The 4 Tonnetz of the chromatic scale. by Ramon Capsada Blanch published on 2022-11-17T19:06:47Z In this album I have compiled the 5 pieces that I have composed following the harmonic pattern of the Tonnetz. Using the chromatic scale, there are 4 different tonnetz, what differentiates each of them is the determined number of notes that have their chords that can be 2, 3, 4, 6 notes respectively. Each of the first four pieces (all for piano) follows the scheme of one of these Tonnetz. In the album the pieces are ordered according to this number of notes that have their chords. In the fifth piece (which is orchestral) the four Tonnetz intervenes successively in its different parts. In the following PDFs, one for each language, it is explained in some detail what Tonnetz is and the characteristics of the different types, for those who are interested or curious about the subject. Now that I have the information recently studied, it seemed convenient to make this summary. Explanation in English language: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1LxHW0Ly5Rl4RZjuPjzJj92SBHl8lzMgc/view?usp=sharing Explicación en castellano: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1QLABP3AOhZOl1-G_-BtHvhA5otWEg9Kv/view?usp=sharing Genre Classical Contains tracks Fifth chords chained with common notes by Ramon Capsada Blanch published on 2022-11-17T17:52:01Z Parsimonious Trichords by Ramon Capsada Blanch published on 2020-08-29T17:07:12Z Walking by four-note chords by Ramon Capsada Blanch published on 2021-08-29T21:48:26Z Six-note chords by Ramon Capsada Blanch published on 2022-10-06T12:32:33Z Lost on paths of chord spaces by Ramon Capsada Blanch published on 2020-12-29T20:59:38Z