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Friday, July 26, 2019

250. THE MANDO-LELE (UKULELE IN CHARANGO BODY IN THE PITCH OF MANDOLIN) OR GUITALELE WITH NYLON STRINGS


 THE MANDO-LELE OR GUITARLINO WITH NYLON STRINGS I have also a charango-ukulele or charango-mandolin (GUITARLINO, TAROPATCH ) of 37.5 cm scale length (same as he concert ukulele) , and with nylon strings, with the same tuning   (D5:D4, G4:G4, B4:B4, E5:E5). in other words with the BODY SIZE OF CONCERT UKULELE BUT tuning of  double string  soprano ukulele . The soprano ukulele has scale length about that of a mandolin. 
The 37,5 cm scale length corresponds to the E4 string of the standard guitar to the D5 note.






Notice that the normal tuning of a charango is (G4 G4 - C5 C5 - E5 E4 - A4 A4 -E5 E5)
Therefore the range of the suggested tuning (D5:D4, G4:G4, B4:B4, E5:E5) has as lowest the D4, which is lower than the lowest of the normal charango tuning the E4. 

For the strings I used strings from the charango set of strings. I used the charango high 1st pair E5:E5, for the high 1st pair of the charango-mandolin. I used the pair C5:C5 of the charango strings for the pair B4:B4 of the charango-mandolin. I used the pair A4:A4 of the charango or the pair G4:G4 for the pair G4:G4 of the new charango-mandolin. And I used the re-entrance pair E5:E4 for the re-entrance pair D5:D4 of the charango mandolin. In order to have the range of the classical tenor ukulele  or of the mandolin one may resort to the next octaved tuning:  (D5:D4, G3:G4, B4:B4, E5:E5). In which case only the G3 string of the 3rd pair G3:G4 is different from the original tuning (D5:D4, G4:G4, B4:B4, E5:E5). We may use a G3 string of a ukulele.

The fretboard of this charango-mandolin is of larger width than the width of the fretboard of a mandolin, which makes it easier to play chords. The sound of the nylon strings somehow in the chords is better too and hides better the slight out of tuning that may occur.
In order to have even lower the range one may resort to the next octaved tunings (D3:D4, G3:G4, B4:B4, E5:E5). or even lower to the (D3:D4, G3:G4, B3:B4, E4:E5). For the E4 of the E4:E5 one may utilize an guitar D3 string. For the B3 of the B3:B4 one may utilize a guitar A2-string. For the G3 of the G3:G4 one may utilize a guitar E2-string. For the D3 of the D3:D4 one may utilize a guitar E2-string.

The body can be also of a concert-size ukulele with 8-strings or TAROPATCH, of 38 cm scale length , but instead of tuning this taropatch as a ukulele we tune as above at the range of mandolin and charango, in other words as a tuning of the sopranino ukulele but with double strings. The taropatch has scale length as the concert ukulele of  37-38 cn 
The 38 cm scale length corresponds to the E4 string of the standard guitar to the D5 note.
The 33 cm scale length corresponds to the E4 string of the standard guitar to the E5 note.

Friday, July 12, 2019

249. THE UPPER REGISTRY FLUTES (28< LENGTH/BORE ID RATIO< 48) FOR HAPPIER MELODIES


THE UPPER REGISTRY WHISTLES (28< Length / bore ID ratio  <48) FOR HAPPIER MELODIES
In  this category belongs also the concert flute (especially if we substitute the upper head join with a fipple) Its ratio L/B=33. Other traditional flutes in this category are many recorders and also it is the Ney if we adopt a fipple instead of rim-blowing and also the kaval flutes too. Such types of  flutes and whistles are designed for happier music and melodies where we start at the higher registry (octave) we may move to the lower registry (octave) and we end the melody in the higher registry (octave_ again. Such whistles when blowing normally they play directly to the 2nd registry (octave) while when we want to play to the lower 1st registry (octave) we have to underblow carefully. This is  the inverse with the standard whistles that when we blow normally they play in the 1st registry and in order to play in the 2nd registry we must overblow.
In the next picture we see two such tunable whistles one in major D4 and one in major C4 with L/B ratios respectively the D4  55cm/1.65cm=33.33 and the C4 63cm/1.65cm= 38.18

