Music theorists have long speculated that blue notes are intervals of
just intonation not derived from European
12-tone equal temperament tuning. Just intonation musical intervals derive directly from the
harmonic series. Humans naturally learn the harmonic series as infants. This is essential for many auditory activities such as understanding speech (see
formant) and perceiving tonal music. In the harmonic series, overtones of a fundamental tonic tone occur as integer multiples of the tonic frequency. It is therefore convenient to express musical intervals in this system as integer ratios (e.g. = octave, = perfect fifth, etc.). The relationship between just and equal temperament tuning is conveniently expressed using the 12-tone equal temperament cents system. Just intonation is common in music of other cultures such as the
17-tone Arabic scale and the
22-tone Indian classical music scale. In African cultures, just intonation scales are the norm rather than the exception. As the blues appears to have derived from
a cappella field hollers of African slaves, it would be expected that its notes would be of just intonation origin closely related to the musical scales of western Africa. This note is commonly slurred with a
major third justly tuned at (386 cents) refer to as a "neutral third". This bending or glide between the two tones is an essential characteristic of the blues. The barbershop quartet idiom also appears to have arisen from African American origins. It was a surprising finding that was a much more common tonal location although both were used in the blues, sometimes within the same song. It should not be surprising that blue notes are not represented accurately in the 12-tone equal temperament system, which is made up of a cycle of very slightly flattened perfect fifths (i.e. ). The just intonation blue note intervals identified above all involve prime numbers not equally divisible by 2 or 3. Prime-number harmonics greater than 3 are all perceptually different from 12-tone equal temperament notes. The blues has likely evolved as a fusion of an African just intonation scale with European 12-tone musical instruments and harmony. The result has been a uniquely American music which is still widely practiced in its original form and is at the foundation of another genre,
American jazz. ==See also==