
Ranking the Intervals (Still More About Series) (entry for 12/27/2024) You may have already noticed, but whether or not you have, there’s a strange feature about the idea of Partials or the Overtone Series that we’ve talked about for the last two posts: namely, that as you go up the ‘steps’ of the series, each interval involved is smaller than the one before. Go back to the Partials of the note A110 that we already covered extensively. (An illustration of the intervals involved is at the head of this post.) The distance from the first partial (the fundamental) to the second one (the first overtone) is exactly one octave. To be more precise, the next partial up from the fundamental A110 is A220, an octave higher. The next ‘step’ is from A220 to E330, which is a perfect fifth (in ‘pure’ tuning). The next one up is from E330 to A440, which is a perfect fourth. Then from A440 to C-sharp 550 is a major third. And from C-sharp 550 to E660 is a minor third. In other words, each subsequent ste...