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[[File:1743 strahle nyttpafund firstpage.png|thumb|right|first page from Daniel P. Stråhle's 1743 article "Nytt Påfund, at finna Temperaturen i stämningen"]]
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'''Strähle's construction''' is a [[geometry|geometric]] method for determining the lengths for a series of [[vibrating string]]s with uniform diameters and tensions to sound [[Pitch (music)|pitches]] in a specific rational [[Musical temperament|tempered]] [[musical tuning]]. It was first published in the 1743 ''Proceedings of the [[Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences]]'' by Swedish master [[organ (music)|organ]] maker '''Daniel Stråhle''' (1700–1746). The Academy's secretary Jacob Faggot appended a miscalculated set of pitches to the article, and these figures were reproduced by [[Friedrich Wilhelm Marpurg]] in ''Versuch über die musikalische Temperatur'' in 1776. Several German textbooks published about 1800 reported that the mistake was first identified by Christlieb Benedikt Funk in 1779, but the construction itself appears to have received little notice until the middle of the twentieth century when tuning theorist J. Murray Barbour presented it as a good method for approximating [[equal temperament]] and similar exponentials of small roots, and generalized its underlying mathematical principles.  
 
It has become known as a device for building fretted musical instruments through articles by mathematicians [[Ian Stewart (mathematician)|Ian Stewart]] and [[Isaac Jacob Schoenberg]], and is praised by them as a unique and remarkably elegant solution developed by an unschooled craftsman.
 
The name "Strähle" used in recent English language works appears to be due to a transcription error in Marpurg's text, where the old-fashioned diacritic raised "e" was substituted for the raised ring.<ref name = "marpurg">Wilhelm Friedrich Marpurg [http://www.mdz-nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn=urn:nbn:de:bvb:12-bsb10598999-6 ''Versuch über die musikalische Temperatur''] 1776 p.167-168</ref>
 
== Background ==
 
Daniel P. Stråhle was active as an organ builder in central Sweden<!--[[Gästrikland]]--> in the second quarter of the eighteenth century. He had worked as a journeyman for the important Stockholm organ builder Johan Niclas Cahman<!--(1675-1735)??-->, and in 1741<!--Norlind says 1742-->, four years after Cahman's death, Stråhle was granted his privilege for organ making. According to the system in force in Sweden at the time a privilege, which was held by only a few of the most established makers of each type of musical instruments, gave him the legal right to build and repair organs, as well as to train and examine workers, and it also served as a guarantee of the quality of the work and education of the maker.<ref>Eva Helenius-Öberg [http://www.musikforskning.se/stm/STM1977/STM1977_1HeleniusOberg.pdf "Svensk Instrumentmakeri 1720-1800 - En Preliminär Översikt"] ''Svensk Tidskrift för Musikforskning'', 1977 p.22<!--5-43--></ref> An organ by him from 1743 is preserved in its original condition at the chapel at [[Strömsholm Palace]];<ref>[http://www.royalcourt.se/royalcourt/theroyalpalaces/stromsholmpalace/thepalace/history.4.396160511584257f21800017339.html  History: Strömsholm Palace] The Royal Palaces - The Royal Court (accessed October 14, 2009)</ref> he is also known to have made [[clavichord]]s, and a notable example with an unusual string scale and construction signed by him and dated 1738 is owned by the [[Stockholm Music Museum]].<ref>Edward L. Kottick and George Lucktenberg, ''Early Keyboard Instruments in European Museums'' Indiana University Press 1997 p.196<br />Daniel Stråhle, 1738 [http://www.musikmuseet.se/samlingar/detalj.php?l=sv&iid=172&str= Klavikord, Inv. nr. N145765] - Stockholm Music Museum (accessed August 28, 2009)</ref> His apprentices included his nephew Petter Stråhle and Jonas Gren, partners in the famous Stockholm organ builders Gren & Stråhle,<ref>"Jonas Gren" ''Nordisk Familjebok'' femte band, Gernandts boktryckeri-aktiebolag, Stockholm. 1882 p.1554</ref> and according to Abraham Abrahamsson Hülphers in his book ''Historisk Afhandling om Musik och Instrumenter'' published in 1773, Stråhle himself had studied mechanics (which has been assumed to have included mathematics<ref name = "kerala">Kerala J. Snyder ''The Organ as a Mirror of its Time: North European Reflections, 1600-2000'' Oxford University Press, 2002 p.8, 15</ref>) with Swedish Academy of Science founding member [[Christopher Polhem]].<ref name = "norlind">Tobias Norlind ''Svensk Musikhistoria'' Helsingborgs Typografiska Anstalt, Helsingborg 1901. p.132<!--http://books.google.com/books?id=yyIQAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA132&dq=polhem+orgel&lr=&as_brr=3&ei=5AL9Sq_qD5u0zASZ4LSjDw&client=firefox-a#v=onepage&q=polhem%20orgel&f=false--></ref> He died in 1746 at Lövstabruk in northern Uppland.
 
