You would diagnose this with a test of major thirds ascending cromatically. Jon Page Harwich Port, Cape Cod, Mass. (jpage@capecod.net) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ At 05:50 PM 11/27/97 -0500, you wrote: >Dear Ralph: > >I have always been suspicious of what George Defebaugh called the >"outside sixth, inside third," which does, indeed make up a dominant >seventh in the third inversion. But what does it tell you? If they are >equal beating, fine; but suppose one is faster than the other, which note >would you then correct? > >Suppose the F sixth (F-D) is faster than the G third (G-B). Is the D too >high? Is the F too low? (either of which will make the sixth beat >faster). Is the G too high? Is the B too low? (either of which will make >the sixth beat faster). Which note would you change? > >Fred > >On Wed, 26 Nov 1997, ralph m martin wrote: > > >--------------------------------------------------------------------------- --- >Fred W. Tremper, RPT >Morehead State University >Morehead, KY 40351 >f.trempe@morehead-st.edu >--------------------------------------------------------------------------- --- > > > Jon Page Harwich Port, Cape Cod, Mass. (jpage@capecod.net) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ When your ISP is down, you are virtually cut off from the world. ~~~~~~~~`~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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