I have made on more in F4 with L/B ratio equal to 47.5cm/1.2 cm=39.58


The next photo is of a tunable G4 , PVC Romanian Caval (double and simple harmonic minor with 2+4 front holes and thump at F#). Length/Bore=42.cm/1.2cm=35. See also post 242

248. A DIFFERENTLY EFFICIENT TUNABLE ROMANIAN CAVAL IN A3 WITH THUMB HOLE FIPPLE AND FROM PVC


This PVC Romanian caval has inner diameter 20 mm and Lenghth/bore  ratio  L/B=74 cm/2 cm=37. Therefore it is in the category (see post 199 or 248 ) of the upper registry flutes and not overtone flutes. In other words it can play with the 1st harmonic the 1st octave decently but the 2nd harmonic it plays easier the 2nd octave.


We remind the reader that in the online notes here we call a sequence of 7 interval that sum-up to 12 semitones a mode and all cyclic permutations of it as the scale that the mode belongs. Thus any cyclic permutation of the 2-1-1-3-1-1-3  is considered again as the parachromatic Byzantine scale but at a different mode of it.
See also the post about the parachromatic Byzantine flute (3rd chromatic Byzantine minor scale) post 235 and post 242 about how to convert a Romanian caval to play both the harmonic minor and double harmonic minor
Other very well known 7-notes Byzantine scales but different from the parachromatic or 3rd Byzantine chromatic minor , also in  the chromatic family are the harmonic minor or 1st Byzantine chromatic minor (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minor_scale#Harmonic_minor_scale ) and double harmonic minor or 2nd Byzantine chromatic minor (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Double_harmonic_scale).


This PVC Romanian Caval has a thumb hole and it is also tunable . Normally without the tump hole the 2+3 front holes in Romanian Caval flute with fipple plays the A4-B4-C5-D#5-E5-F5  in semitones 2-1-3-1-1-4 The tump here plays the note  G#5 thus all the A4 double harmonic minor scale 2-1-3-1-1-3-1  is playable.

The fipple is from an Irish Low D4 whistle, with rather thin corridor to Blow air and a sound hole of size 15 mm (vertically to the tube) and 7 mm or 10 mm longitudinally.

The size of the lowest 2 holes is only 7 mm which allows the fipple to play also the 1st octave with the 1st harmony quite well and in stable way without being necessary a special buzzing embouchure : A3-B3-C4-D#4-E4-F4-G#4-A4. If the flute would be made from 16.5 inner diameter PVC tube  the 1st octave  by  the 1st harmonic would be playable only with the special buzzing embouchure mm, but the 3rd and 4th harmonic would be payable only by overblowing and without partial opening of the thump hole. 

But the sizes of the rest of the 3+1 holes is 10 mm which gives more benefits. The benefits are that the 3rd hole that normally plays D#3 or D#4 can very easily with partial holing play also D3 or D4 thus having the scale A3-B3-C4-D4-E4-F4-G#4-A4 or in semitones 2-1-2-2-1-3-1, which is the A3 harmonic minor. Some caval flute add a hole between the 2nd C4 and the 3rd D#4 to do that, This is necessary only when the holes are small size. With 10 mm size holes this is easily done with partial holing.
Also the thumb hole which is again 10mm size can easily play  by partial  holing the G4 , thus together with the D3 play the natural minor A3-B3-C4-D4-E4-F4-G4-A4.

Because the bore is quite large (20 mm) and the lower holes also large size, the higher overtones require something more than overblowing.

The 2nd overtone requires simply overblowing. But the 3rd and 4th overtones require partial opening of the thumphole to help them.