Stråhle published his construction as a "new invention, to determine the ''Temperament'' in tuning, for the pitches of the clavichord and similar instruments" in an article that appeared in the fourth volume of the proceedings of the newly formed Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, which included articles by prominent scholars and Academy members Polhem, [[Carl von Linne|Carl Linnaeus]], [[Carl Fredrik Mennander]], [[Augustin Ehrensvärd]], and [[Samuel Klingenstierna]].<!--Jacob Faggot, Göran Wallerius,  and Per Elvius, Daniel Tilas, and scientific instrument maker Daniel Ekström in the same volume--> According to organologist Eva Helenius musical tuning was a subject of intense debate in the Academy during the 1740s,<ref name = "helenius1979">Eva Helenius-Öberg [http://www.musikforskning.se/stm/STM1979/STM1979_1HeleniusOberg.pdf "Cembalon i Sverige samt Frågan om det Svenska Klavikordets Uppkomst"] ''Svensk Tidskrift för Musikforskning'' 1979 p.31-42</ref> and though Stråhle himself was not a member his was the third article on practical musical topics published by the Academy—the first two were by amateur musical instrument maker, minister, and Academy member Nils Brelin<ref>"Nils Brelin" ''Nordisk Familjebok'' fjärde bandet Nordisk Familjeboks förlags aktiebolag Stockholm 1905 p.86</ref> which related inventions applicable to harpsichords and clavichords.<ref>Nils Brelin "Et Påfund at Storligen öka ''Claviers'' och ''Cymbalers'' godhet" ''Kongliga Swenska Wetenskaps Academiens Handlingar'', för Månaderne Julius, August och September 1739 vol. 1, p.81; Nils Brelin "Beskrifning öfver det nyt Påfund af en uprät-stående dubbel Clavesin, inrättad met forte och Piano til 8. graders förändring, som wid 1741. års Riksdag för Riksens Höglofl. Ständer blifwit upwist, af des inventor Nicol. Brelin ''Kongliga Swenska Wetenskaps Academiens Handlingar'', för Månaderne Julius, August och September vol.3 p.218</ref>
 
Stråhle wrote in his article that he had developed the method with "some thought and a great number of attempts" for the purpose of creating a gauge for the lengths of the strings in the temperament which he described as that which made the tempering ("sväfningar") mildest for the ear, as well comprising as the most useful and even arrangement of the pitches. His instructions produce an irregular tuning with a range of tempered intervals similar to better known tunings published during the same period, but he provided no further comments or description about the tuning itself; today it is generally considered to be an approximation of [[equal temperament]].<ref>Barbour (1951) p.65</ref> He also did not elaborate upon any advantages of his construction, which can produce accurate and repeatable results without calculations or measurement with only a straightedge and dividers; he described the construction in only five steps, and it is less iterative than  arithmetic methods described by [[Dom Bédos de Celles]] method for determining organ pipe lengths in just intonation or [[Vincenzo Galilei]] for determining string fret positions in approximate equal temperament, and geometrical methods such as those described by [[Gioseffo Zarlino]] and [[Marin Mersenne]]—all of which are much better known than Stråhle's. Stråhle concluded by stating that he had applied the system to a clavichord, although the tuning as well as the method of determining a set of sounding lengths can be used for many other musical instruments, but there is little evidence showing whether it was put into more widespread practice other than the two examples described in the article, and whose whereabouts today are unknown.
 
== Construction ==
 
[[Image:1743Strahle tabvifig4.svg|300px|right]]Stråhle instructed first to draw a line segment ''QR'' of a convenient length divided in twelve equal parts, with points labeled I through XIII. ''QR'' is then used as the base of an isosceles triangle with sides ''OQ'' and ''OR'' twice as long as ''QR'', and rays drawn from vertex ''O'' through each of the numbered points on the base. Finally a line is drawn from vertex ''R'' at an angle through a point ''P'' on the opposite leg of the triangle seven units from ''Q'' to a point ''M'', located at twice the distance from ''R'' as ''P''. The length of ''MR'' gives the length of the lowest sounding pitch, and the length of ''MP'' the highest of the string lengths generated by the construction, and the sounding lengths between them are determined by the distances from ''M'' to the intersections of ''MR'' with lines ''O I'' through ''O XII'', at points labeled 1 through 12.
 
