Cyclic set


In music, a cyclic set is a set, "whose alternate elements unfold complementary cycles of a single interval." Those cycles are ascending and descending, being related by inversion since complementary:
s producing the cyclic set
In the above example, as explained, one interval and its complement, creates two series of pitches starting from the same note :
P7: 8 +7= 3 +7= 10 +7= 5...1 +7= 8
I5: 8 +5= 1 +5= 6 +5= 11...3 +5= 8
According to George Perle, "a Klumpenhouwer network is a chord analyzed in terms of its dyadic sums and differences," and, "this kind of analysis of triadic combinations was implicit in," his, "concept of the cyclic set from the beginning".
A cognate set is a set created from joining two sets related through inversion such that they share a single series of dyads.
0 7 2 9 4 11 6 1 8 3 10 5 (0
+ 0 5 10 3 8 1 6 11 4 9 2 7 (0
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= 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 (0
The two cycles may also be aligned as pairs of sum 7 or sum 5 dyads. All together these pairs of cycles form a set complex, "any cyclic set of the set complex may be uniquely identified by its two adjacency sums," and as such the example above shows p0p7 and i5i0.