quarter-tone styles worked into large ensemble avant-jazz. The addition of multiple vocalists is also rather unique. At times, the music swings like you’d expect, but a lot of the music here is more textural and experimental. There are sections of fiery free jazz, creepy noise-sculptures, and much more.

Mike Battaglia - Sweet Lorraine
YouTube
While I try to focus more on albums than individual songs, this cover song from YouTuber microtonalist Mike Battaglia is particularly fascinating. Using a stride piano style that gradually works in more and more quirks of the 31-EDO tuning, it perfectly toes the line between detuned honky-tonk piano and truly intentional microtonality. Mike has a bunch of other neat microtonal covers on his channel if this provokes your interest.

Ambient / Electroacoustic / Folk / Classical / Etc.

75 Dollar Bill - I Was Real
YouTube / Bandcamp
Incorporating the quarter-tonal aesthetic of North African music, 75 Dollar Bill deeply plumbs the idea of desert folk for this really excellent, wide-ranging album. Many of the tracks are in a sort of meditative near-ambient style that highlights the subtly-amplified guitar. In others, hand percussion and occasionally other instruments (e.g. viola, saxophone) push lightly in the direction of rock. Overall an extremely relaxing album.

Basiani Ensemble - Georgian Polyphony Singing
YouTube
I bet you didn’t think you’d be listening to microtonal Georgian church choir music today, but here you are. As I explained for ‘Georgian Mikrojamz’ above, Georgian folk tunings are quite otherworldly, but here as a solemn purely vocal performance they acquire a strange profundity that is hard to describe. Some of the tracks use typical 12-EDO harmonies, but about half of them have these odd, resonant microtones that probably sound even better in a huge space like a church (I imagine). Start with tracks 2 and 5 if you want just a taste.

Duane Pitre - Omniscient Voices
YouTube / Bandcamp
Ambient electroacoustic music primarily featuring piano. The very slow pace and gentle, quiet sound are very conducive to hearing the details of just intonation tuning, whose exactly tuned ratios produce intense and evocative ringing sounds. A great album for relaxation or meditation, in my opinion.

Guillaume Costeley - Seigneur Dieu ta pitie
YouTube
Guillaume Costeley was a 16th century French composer, and one of the first Western examples of experimentation with microtones - particularly, he used the 19-EDO tuning, which is good at approximating similar intervals to 12-EDO, but gives new options for key changes. This video is a brief composition of his, played on microtonal organ, along with sheet music and a more detailed explanation of how this tuning works. Fascinating stuff.

Julia Reidy - World In World
Bandcamp
On this album, just intonation tunings are played using only almost exclusively clean electric guitar, using heavy reverb, delay, and looping to create some expressive, mystical soundscapes. The almost tactile textures produced are sometimes rather dark, though never sinister. At other times they are bright and expansive, though no less quiet and intimate. Another great relaxation album.

Methods Body - Methods Body
Bandcamp
Electroacoustic avant-rock that uses free intonation to create harmony that is bizarre yet curiously organic-sounding. You can hear the warbling texture of the intentionally out-of-tune intervals in a lot of these tracks, which fits the earthiness of the acoustic instrumentation. A lot of the tracks also have a danceable groove to them reminiscent of some free intonation African music. Methods Body also recently released an album called Plural Not Possessive that is an even more low-key, ambient example of some of these features.

Sound Tracker - Gamelan
YouTube
Indonesian folk music, also called ‘gamelan’ music, uses some very unusual tunings - neither equal temperament nor just intonation, but some idiosyncratic set of intervals cooked up long, long ago. In addition, gamelan ensembles pair up instruments that are tuned slightly differently, so when they play in unison you get a beautiful, ‘shimmering’ texture. Unfortunately, there are not a lot of high quality recordings of purely traditional gamelan music. This is probably the best one I’ve seen, and it also lets you see some of the musicianship involved in actually performing the stuff.

15 comments

  1. BisonST
    Link
    First off, what a well crafted post. Irregardless of the subject this is a master post. On the music itself, I feel like it makes me anxious. Like it goes straight to the bottom of my stomach....

    First off, what a well crafted post. Irregardless of the subject this is a master post.

    On the music itself, I feel like it makes me anxious. Like it goes straight to the bottom of my stomach. What a fascinating feeling.

    8 votes
  2. [2]
    knocklessmonster
    Link
    My first exposure to microtonality was Aphex Twin talking about how he tuned his hardware, because I was trying to figure out his sound. He basically said he adjusted hardware until it felt right....

    My first exposure to microtonality was Aphex Twin talking about how he tuned his hardware, because I was trying to figure out his sound. He basically said he adjusted hardware until it felt right.

    Eventually I found Tolgahan Çoğulu a fascinating dude who has devised his own adjustable-fret guitar and made microtonality make sense, but I was still left without an easy way to implement it in my music. Custom instruments are expensive, and VSTs didn't really have the option, at least the ones I had. This is very different today.

