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  2. Stretched tuning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stretched_tuning

    Stretched tuning is a detail of musical tuning, applied to wire-stringed musical instruments, older, non-digital electric pianos (such as the Fender Rhodes piano and Wurlitzer electric piano), and some sample-based synthesizers based on these instruments, to accommodate the natural inharmonicity of their vibrating elements.

  3. Jankó keyboard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jankó_keyboard

    A Jankó keyboard. The Jankó keyboard is a musical keyboard layout for a piano designed by Paul von Jankó, a Hungarian pianist and engineer, in 1882.It was designed to overcome two limitations on the traditional piano keyboard: the large-scale geometry of the keys (stretching beyond a ninth, or even an octave, can be difficult or impossible for pianists with small hands), and the fact that ...

  4. Stringed instrument tunings - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stringed_instrument_tunings

    Tuning is given for a typical single-keyboard, 5-octave instrument, for the main choir of strings. Only lowest and highest octaves are shown; intervening notes are tuned chromatically. Often tuning is in some musical temperament other than 12-tone equal temperament (common on modern pianos). Harzither: 8 strings 4 courses. GG • CC • EE ...

  5. File:ANSI Keyboard Layout Diagram with Form Factor.svg

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:ANSI_Keyboard_Layout...

    English: Correctly labeled modifier keys for the ANSI Keyboard layout. This diagram includes denotations for the common form factors for 60%, 80%, and 100% sized keyboards. Key sizes are also correct, relative to each other, based on the 1x model.

  6. Wikipedia : Manual of Style/Stringed instrument tunings

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Stringed_instrument_tunings

    A tuning is a sequence of pitches to which the strings are tuned. A stringing is a set of string gauges (and very occasionally other string parameters) that support one or more tunings. Just as many stringings support more than one tuning, so for many tunings there is more than one common stringing.

  7. Musical temperament - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Musical_temperament

    The most widely known example of this is the use of equal temperament to address problems of older temperaments, allowing for consistent tuning of keyboard and fretted instruments and enabling musical composition in, and modulation among, the various keys.

  8. Meantone temperament - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meantone_temperament

    Meantone temperaments are musical temperaments; [1] that is, a variety of tuning systems constructed, similarly to Pythagorean tuning, as a sequence of equal fifths, both rising and descending, scaled to remain within the same octave.

  9. Isomorphic keyboard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isomorphic_keyboard

    An isomorphic keyboard is a musical input device consisting of a two-dimensional grid of note-controlling elements (such as buttons or keys) on which any given sequence and/or combination of musical intervals has the "same shape" on the keyboard wherever it occurs – within a key, across keys, across octaves, and across tunings.