We see this efficient PVC Romanian caval in  A3 with thump hole in the next photos








VERSION OF THE FLUTE  IN  DOUBLE HARMONIC MINOR  WHICH IS CLOSED OR INVARIANT TO THE 3RD OVERTONE 
Nevertheless, the 3rd harmonic and on the same holes  in such a flute (and on the original 6-notes Romanian  Caval too) will not give notes inside the double harmonic minor as it does say in  a major mode flute . The double harmonic minor has a mode, the 5th mode which is symmetric to shift higher by an interval of 5th and in interval structure it is 1-3-1-2-1-3-1. Therefore if we open holes for this 5th mode of the double harmonic minor we will get again a flute in double harmonic minor which has the additional advantage that the 3rd overtones on the same holes gives again notes of the same scale.

E.g. if the flute starts again from a, the notes that we should open holes are the 

All holes closed gives a4
1st hole open gives a#4
2nd hole open gives c#4
3rd hole open gives d5
4th hole open gives  e5
5th hole open gives  f5
6th thumb hole gives g#5


This scale is a mode of the d5 double harmonic minor . By partial holing on the 2nd hole and on the 6th hole we may play also the d5 simple harmonic minor and natural d5 minor .





Wednesday, July 10, 2019

247. FROM THE NEY TO THE TROMBONE AND VALVED TRUMPETS: FULLY CHROMATIC OVERTONES FLUTES (NEY OR CHROMATIC FUJARA) FLUTE WITH FIPPLE WITH MEMBRANE OR SAX MOUTHPIECE. (FIPPLE OR REED VALVED-LIKE AEROPHONE TRUMPETSOR TROMBONES)


The Ney flute is very famous and loved my many, but also as it is rim-blowing and in a way different from the quena flutes or Chinese Xiao, or japanese Shakuhachi is considered quite difficult.

To make it more easy I designed and crafted one from PVC but not as rim-blowing flute but with fipple with membrane (see post  243) . This fipple with membrane gives to it almost the same breathy and harsh sound as the classical rim blowing Ney. But because we cannot create easily shifts of the pitch by one semitone with the mouth only as with the baspare (rim blowing mouthpiece) and in order to have the Ney fully chromatic (all 12 notes ogf the octave) with the 2nd and 3rd harmonic , I added one more hole one semitone away higher than the highest front hole of the classical Ney.

It is essentially an one octave , fully chromatic (all 12-notes of the octave) direct blowing flute.

In the next 2 photo we see a  C5 full chromatic upper  registry  whistle (see post 199 or 248)  that utilizes practically the 2nd and 3rd harmonic and with the 6 holes to give the chromatic half octave C5 C5# D5 D#5 E5 F5 F#5 with the 2nd harmonic and with the 3rd harmonic to give on the same holes the G5  G#5 A5 A#5 B5 C5 C#5 gives thus a full chromatic 12 notes octave. It is the same  idea of the valves in a trumpet and slide of a trombone (and close to the main idea of a Ney). The 1s tharmonic  is hardly listened or of sound it is fused with the 2nd harmonic due to the membrane fipple (see post 243) and gives to this part of the 5th octave a more bass sound. It is made again by PVC tube of external diameter 25 mm. If we would utilize 20 mm or 12 mm tube so that it would become an overtone flute and it would be even better garanteed that the 1st harmonic is not playable as in the (valved) trumpet too. The length to bore ratio Length/bore=34 , thus strictly speaking an upper registry whistle (see post 199 ) rather than an overtone whistle . That is why it does not give practically more than the 3rd harmonic (quite large size bore). The idea is the same with the trumpet and the valves that produce 5 notes each a semitone away from the previous. We see 7 holes in the front (there is not thump hole) but the highest pitch hole is a tuning hole for C5, thus 6 holes covered 3+3 by the two hands. These 5 notes that divide a 5th (also a 4th) give the concept of ancient Greek 4-chords and 5-chords as basic building block for an octave scale. If we close that tuning hole too it will give a Bb3 note as in a C4 Ney. The whistle has a breathy harsh sound due to the membrane fipple sounds almost exactly like a C4 Ney flute (which normally is rim blowing ) and if we exclude the 1st harmonic of the Ney it is identical with what the Ney is playing (of course the semitones are in the equal tempered scale rather than deviating oriental scale)