Stråhle wrote that he had named the line ''PR'' "Linea Musica", which Helenius noted was a term Polhem had used in an undated but earlier manuscript at the Linköping Stifts- och Landsbibliotek and which is accompanied by notes from composer and geometer Harald Vallerius (1646–1716) and Stråhle's former employer J. N. Cahman.<ref name = "helenius1979" />
 
Stråhle also showed line segments parallel to ''MR'' through points ''NHS'', ''LYT'', and ''KZV'' in order to illustrate how once created the construction could be scaled to accommodate different starting pitches.
 
Stråhle stated at the conclusion of the article that he had implemented the string scale in the highest three octaves of a clavichord, although it is unclear whether this section would have been strung all with the same gauge wire under equal tension like the monochord which he wrote it resembled, and whose construction he described in more detail. He only described an indirect method of setting its tuning, however, requiring that he first establish reference pitches by transferring the corresponding string lengths to the movable bridges on a keyed thirteen string monochord whose open strings had been previously tuned in unison.{{ref|Strahle285|a}}
 
== Faggot's numerical representation ==
 
[[Image:1743Faggot table.png|250px|right]]
The article following Stråhle's was a mathematical treatment of it by '''Jacob Faggot''' (1699–1777), then secretary of the Academy of Sciences and future director of the Surveying Office, who in the same volume also contributed articles on a weight measure for lye<!--"Beskrifning på en i Sverige brukelig Lutvigt" p.239--> and methods for calculating the volume of barrels<!--"Om runda Kärils Rymdemätning'' p.200-->. Faggot was one of the first members of the Academy, and had also been member of a special commission on weights and measures.<ref>[http://runeberg.org/nfbg/0678.html "Jakob Faggot"] ''Nordisk Familjebok'' Band 7, Nordisk familjeboks förlags aktiebolag, Stockholm 1907 p.1259</ref> He apparently was not a musician, though Helenius described he was interested in musical topics from a mathematical perspective and documented that he periodically came in contact with musical instrument makers through the Academy.<ref>Eva Helenius-Öberg [http://musikforskning.se/stm/STM1987/STM1987HeleniusOberg.pdf "Kyrkoherden Nils Brelin—Mechanicus och Klaverälskare"] ''Svensk Tidskrift för Musikforskning'' 1987 p.112</ref> Helenius also presented a theory that Faggot had a more active, if indirect and posthumous influence on the construction of musical instruments in Sweden, claiming that he may have suggested the long tenor strings used in two experimental instruments built by Johan Broman in 1756 which she proposed influenced the type of clavichord built in Sweden in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries.<ref>The instruments—a harpsichord and clavichord, both in the Stockholm Music Museum collection—are notable for their extreme large size and long tenor strings, where string length doubling extends down five octaves, and three octaves and a fourth respectively. Both incorporate many of the ideas described by Brelin in an article the Academy's 1739 Proceedings; Helenius (1979)<br />
Johannes Broman, harpsichord, Stockholm 1756 [http://www.musikmuseet.se/samlingar/detalj.php?l=en&iid=120&v=2009-08-25%2012:53:08&str= Museum no. 83118] Stockholm Music Museum; Johannes Broman, clavichord, Stockholm 1756 [http://www.musikmuseet.se/samlingar/detalj.php?l=en&iid=154&v=2007-12-18%2020:23:17&str= Museum no. N57244] Stockholm Music Museum (accessed September 13, 2009)</ref>
 
{| class="wikitable" border="1" style="text-align:right; font-size:86%" align = "right"
|+Faggot's and Stråhle's string lengths and their relative pitches
|-
! note
! colspan = "2" | Faggot
! colspan = "3" | Stråhle<ref>Barbour (1951) p.68</ref>
|-
| '''note'''
| '''length'''
| '''cents'''
| '''length'''
| '''cents'''
| '''ratio'''
|-
! C
| 10000
| 0
| 10000
| 0
| 1/1
|-
! c ♯
| 9379
| 111
| 9432
| 101
| 211/199
|-
! d
| 8811
| 219
| 8899
| 202
| 109/97
|-
! d ♯
| 8290
| 325
| 8400
| 302
| 25/21
|-
! e
| 7809
| 428
| 7930
| 401
| 29/23
|-
! f
| 7365
| 529
| 7490
| 500
| 239/179
|-
! f ♯
| 6953
| 629
| 7073
| 600
| 41/29
|-
! g
| 6570
| 727
| 6676
| 699
| 253/169
|-
! g ♯
| 6213
| 824
| 6308
| 798
| 65/41
|-
! a
| 5881
| 919
| 5955
| 897
| 89/53
|-
! a ♯
| 5568
| 1014
| 5621
| 997
| 137/77
|-
! b
| 5274
| 1108
| 5303
| 1098
| 281/149
|-
! c
| 5000
| 1200
| 5000
| 1200
| 2/1
|} 
 