    Similarly Flying Microtonal Banana caused everything to click, especially the warmth in their Turkish tuning, and it led to my current fascination with working with them. I also actually have tools I can use, like Tidalcycles, a handful of VSTs (Serum, Surge XT, Vital, Zyn Fusion), and software (OpenMPT), and even some hardware (waiting on a Dirtywave m8 which allows custom scales).

    I don't have much to add beyond beyond mentioning Tolgahan Çoğulu, but he's an interesting person with regards to cultural contexts for people with no previous exposure.

    I do believe Aphex Twin's Korg Funk 5 uses some custom scales he shipped on the Monologue, which he helped design, and it definitely has some of that Aphex tonal funk.

    6 votes
    1. eyechoirs
      Link Parent
      I completely forgot about Tolgahan! He has a ton of great videos, and they're generally simple enough for even non-musicians to enjoy. He's done some covers of King Gizzard songs as well, which I...

      I completely forgot about Tolgahan! He has a ton of great videos, and they're generally simple enough for even non-musicians to enjoy. He's done some covers of King Gizzard songs as well, which I found very enjoyable.

      You're right about custom tuning being a more standard VST feature these days. For most people, that's probably going to be the entryway to playing with microtones. I've used a couple of the ones you mentioned, especially Serum which I found to do pretty much everything I wanted to do with synthesizers (I used it on my most recent album).

      My favorite VST, though, is AAS Lounge Lizard EP4. The combination of microtonal harmonies with a physically modeled (and completely modifiable) electric piano is chef's kiss. I also think hearing microtones on a familiar instrumental sound is important to developing an 'ear' for playing them. Unlike with synthesizers, which can sound really neat but whose sound is sort of ad hoc, an electric piano sound imports a whole, implicit knowledge-base about sound and harmony that many people have developed through a lifetime of hearing electric pianos. Obviously your mileage may vary, but perhaps it is worth a shot to try out.

      1 vote
  3. [2]
    zhanteimi
    Link
    More music that falls under the microtonal umbrella: Shahen-Shah by Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan. Qawwali / Ghazal music out of Pakistan. Fragmentarium by Erlend Apneseth. Progressive Folk / Free...

    More music that falls under the microtonal umbrella:

    Shahen-Shah by Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan. Qawwali / Ghazal music out of Pakistan.

    Fragmentarium by Erlend Apneseth. Progressive Folk / Free Improvisation out of Norway.

    In the Heart of the Moon by Ali Farka Touré & Toumani Diabaté. Mande / Songhai music out of Mali.

    Bes by The Dwarfs of East Agouza. Experimental Rock / Free Folk / Avant-Folk out of Egypt.

    Many more, of course, but no need to inundate.

    4 votes
    1. eyechoirs
      Link Parent
      I checked each of these out - I found Shahen-Shah and Bes to be the most interesting (the microtones are extremely subtle on the other two, imo). It looks like the guitarist who plays on Bes is...

      I checked each of these out - I found Shahen-Shah and Bes to be the most interesting (the microtones are extremely subtle on the other two, imo). It looks like the guitarist who plays on Bes is also a member of Land of Kush, who I included on my list. No wonder I really like it!

      1 vote
  4. marron12
    Link
    I listened to Agonanist, the Basiani Ensemble, and Sound Tracker - Gamelan. Agonanist was a little unsettling, maybe because I've never heard anything like it before. Interesting though. Almost...

    I listened to Agonanist, the Basiani Ensemble, and Sound Tracker - Gamelan.

    Agonanist was a little unsettling, maybe because I've never heard anything like it before. Interesting though. Almost like the sounds were three-dimensional shapes that moved around. Maybe that sounds silly. I don't have any musical training and don't know if it's normal to hear it like that.

    The Georgian polyphonic singing was soothing and beautiful. They sing a lot with one breath and the voices interact with each other in interesting ways. Maybe I'm imagining it, but it seemed like the sound of inhaling was part of the music in the first song.

    And the very last video you linked, just gorgeous. It would be quite an experience to hear that live.

    2 votes
  5. boredop
    Link
    This is the first post I have ever bookmarked on Tildes (and I've been here on and off since 2018.) Nicely done. You can probably add to your jazz section something by Don Ellis, who famously...

    This is the first post I have ever bookmarked on Tildes (and I've been here on and off since 2018.) Nicely done.

    You can probably add to your jazz section something by Don Ellis, who famously played a trumpet with four valves which allowed him to play quarter tones in his solos. Unfortunately I couldn't name the pieces in which he utilized it, but I'm sure the info is out there. TIL he even wrote an instructional book on the topic!

    2 votes
  6. [2]
    rsl12
    Link
    What a list! I will definitely have to go through it all. For classical, are you familiar with Easley Blackwood? His album Microtonal Compositions contains examples of 13- to 24-note equal tunings.

    What a list! I will definitely have to go through it all. For classical, are you familiar with Easley Blackwood? His album Microtonal Compositions contains examples of 13- to 24-note equal tunings.

