Generated collection


In diatonic set theory, a generated collection is a collection or scale formed by repeatedly adding a constant interval in integer notation, the generator, also known as an interval cycle, around the chromatic circle until a complete collection or scale is formed. All scales with the deep scale property can be generated by any interval coprime with twelve.
The C major diatonic collection can be generated by adding a cycle of perfect fifths starting at F: F-C-G-D-A-E-B = C-D-E-F-G-A-B. Using integer notation and modulo 12: 5 + 7 = 0, 0 + 7 = 7, 7 + 7 = 2, 2 + 7 = 9, 9 + 7 = 4, 4 + 7 = 11.
The C major scale could also be generated using cycle of perfect fourths, as 12 minus any coprime of twelve is also coprime with twelve: 12 − 7 = 5. B-E-A-D-G-C-F.
A generated collection for which a single generic interval corresponds to the single generator or interval cycle used is a MOS or well formed generated collection. For example, the diatonic collection is well formed, for the perfect fifth corresponds to the generator 7. Though not all fifths in the diatonic collection are perfect, a well formed generated collection has only one specific interval between scale members —which corresponds to the generic interval but to not the generator and this one differing interval is always the generator plus or minus one if the total number of specific intervals and the generic interval's corresponding specific interval are coprime. The major and minor pentatonic scales are also well formed.
The properties of generated and well-formedness were described by Norman Carey and David Clampitt in "Aspects of Well-Formed Scales", In earlier work, theoretician Erv Wilson defined the properties of the idea, and called such a scale a MOS, an acronym for "Moment of Symmetry". While unpublished, this terminology became widely known and used in the microtonal music community.
For instance, the three-gap theorem implies that every generated collection has at most three different steps, the intervals between adjacent tones in the collection.
A degenerate well-formed collection is a scale in which the generator and the interval required to complete the circle or return to the initial note are equivalent and include all scales with equal notes, such as the whole-tone scale.
A bisector is a more general concept used to create collections that cannot be generated but includes all collections which can be generated.