In his analysis of Stråhle's article Faggot outlined the trigonometric steps he had used to calculate the sounding lengths of the individual pitches, for the purpose of comparing the new tuning produced by Stråhle's method, against a tuning with pure thirds, fourths and fifths (labeled "N.1." in the table), and equal temperament, which he called only "an older temperament and [which] is introduced in [[Johann Mattheson|Mr. Mattheson's]] ''Critica Musica''" ("N.2."),<!--en äldre _Temperatur_, ock står införd i Herr _Matthesons Critica Musica_, pag. 32,--> He intended the resulting set of figures to show whether "the tuning of the pitches, following the previously described invention, satisfies the ear with pleasant sounds and with better evenness, in the ''Musical'' pitches on a keyboard instrument, and therefore teaches understanding better can judge than the old and previously known manner of tuning, when the eye can see what the ear hears." {{ref|Faggot286|b}}
 
Both articles were reproduced in a German edition of the Academy's proceedings published in 1751,<ref>Dan. P. Stråhle, Neue Erfindung die Temperatur beym Stimmen für Töne auf dem Clavier u. d. g. Instrumenten zu finden. Jacob Faggot, Trigonometrische Berechnung für die neue Temperatur zu Stimmung der Töne auf dem Claviere. ''Der Königl. Schwedischen Akademie der Wissenschaften. Abhandungen, aus der Naturlehre, Haushaltungskunst und Mechanik, auf das Jahre 1743.'' fünfter Band. aus dem Schwedischen übersetzt, von Abraham Gotthelf Kästner. Georg Christian Grund, Hamburg; Adam Heinrich Holle, Leipzig 1751 p.226-229, 230-234<!--http://gdz.sub.uni-goettingen.de/dms/load/toc/?PPN=PPN324352840--></ref> and a table of Faggot's calculated string lengths was subsequently included by [[Friedrich Wilhelm Marpurg|Marpurg]] on his 1776 ''Versuch über die musikalische Temperatur'',<ref name = "marpurg" /> who wrote that he accepted their accuracy but that rather than accomplishing "Strähle"'s stated goal, the tuning represented an unequal temperament "not even of the tolerable type."{{ref|Marpurg167}}
 
The sounding lengths calculated by Faggot are substantially different from what would be produced according to Stråhle's instructions, a fact which appears to have been first published by [[:de:Christlieb Benedict Funk|Christlieb Benedict Funk]] in ''Dissertatio de Sono et Tono'' in 1779,<ref>reviewed in "Leipzig" ''Göttingische Anzeigen von gelehrten Sachen unter der Aufsicht der Königl. Gesellschaft der Wissenschaften.'' 32 Stück (11 März, 1780) Erste Band. Johann Christian Dieterich, Göttingen, 1780<!--http://books.google.com/books?id=Ug0WAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA272--><br />The article reported that the actual tuning was nothing new since it did not differ significantly from the usual division of the octave.</ref> and the tuning he created includes intervals tuned outside of the range conventionally used in Western art music. Funk is credited the observation of this discrepancy in Gehler's ''Physikalisches Wörterbuch'' in 1791,<ref>''Dissertatio de Sono et Tono''. Leipzig. 1779. 4; cited by Johann Samuel Traugott Gehler "Ton" <!--http://books.google.com/books?id=5qEtAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA387-IA8-->''Physikalisches Wörterbuch oder Versuch einer Erklärung der vornehmsten Begriffe und Kunstwörter der Naturlehre'' Vierter Theil. Schwickertschen Verlage, Leipzig 1791 p.387-388</ref> and Fischer's ''Physikalisches Wörterbuch'' in 1804,<ref>Johann Carl Fischer "Ton" ''Physikalisches Wörterbuch oder Erklärung der vornehmsten zur Physik'' Fünfter Theil. Heinrich Dieterich, Göttingen 1804 p.26</ref> and the error was pointed out by [[Ernst Chladni]] in ''Die Akustik'' in 1830.<ref>Ernest Florens Friedrich Chladni ''Die Akustik'' Breitkopf & Härtel, Leipzig 1830 p.39</ref> No similar comments appear to have been published in Sweden during the same period.
 
