Shohé Tanaka

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Shohé Tanaka was a Japanese physicist, music theorist, and inventor. He graduated from Tokyo University in 1882 as a science student. On an imperial scholarship, he was sent to Germany for doctoral studies in 1884, together with Mori Ogai. His dissertation concerned just intonation and practical means to its implementation.

Tanaka was an early advocate of 53 equal temperament as a means of closely approximating 5-limit just intonation. He was the first to obtain a clear understanding of the temperament, noticing that it tempered out both the schisma, 32805/32768, but also the kleisma, an interval of size 15625/15552 = 2-6 3-5 5 6, which is the interval by which five just minor thirds of size 6/5 exactly differs from a just tenth of size 5/2 exactly. Tanaka was the first to take note of this interval and gave it its name. Tanaka realized that the 53 equal temperament was completely characterized as a five limit temperament by the fact that it tempers out both the schisma and the kleisma.

Tanaka was also an early advocate of the use of the hexagonal lattice for representing the pitch classes of 5-limit just intonation; which he discovered independently of Hugo Riemann, and which he seems to have had a better grasp of. He also gave what would now be called a Fokker block as a way of viewing the pitch classes of 53 equal temperament.

Tanaka was an inventor as well as a theoritician. He constructed an Enharmonium able to play in 53 equal temperament, and in Vienna in 1891, demonstrated it to Anton Bruckner, who was impressed with its potential. He also constructed an early calculating machine.

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[edit] References

  • Tanaka, Shohé, Studien im Gebiete der reinen Stimmung, Vierteljahrsschrift für Musikwissenschaft vol. 6 no. 1, Friedrich Chrysander, Philipp Spitta, Guido Adler (eds.), Breitkopf und Härtel, Leipzig, pp. 1-90. [1]
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