    2 votes
    1. eyechoirs
      Link Parent
      Some of Easley Blackwood's stuff is alright, but in general I'm not a huge fan of him. I feel like a lot of early explorers of microtonal music were somewhat unselective in their approach to...

      Some of Easley Blackwood's stuff is alright, but in general I'm not a huge fan of him. I feel like a lot of early explorers of microtonal music were somewhat unselective in their approach to harmony, using 'difficult' tunings just for the sheer sake of doing something different and not worrying about whether they matched the tendencies of human auditory perception. For instance, harmonizing two melodies in thirds is a conceit particular to 12-EDO because all of its thirds are pretty consonant - when Blackwood tries to do this in, say, 17-EDO, it's pretty gnarly.

      A lot of people would probably disagree with me there, and of course Blackwood and other composers were an important stepping stone to modern microtonal music, so I shouldn't be too critical. Nonetheless I feel like his work is not all that accessible by today's standards.

      I also think it is more difficult to make accessible microtonal music with synthesizers alone, as with the music you linked. As I mentioned in another comment, using real, physical instruments seems to tap into an implicit familiarity with their sound which seems to help taste acquisition. Additionally, it can be difficult to design the timbre of a synthesizer to 'support' the harmonic qualities of the particular microtones being employed. Ideally, we would all take a page from Harry Partch's book and build our own instruments, fit-for-purpose in whatever tuning we like.

      2 votes
  7. [2]
    Akir
    Link
    @mycketforvirrad can we put an "exemplary" tag on this post? It certainly deserves it. The thing about microtonal music is that after you get into them they don't "sound" microtonal anymore. And...

    @mycketforvirrad can we put an "exemplary" tag on this post? It certainly deserves it.

    The thing about microtonal music is that after you get into them they don't "sound" microtonal anymore. And that's what I love about it; it's like an acknowledgement of how fundamentally human music is.

    The entire reason why I started listening to King Gizzard was because I heard the title of their first album, Flying Microtonal Banana" - specifically because of the "Microtonal" part - and it turned out to be the best "Judge an album by it's cover" moment I've ever had. Not too long ago I saw them perform in the Hollywood Bowl and they turned out to be even better in concert than they are in the studio.

    The first time I listened to a song that I was aware of being microtonal was actually the soundtrack to Akira by the Geinoh Yamashirogumi, which is worth an independent listen if you haven't already. The songs are pretty incredible.

    2 votes
    1. eyechoirs
      Link Parent
      I absolutely agree that microtones can be familiarized over time. I usually play microtonal stuff on a re-mapped keyboard with a custom set of quarter-tone intervals put into a single octave. This...

      I absolutely agree that microtones can be familiarized over time. I usually play microtonal stuff on a re-mapped keyboard with a custom set of quarter-tone intervals put into a single octave. This is effectively a mix of microtonal and non-microtonal (12-EDO) intervals, and the arbitrary mapping means I can only determine what each interval is by ear. And I find that after playing a lot, I start to have trouble quickly telling the two sets of notes apart. The effect quickly goes away if I refresh myself with a 'normal' keyboard, though.

      Also, I had no idea that the soundtrack to Akira was microtonal! It's been many years since of seen that movie. Guess I'll be re-watching that soon. Thanks for the recommendation.

      1 vote
  8. deadrachel
    Link
    Thanks for all the recs! I've done a little 14 and 24 tet and it's difficult to write

    Thanks for all the recs! I've done a little 14 and 24 tet and it's difficult to write

    2 votes
  9. JuDGe3690
    Link
    Some of my first exposure to this was Michael Harrison's album Revelation: Music in Pure Intonation, after reading a book about different piano tunings (can't recall the name,as it's been more...

    Some of my first exposure to this was Michael Harrison's album Revelation: Music in Pure Intonation, after reading a book about different piano tunings (can't recall the name,as it's been more than a decade). This album is ambient/classical, but the resonant sympathetic strings almost make non-piano sounds.

    2 votes
  10. BuckWylde
    Link
    I knew that Jute Gyte had done some microtonal stuff and always wanted to hear it, but I know I would get totally sucked into that rabbit hole. Now I want to jump in with that, Agonanist, and...

    I knew that Jute Gyte had done some microtonal stuff and always wanted to hear it, but I know I would get totally sucked into that rabbit hole. Now I want to jump in with that, Agonanist, and Scarcity.

    1 vote
  11. lexabear
    Link
    Great post! I'm a big folk/world music fan and grew up listening to it, but am not particularly familiar with the music theory behind different traditions, so this explained a lot about why I like...

    Great post! I'm a big folk/world music fan and grew up listening to it, but am not particularly familiar with the music theory behind different traditions, so this explained a lot about why I like these 'weird' harmonies. It's very true that once you get used to them, they're just 'another way of doing music'.

    Another great gamelan track is Kang Mandor by Ujang Suryana which I heard on the Putumayo compilation album Music from the Tea Lands.

    1 vote