These works report Faggot's mistake as the result of having used a value from the tangent instead of the sine column from the logarithmic tables. The error itself consisted of making the angle of ''RP'' about seven degrees too great, which caused the effective length of ''QP'' to increase to 8.605. This greatly exaggerated the errors of the temperament compared to the tunings he presented alongside of it, although it is not clear whether Faggot observed these apparent defects as he made no further comments about Stråhle's construction or temperament in the article.
 
[[Image:1743straahle fifthsandthirdschart.png|thumb|200px|right]]
 
== The tuning ==
 
The tuning produced following Stråhle's instructions is a rational temperament with a range of fifths from 696 to 704 cents, which is from about one cent flatter than a [[quarter-comma meantone|meantone]] fifth to two cents sharp of [[Just intonation|just]] 3:2; the range of major thirds is from 396 cents to 404 cents, or ten cents sharp of just 5/4 to three cents flat of [[Pythagorean tuning|Pythagorean]] 81/64. These intervals fall within what is considered to have been acceptable but there is no distribution of better thirds to more frequently used keys that characterize what are today the most popular of the tunings published in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, which are known as ''[[well temperament]]s''. The best fifth is pure in the key of F♯—or the pitch given by ''MB''—which has a 398 cent third, and the best third is in the key E, which has a 697 cent fifth; the best combination of the two intervals is in the key of F and the worst combination is in the key of B♭.
 
== Barbour's algebraic representation and geometric construction==
 
J. Murray Barbour brought new attention to Stråhle's construction along with Faggot's treatment of it in the 20th century. Introduced in the context of Marpurg, he included an overview of it alongside the more famous methods of determining string lengths in his 1951 book ''Tuning and Temperament'' where he characterized the tuning as an "approximation for equal temperament". He also demonstrated how close Stråhle's construction was to the best approximation the method could provide, which reduces the maximum errors in major thirds and fifths by about half a cent and is accomplished by substituting 7.028 for the length of ''QP''.
 
Barbour presented a more complete analysis of the construction in "A Geometrical Approximation to the Roots of Numbers" published six years later in ''American Mathematical Monthly''.<ref>J. Murray Barbour "A Geometrical approximation to the Roots of Numbers" ''American Mathematical Monthly'' vol. 64 (1957) p.1-9</ref> He reviewed Faggot's error and its consequences, and then derived Stråhle's construction algebraically using [[Similarity (geometry)|similar triangles]]. This takes the generalized form
 
<math>N^m \doteq \frac{OA + BA + (OA - 3BA) \times{m}}{OA +BA - 2BA\times{m}}</math>
 
Using the values from Stråhle's instructions this becomes
 
<math>\frac{24 + 10m}{24 - 7m}</math>
 
Letting <math>\scriptstyle OA-BA=1</math> so that <math>\scriptstyle OA+BA=\sqrt{N}</math> leads to a form of the first formula that is more useful for calculation
 
<math>N^m \doteq \frac{Nm+\sqrt{N}(1-m)}{m+\sqrt{N}(1-m)}</math>
 
  {{multiple image
  | direction = vertical
  | width    = 200
  | image1    = 1957Barbour strahle 2-12.svg
  | caption1  = Barbour's method
  | image2    = 1957Barbour strahle 3-13.svg
  | caption2  = Barbour's (red) and Schoenberg's (blue) methods
  }}
 
Barbour then described a generalized construction using the easily obtained [[Geometric mean|mean proportional]] for the length of ''MB'' that avoids most of the specific angles and lengths required in the original. For musical applications it is simpler and its results are slightly more uniform than Stråhle's, and it has the advantage of producing the desired string lengths without additional scaling.
 
He instructed to first draw the line ''MR'' corresponding to the larger of  the two numbers with ''MP'' the smaller, and to construct their mean proportional at ''MB''. The line that will carry the divisions is drawn from ''R'' at any acute angle to ''MR'', and perpendicular to it a line is drawn through ''B'', which intersects the line to be divided at ''A'', and ''RA'' is extended to ''Q'' such that ''RA''=''AQ''. A line is drawn from ''Q'' through ''P'', intersecting the line through ''BA'' at ''O'', and a line drawn from ''O'' to ''R''. The construction is completed by dividing ''QR'' and drawing rays from ''O'' through each of the divisions.
 
Barbour concluded with a discussion of the pattern and magnitude of the errors produced by the generalized construction when used to approximate exponentials of different roots, stating that his method "is simple and works exceedingly well for small numbers". For roots from 1 to 2 the error is less than 0.13%—about 2 cents when ''N''=2— with maxima around ''m''=0.21 and ''m''=0.79. The error curve appears roughly sinusoidal and for this range of ''N'' can be approximated by about 99% by fitting the curve obtained for ''N''=1, <math>f(m)=m(1-m)(1-2m)</math>. The error increases rapidly for larger roots, for which Barbour considered the method inappropriate; the error curve resembles the form <math>\scriptstyle f(x)=x(1-x^{2a})</math> with maxima moving closer to ''m''= 0 and ''m''=1 as ''N'' increases.
 
