File:Tetrachord Genera 1768.png|right|thumb|300px|Tetrachord genera of the four-string lyre, from
The History of the Arts and Sciences of the Antients, Charles Rollin (1768). The text gives a typically fanciful account of the term
chromatic.
Greek genera In ancient Greece there were three standard tunings (known by the Latin word
genus, plural
genera) of a lyre. These three tunings were called
diatonic,
chromatic, and
enharmonic, and the sequences of four notes that they produced were called
tetrachords ("four strings"). A diatonic tetrachord comprised, in descending order, two whole tones and a semitone, such as A G F E (roughly). In the chromatic tetrachord the second string of the lyre was lowered from G to G, so that the two lower intervals in the tetrachord were semitones, making the pitches A G F E. In the enharmonic tetrachord the second string of the lyre was lowered further to G, so that the two lower interval in the tetrachord were
quarter tones, making the pitches A G F E (where F is F lowered by a quarter tone). For all three tetrachords, only the middle two strings varied in their pitch.
Medieval coloration The term
cromatico (Italian) was occasionally used in the medieval and Renaissance periods to refer to the
coloration (Latin
coloratio) of certain notes. The details vary widely by period and place, but generally the addition of a colour (often red) to an empty or filled head of a note, or the "colouring in" of an otherwise empty head of a note, shortens the duration of the note. In works of the
Ars Nova from the 14th century, this was used to indicate a temporary change in metre from triple to duple, or vice versa. This usage became less common in the 15th century as open white noteheads became the standard notational form for minims (half-notes) and longer notes called
white mensural notation. Similarly, in the 16th century, a form of notating secular music, especially madrigals in was referred to as "chromatic" because of its abundance of "coloured in" black notes, that is semiminims (crotchets or quarter notes) and shorter notes, as opposed to the open white notes in , commonly used for the notation of sacred music. These uses for the word have no relationship to the modern meaning of
chromatic, but the sense survives in the current term
coloratura.
Renaissance chromaticism The term
chromatic began to approach its modern usage in the 16th century. For instance
Orlando Lasso's
Prophetiae Sibyllarum opens with a prologue proclaiming, "these chromatic songs, heard in modulation, are those in which the mysteries of the Sibyls are sung, intrepidly," which here takes its modern meaning referring to the frequent change of key and use of chromatic intervals in the work. (The
Prophetiae belonged to an experimental musical movement of the time, called
musica reservata). This usage comes from a renewed interest in the
Greek genera, especially its chromatic tetrachord, notably by the influential theorist
Nicola Vicentino in his treatise on ancient and modern practice, 1555. == Diatonic scales == {{Image frame \new Staff \with { \remove "Time_signature_engraver" } \relative c'{ c d e f g a b c\fermata \bar "||" } } Medieval theorists defined scales in terms of the Greek tetrachords. The
gamut was the series of pitches from which all the Medieval "scales" (or
modes, strictly) notionally derive, and it may be thought of as constructed in a certain way from
diatonic tetrachords. The origin of the word
gamut is explained in the article
Guidonian hand; here the word is used in one of the available senses: the all-encompassing gamut as described by
Guido d'Arezzo (which includes all of the modes). The
intervals from one note to the next in this medieval gamut are all
tones or
semitones, recurring in a certain pattern with five tones (T) and two semitones (S) in any given
octave. The semitones are separated as much as they can be, between alternating groups of three tones and two tones. Here are the intervals for a string of ascending notes (starting with F) from the gamut: :... –T–T–T–S–T–T–S–T–T–T–S–T– ... And here are the intervals for an ascending octave (the seven intervals separating the eight notes A–B–C–D–E–F–G–A) from the gamut: :T–S–T–T–S–T–T (five tones and two semitones) The white keys are the modern analog of the gamut. In its most strict definition, therefore, a diatonic scale is one that may be derived from the pitches represented in successive white keys of the piano (or a
transposition thereof). This would include the
major scale, and the
natural minor scale (same as the descending form of the
melodic minor), but not the old ecclesiastical
church modes, most of which included both versions of the "variable" note B/B.
Modern meanings There are specific applications in the music of the
Common Practice Period, and later music that shares its core features. Most, but not all writers, accept the
natural minor as diatonic. As for other forms of the minor: • "Exclusive" usage :Some writers consistently classify the other variants of the minor scale – the
melodic minor (ascending form) and the
harmonic minor – as
non-diatonic, since they are not transpositions of the white-note pitches of the piano. Among such theorists there is no agreed general term that encompasses the major and all forms of the minor scale. • "Inclusive" usage :Some writers consistently include the melodic and harmonic minor scales as diatonic also. For this group, every scale standardly used in common practice music and much similar later music is either
diatonic (the major, and
all forms of the minor) or
chromatic. • "Mixed" usage :Still other writers mix these two meanings of
diatonic (and conversely for
chromatic), and this can lead to confusions and misconceptions. Sometimes context makes the intended meaning clear. Some other meanings of the term
diatonic scale take the extension to harmonic and melodic minor even further, to be even more inclusive. In general,
diatonic is most often used inclusively with respect to music that restricts itself to standard uses of traditional major and minor scales. When discussing music that uses a larger variety of scales and modes (including much jazz, rock, and some tonal 20th-century concert music), writers often adopt the exclusive use to prevent confusion. == Chromatic scale ==