I remind the reader (see post 243)  that due to the same laws of acoustics we may use on the same body tube besides a  fipple also a quena rim with notch blowing mouthpiece and also a tenor sax or clarinet mouthpiece. Except that in the latter case we will have only the odd number overtones (1st 3rd, 5th etc)



A 2nd version of the Ney or chromatic fujara, or aerophine valved-like trumpet is the next in the picture at Eb4 root note, from PVC of 12mm external diameter, and mouthpiece from ordinary soprano whistles.

It has a  chromatic 6+1 fingering system as if of an ordinary whistle except  it is not in diatonic steps but steps of one semitone. The open hole of the tume gives  Eb when all else are closed , and the rest 6 front holes give correspondingly E4, F4, F#4 G4 G#4 A4 . There is also a 7nth hole and thump hole as in the 2nd photo, which is not really necessary but as in quenas it helps also by partial opening as registry key that helps triggering easier the 3rd overtone. It gives the note A4 (which also can be give if all front and thump hole are closed and we pass from the 2nd to the 3rd overtone). These holes when used for higher overtones are as correct as the valved in a trumpet or brass instrument.
No more not less correct.
The idea to derive a full chromatic scale with this 6+1 fingering system is excatly as the idea to derive all the chromatic scale with the 7 positions valves in a trumpet. Except that in the trumpet by each valve-step the pitch lowers by a semitone while here with each additional hole the pitch increases by one semitone. As with a  trombone or valved trumpet a fully chromatic non-repeating sequence of notes with the 1st 5 harmonics would require

2ND OVER TONE: ALL HOLES FROM TUBE BOTTOM HOLE   TILL  THE 6TH HIGHEST FRONT HOLE 
notes Eb4 E4 F4 Gb4 G4 Ab4 A4 . 
3RD OVERTONE: ALL HOLES FROM TUBE BOTTOM HOLE   TILL THE  5TH HIGHEST FRONT HOLE
notes Bb4 B4 C5 Db5 D5,

4TH OVERTONE: ALL HOLES FROM TUBE BOTTOM HOLE   TILL  THE  4TH HIGHEST FRONT HOLE
notes Eb5 E5 F5 Gb5 . 
5TH OVERTONE: ALL HOLES FROM TUBE BOTTOM HOLE   TILL  THE  3RD HIGHEST FRONT HOLE
notes G5 Ab5 A5 

As with a valved  trumpet or with the slided trombone, as we move from the 1st hole to the higher holes the required speed and pressure of  blowing increases, but when we reach at the  an appropriate higher  hole it is the same as with that of the next overtone at the bottom tube  hole of the fingering as above. If we layout the notes per overtone and hole it will be a triangular matrix over the 2 dimensions (overtones)x(holes)

At the end of the post is for comparison the essential rage of a valved trumpet




 I  have crafted one more such chromatic overtone flute at Bb4 with the 6+1 chromatic fingering system. It is in the range of the standard piccolo trumpet although it is about 7 cm long .


Sunday, July 7, 2019

246. THE TRINITY OF GENDERS OF SCALES BASED ON OVERTONES, UNDERTONES, EQUAL TEMPERED (BACH) SCALE AND THE CORRESPONDING ANCIENT GREEK MUSICAL GENDERS : ENHARMONIC, CHROMATIC , DIATONIC.

245. THE FIRST 4 BLUE NOTES OF THE DIATONIC SCALE , THE SERIES OF OVERTONES AND CELEBRATED IN VARIOUS CULTURES CHROMATIC MINOR SCALES FROM THEM.