===Schoenberg's refinements of Barbour's methods===
 
 
The paper was published with two notes added by its referee, [[Isaac Jacob Schoenberg]]. He observed that the formula derived by Barbour was a fractional linear transformation and so called for a perspectivity,<!--"the linear fractional transformation clearly called for a perspectivity"--> and that since three pairs of corresponding points on the two lines uniquely determined a projective correspondence<!--"since a projective correspondence on lines is uniquely determined by three pairs of corresponding points,"--> Barbour's condition that ''OA'' be perpendicular to ''QR'' was irrelevant. The omission of this step allows a more convenient selection of length for ''QR'', and reduces the number of operations.
 
Schoenberg also noted that Barbour's equation could be viewed as an interpolation of the exponential curve through the three points ''m''=0, ''m''=1/2 and ''m''=1, which he expanded upon in a short paper titled "On the Location of the Frets on the Guitar" published in ''American Mathematical Monthly'' in 1976.<ref>Isaac J. Schoenberg "On the Location of the Frets on a Guitar" ''American Mathematical Monthly'' vol. 83, 1976 p.550-2.</ref> This article concluded with a brief discussion of Stråhle's fortuitous use of <math>\scriptstyle \frac {41}{29}</math> for the half-octave, which is one of the convergents of the [[Square root of two#Continued fraction representation|continued fraction expansion]] of the <math>\scriptstyle \sqrt{2}</math>, and the best rational approximation of it for the size of the denominator.
 
===Stewart and continued fractions===
 
 
The use of fractional approximations of <math>\scriptstyle \sqrt{2}</math> in Stråhle's construction was expanded upon by Ian Stewart, who wrote about the construction in "A Well Tempered Calculator" in his 1992 book ''Another Fine Math You've Got Me Into...'' <ref>Ian Stewart ''Another Fine Math You've Got Me Into...'' Courier Dover Publications, 2004 p.246-252</ref> as well as "Faggot's Fretful Fiasco" included in ''Music and Mathematics'' published in 2006. Stewart considered the construction from the standpoint of projective geometry, and derived the same formulas as Barbour by treating it from the start as a fractional linear function, of the form <math>\scriptstyle y= \frac{(ax+b)}{(cx+d)}</math>, and he pointed out that the approximation for <math>\scriptstyle \sqrt{2}</math> implicit in the construction is <math>\scriptstyle \frac {17}{12}</math>, which is the next lower convergent from the half octave it produces. This is the consequence of the function simplifying to <math>\scriptstyle \frac{p+2q}{p+q}</math> for ''m''=0.5 where <math>\scriptstyle \frac{p}{q}</math> is the generating approximation.
 
==Similar methods applied to musical instruments==
[[File:1833 Kuetzing tab1fig4 1916wolfenden fig5.svg|thumb|275px|right|Kützing's construction (in black), and part of Wolfenden's construction (51.5° in red and 35:13 in blue)]]
 
The geometric and arithmetic methods for dividing monochords as well as musical instrument fretboards compiled by Barbour were for the stated purpose of illustrating the different tunings each represents or implies, and Schoenberg's and Stewart's works retained similar focus and references. Three textbooks on piano building that are not included by them show similar constructions to Stråhle's for designing new instruments but treat the tuning of their pitches independently; both constructions employ a non-perpendicular form as suggested by Schoenberg's observation in Barbour's "A Geometrical approximation to the Roots of Numbers", and one achieves optimal results while the other demonstrates an application with a root other than 2.
 
===Kützing===
 
Carl Kützing, an organ and piano maker in Bern during the middle of the 19th century wrote in his first book on piano design, ''Theoretisch-praktisches Handbuch der Fortepiano-Baukunst'' from 1833, that he devised a simple method of determining the sounding lengths in an octave after reading of the different geometric constructions described in an issue of Marpurg's ''Historisch-kritischen Beitragen zur Aufnahme der Musik'';<!--Moses Mendelsohn, zweyte Aufgave, fuenfte Band--> he stated that the divisions would be very accurate and that the construction could be used for fretting guitars. 
 
