Temperament - Kawai Novus NV10 Owner's Manual

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Temperament

The Temperament setting allows the tuning system used by the NV10 hybrid digital piano to be changed from the
modern 'Equal Temperament' standard to one of the various temperaments popularised during the Renaissance
and Baroque periods. It is also possible to create customised temperaments using the User Temperament function.
* This Virtual Technician setting will affect all sounds.
 Temperament types
Temperament type
Equal Temperament
(default)
(Equal)
Pure Temperament
(Pure Major/Pure Minor)
Pythagorean Temperament
(Pythagorean)
Meantone Temperament
(Meantone)
Werckmeister Temperament
(Werckmeister)
Kirnberger Temperament
(Kirnberger)
User Temperament
(User)
 Changing the Temperament type
Swipe left/right or tap the arrow buttons to change the
Temperament type.
* The Temperament type can be set to one of 8 types.
* Any changes made to the Temperament setting will remain until the
power is turned off.
* Preferred Temperament settings can be stored to the sound's
memory (in Sound mode) or a Favorite memory for convenient recall.
Please refer to pages 82 and 101 for more information.
Description
This temperament is the most popular tuning method, and divides the scale into twelve equal
semi-tones. This produces the same chordal intervals in all twelve keys, and has the advantage
of limitless modulation of the key. However, the tonality of each key becomes less characteristic
and no chord is in pure consonance.
This temperament, which eliminates dissonances for thirds and fifths, is still popular in choral
music because of its perfect harmony. Any key modulation will result in dissonances.
* The key of the temperament and major/minor setting must be correctly matched.
This temperament, which uses mathematical ratios to eliminate dissonance for fifths, is very
limited for use with chords, but produces very characteristic melodic lines.
This temperament, which uses a mean between a major and minor whole tone to eliminate
dissonance for thirds, was devised to eliminate the lack of consonances experienced with certain
fifths for the Mersenne pure temperament.
It produces chords that are more beautiful than those played with equal temperament.
These two temperaments are placed in between Meantone and Pythagorean. For music with
few accidentals, this temperament produces the beautiful chords of the mean tone, but as
accidentals increase, the temperament produces the characteristic melodies of the Pythagorean
temperament.
It is used primarily for classical music written in the Baroque era to revive the original
characteristics.
A custom temperament, created by raising or lowering the pitch of each note in the scale.
Sound Mode
Temperament type
117

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