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spaghetti lattice

🔗monz@xxxx.xxx

4/30/1999 5:08:15 AM

[Paul Erlich, TD 159.11]
> if you started adding more and more dimensions, you end up
> having to curve the prime-axis lines more and more, so I prefer
> fixing those as straight (who wants a spaghetti lattice, anyway?

Look at 'D'alessandro, like a hurricane' on the Wilson Archives:
http://www.anaphoria.com

Erv describes and draws there (Figure 10b) a 'pre-breakthru'
lattice (vintage 1968) that has curved spaghetti lines.

It's exactly what he's referring to in the line I quote in my
signature.

-monz

Joseph L. Monzo monz@juno.com
http://www.ixpres.com/interval/monzo/homepage.html
|"...I had broken thru the lattice barrier..."|
| - Erv Wilson |
--------------------------------------------------

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🔗perlich@acadian-asset.com

5/2/1999 10:33:07 AM

I wrote,

>> if you started adding more and more dimensions, you end up
>> having to curve the prime-axis lines more and more, so I prefer
>> fixing those as straight (who wants a spaghetti lattice, anyway?

Joe Monzo wrote,

>Look at 'D'alessandro, like a hurricane' on the >Wilson Archives:
>http://www.anaphoria.com

>Erv describes and draws there (Figure 10b) a >'pre-breakthru'
>lattice (vintage 1968) that has curved spaghetti >lines.

I don't think those lines are curved in concept; Erv just curved them slightly so that they wouldn't be obscured behing the circled notes.

🔗Kraig Grady <kraiggrady@xxxxxxxxx.xxxx>

5/2/1999 5:52:09 PM

>
>
> perlich@acadian-asset.com wrote:
>
>>
>> I don't think those lines are curved in concept; Erv just curved them slightly so that they wouldn't be obscured behing the circled
>> notes.
>

This is very much the case! Wilson pretty much prefers lattices where parallel line represents the same interval. 10b though shows a hexany
in the inner and outer rings as well as a cycle of six hexanies going around clockwise and/or counterclockwise. When I'm modulating
hexanies, I use this lattice alot!
-- Kraig Grady
North American Embassy of Anaphoria Island
www.anaphoria.com