Kützing introduced the construction following a description of a large [[sector (instrument)|sector]] to be made for the same purpose. He did not include either method in ''Das Wissenschaftliche der Fortepiano-Baukunst'' published eleven years later, where he calculated lengths using approximately 18:35 ratios between octave lengths and proposed a new method with a non-continuous curve adjusted for actual wire diameters in order to reduce tonal differences from jumps in tension.<ref>Carl Kützing. [http://books.google.com/books?id=2T8uAAAAYAAJ ''Das Wissenschaftliche der Fortepiano-Baukunst'']. J. F. J. Dalp. Bern und Chur, 1844</ref>
 
Kützing instructed to extend a line segment ''bc''—representing a known sounding length—at 45 degrees to the line ba, and from its octave at point ''d'' located midway between ''b'' and ''c'', to extend a line perpendicular to ''ba'' intersecting it at ''e'', then to divide ''de'' into 12 equal parts. The point ''a'' on ''ab'' is located by transferring the lengths of ''de'', ''db'', from ''e'' away from ''b'', and rays extended from ''a'' through the points dividing ''de'' and intersecting ''bc'' to locate the different endpoints of the string lengths from ''c''.<ref>Carl Kützing. Theoretisch-praktisches Handbuch der Fortepiano-Baukunst. J. F. J. Dalp. Bern und Chur, 1833. p.20-21</ref>
 
This arrangement is equivalent to using the mean proportional to locate ''a''.
 
It was reproduced by Giacomo Sievers, a Russian-born piano maker working in Naples, in his 1868 book ''Il Pianoforte'', where he claimed it was the best practical method for determining sounding lengths of strings in a piano. Sievers did not describe its source or extent of its use, and did not explain any theory behind it. He also did not suggest it had any use beyond designing pianos.<ref>Giacomo Sievers, Il Diagramma per lo spartimento delle corde. [http://quod.lib.umich.edu/cgi/t/text/text-idx?c=scores;cc=scores;view=toc;idno=1466882.0001.001 ''Il pianoforte; Guida Pratica per Costruttori, Accordatori, Dilettanti e Possessori di Pianoforti''] Stabilimento Tipografico Ghio, Napoli 1868. p.103-104</ref>
 
===Wolfenden===
 
English piano maker Samuel Wolfenden presented a construction for determining all but the lowest sounding plain string lengths in a piano in ''A Treatise on the Art of Pianoforte Construction'' published in 1916; like Sievers, he did not explain whether this was an original procedure or one in common use, commenting only that is was "a very practical method of determining string lengths, and in past years I used it altogether". He added that at the time of writing he found calculating the lengths directly "somewhat easier" and had preceded the description with a table of computed lengths for the top five octaves of a piano.<ref>Samuel Wolfenden, String Lengths and Diameters. ''A Treatise on the Art of Pianoforte Construction'' 1916, reprinted by Unwin Brothers, London, 1975 p.23-33</ref> He included frequencies in equal temperament, but only published aural tuning instructions in his 1927 supplement.
 
Wolfenden explicitly advocated equalizing the tension of the plain strings which he proposed to accomplish in the upper range by combining a 9:17 ratio between octave lengths with a uniform change in string diameters (achieving slightly more consistent results over the otherwise similar system published by Siegfried Hansing in 1888<ref>Siegfried Hansing [http://books.google.com/books/about/The_pianoforte_and_its_acoustic_properti.html?id=zNc5AAAAIAAJ ''The Pianoforte and its Acoustic Properties''] second edition, translated by Emmy Hansing-Perzina. Siegfried Hansing, Schwerin i. M., 1904 p.84</ref>), in contrast to Sievers scale whose stringing schedule results in higher tension for the thicker, lower sounding pitches.
 
Like Sievers, Wolfenden constructed all of the sounding lengths on a single segment at 45 degrees from the base lines for the rays, starting with points located for each C in the range designed at 54, 102, 192.5, 364 and 688mm from the upper point. The four vertices for the rays are then located by the intersections of the horizontal base lines extended from the lower C in each octave with a second line angled from the upper starting point for the string line, however, which he specified should both be at 51.5 degrees to the base lines and that the base lines have a 35:13 ratio with the difference between the two octave lengths.
 
Wolfenden's method approximates <math>\scriptstyle \sqrt{17/9}</math> with roughly <!--<math>\scriptstyle 17/9-(sin(45)*(17/9)*(1+1/tan(51.5)))/((9/4)*(1+(17/9)/tan(51.5))+1) ~ </math> (~1.3777)--> 1.3775<!--<math>\scriptstyle 17/9-(sin(pi/4)/sin(B)+1)*280/117*1/cos(pi/4) ~</math> (~1.3774)-->, and is equivalent to <math>\scriptstyle OA/OB=8.27</math> in Barbour's form. Compensating for its smaller octaves this produces 596 cent half octaves, an error of about 1mm at note F4 (f&prime;) compared with his calculated figures.
 
