[ << Specialist notation ] | [Top][Contents][Index] | [ General input and output >> ] |
[ < Persian music notation ] | [ Up : Persian classical music ] | [ Persian key signatures > ] |
Persian tunings
Dastgahs can have many tunings; it has become common to name
tunings after representative dastgahs featuring them. The
following Persian tunings are provided to be used as the second
argument of the \key
command. Note that in practice not
all tunings are used in all keys.
\shur
‘Shur’ gushehs with natural 5th degree \shurk
‘Shur’ gushehs with koron 5th degree \esfahan
\mokhalefsegah
\chahargah
\mahur
the same as \major
but used in a completely different context\delkashMahur
In dastgah ‘Shur’, the 5th degree can either be natural or
koron, so two tunings are provided (\shur
, \shurk
).
Secondary dastgahs ‘Dashti’, ‘Abuata’, and ‘Bayat-e-tork’
use \shur
, the derived dastgah ‘Afshari’ uses
\shurk
. ‘Nava’ on G is like ‘Shur’ on D (a
4th apart). The tuning of ‘Segah’ is \shurk
. Other
tunings are \esfahan
(‘Homayoun’ on C is like
‘Esfahan’ on G, a 5th apart), \chahargah
, and
\mokhalefsegah
. For dastgahs ‘Mahur’ and
‘Rast-panjgah’ the same tuning \mahur
can be used.
All the various modulatory gushehs in all dastgahs can be notated
with these tunings, with the exception of ‘Delkash’ in
‘Mahur’, but traditionally the peculiar accidentals there are
notated explicitly (however, persian.ly also defines a
tuning \delkashMahur
).
As an example, Chahargah in D can be input with the following.
\include "persian.ly" \relative c' { \key d \chahargah bk'8 a gs fo r g ak g | fs ek d c d ef16 d c4 | }
[ << Specialist notation ] | [Top][Contents][Index] | [ General input and output >> ] |
[ < Persian music notation ] | [ Up : Persian classical music ] | [ Persian key signatures > ] |