==Notes==
 
*{{note|Strahle285|a}}Stråhle (1743) p.&nbsp;285-286:<blockquote><p>"Enligit detta påfund, har jag bygt et ''Monochordium'', i så måtto, at det fullan hafver 13 strängar, ock skulle dy snarare heta ''Tredekachordium'', men som alla strängarna, äro af en ''nummer'', längd ock thon ; så behåller jag det gamla namnet.</p><p>"Til dessa tretton strängar, är lämpadt et vanligit ''Manual'', af en ''Octave''; men under hvar sträng, sedan de noga äro stämde i ''unison'', sätter jag löfa stallar, å de ''puncter'', ock till de längder fra ''crepinerne'', som min nu beskrefne ''Linea  Musica'' det äfkar : derefter hvar sträng undfår sin behöriga thon.</p><p>"Det ''Claver'', som jag här til förfärdigat är jämnväl i de tre högre ''Octaverne'', noga rättadt efter min ''Linea Musica'', til strängarnes längd ock skilnad : ock på det stämningen, må utan besvär, kunna ske ; så är mit ''Monochordium'' så giordt, at det kan ställas ofvan på ''Claveret'', då en ''Octav'' på ''Claveret'' stämmes, thon för thon, mot sina tillhöriga thoner på ''Monochordium'', derefter alla de andra thonerne, å ''Claveret'', stämmas ''Octavs''-vis ; den stamningen, är ock för örat lättast at värkställa, emedan den bör vara fri för svängningar."</p></blockquote>
 
*{{note|Faggot286|b}}Faggot (1743) p.&nbsp;286:<blockquote>"Huruvida thonernes stämning, efter förut beskrefne Påfund, förnöger hörsten, med behageligare ljud, ock med bättre likstämmighet, i de ''Musikaliska'' thonerne å et ''Claver'', än de gamla ock härtils bekanta stämnings sätt, derom lärer förståndet bättre kunna döma, när ögat får se det örat hörer."</blockquote>
 
*{{note|Marpurg167}}Marpurg (1776) p.&nbsp;167-168:<blockquote>"Ich muss gestehen, dass sich dieser Aufsatz mit Vergnügen lesen lässet, und dass ich von der Richtigkeit der vom Hrn. Jacob Faggot, durch eine sehr mühsame trigonometrische Berechnung der Strählischen Linien, gefunden Zahlen voellig überzeuget bin. Nur muss ich hinzufügen, dass die gefunden Zahlen nicht geben, was sie geben sollen, und was Hr. Strähle suchte, nemlich eine Temperatur, welche das Schweben am gelindesten für das Gehör macht, und alle Töne in gehörige Gleichstimmigkeit setzet. Es enthalten nemlich selbige nichts anders als eine ungleichschwebende Temperatur, und nicht einmal von der erträglichsten Art."</blockquote>
 
==References==
[[File:1779 funk desonoettono titlepage.jpg|thumb|Title page from Christlieb Benedict Funk's ''De Sono et Tono Disserit.'' from 1779]]
 
*Daniel P. Stråhle "Nytt Påfund, at finna ''Temperaturen'' i stämningen, för thonerne å Claveret ock dylika Instrumenter" [http://books.google.com/books?id=Ir44AAAAMAAJ ''Kongliga Swenska Wetenskaps Academiens Handlingar''] för Månaderne October, November, ock December, vol. IV, Lorentz Ludewig Grefing, Stockholm 1743 p.&nbsp;281-285
*Jacob Faggot "Trigonometrisk uträkning på en ny ''Temperatur'', för thonernes stämning å Claveret" ''Kongliga Swenska Wetenskaps Academiens Handlingar'' för Månaderne October, November, ock December vol. IV, Lorentz Ludewig Grefing, Stockholm 1743 p.&nbsp;286-291
*Ian Stewart "Faggot's Fretful Fiasco" John Fauvel, Raymond Flood, Robin Wilson, ed. ''Music and Mathematics'' Oxford University Press 2006 p.&nbsp;68-75
*J. Murray Barbour [http://www.archive.org/stream/turningandtemper027139mbp/ ''Tuning and Temperament: A Historical Survey''] Michigan State College College Press, East Lansing 1951 p.&nbsp;65-68
<references />
 
{{DEFAULTSORT:Strahle Construction}}
[[Category:Geometry]]
[[Category:String instrument construction]]
[[Category:Musical tuning]]

Latest revision as of 23:26, 11 November 2014

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