We remind the reader that in the online notes here we call a sequence of 7 interval that sum-up to 12 semitones a mode and all cyclic permutations of it as the scale that the mode belongs.

As it was mentioned in post 40 the order of how much harmonic is  an interval (and interval is more harmonic than another means that the two notes have a  greater number of common harmonics or overtones) the order of "harmonicity" is

8th>5th>4th> major 3rd>minor  3rd

The first 4 blue notes of the diatonic scale are  by definition the neighboring by one semitone notes to the interval of 5th c-g thus g# f# around g and c# around c and the same with the best next interval of major 3rd c-e thus d# or c# again . This gives the maximum shift from an harmonic interval to one with dissonance thus chromaticity. 

It is important to realize that these blue notes of a diatonic scale are already suggested by the series of overtones, because the exact overtones have cases that are outside the equal tempered Bach scale. 

THE 9NTH HARMONIC SUGGESTS THE D#

THE 7NTH HARMONIC SUGGESTS THE  A#

THE 11TH HARMONIC SUGGESTS THE F#

THE 13NTH HARMONIC SUGGESTS THE G#



There cannot be other as first 4 notes other than the above 4 blue notes for the first 2 best intervals (5th and major 3rd) around the roor note .

Notice of course that all the 5 blue notes 2b 3b 5b 6b 7b make a major pentatonic scale with root 5b and main chords 5b major and 3b minor. 

Notice also the important fact that the 4 blue notes make the 4 non-major chords of the scale major chords!

7dim 3m , 6m, 2m to major chords!

The 5# makes the 3m to 3M , 
the 2# makes the 7dim to 7M, 
the 4# makes the 2m to 2M and 
the 1# makes the 6m to 6M 

On the other hand e.g. the 1st blue note (5#) may make also the 4M chord 4m, so making the basic triad 5N 1M 4M, to 5M 1M 4m. Also the 2nd blue note 2# allows, for a 1 minor chord too. making therefore the triad 5N 1M 4M to  5M 1m 4M  or   5M 1m 4 m.

Converselly when improvsing with the 3 basic major chords of diatinic scale 1M, 4M, 5M, then the most natural blue notes are those 3 blue notes that make them minor chords, thus

3b=2# which makes 1M to 1m
7b=6# which makes the 5M to 5m
6b=5# wchich makes the 4M to 4m


The scale 1,2,3,4,5#,6,7 is an harmonic minor scale. The scale 1,2,3,4,5,6#,7, is the Neapolitan scale (a permuted harmonic minor) The scale 1,2#,3,4,5,6, 7, is again the Neapolitan scale.
We may combine now the lue notes per two.

The scale 1,2#,3,4,5# 6, 7, is the double harmonic minor scale.
The scale 1,2,3,4,5#,6#,7, is the Mela Namanarayani, Raga Narmada, Pratapa, Harsh Major-Minor scale.
The scale  1,2#,3,4,5,6#,7 is the inverse double parachromatic Byzantine scale.


IN SUMMARY BOTH EARLY WESTERN AND EASTERN (GYPSY) JAZZ MAY MAKE THE NEXT 7 TEMPORARY CHANGES IN THE CHORDS OF THE DIATONIC SCALE DUE TO THE 5  BLUE NOTES 

3m becomes 3M
7dim becomes 7M
5M becomes 5#dim or 5m 
2m becomes 2M
6m becomes 6M
4M becomes 4m or 4dim
1M becomes 1m or 1#dim

Obviously not all of these changes occur necessarily simultaneously in a single song. maybe only few of them. And usually at least 50% of the time the chords are the normal of the diatonic scale. Other ways to organize them and perceive them are as triads of harmonic pairs of chords (see post 215  
IMPROVISATION OVER A PAIR OF CHORDS . TRIADS OF HARMONIC PAIRS OF CHORDS. ). This awareness of these alterations of the normal chords of a diatonic scale (by blue notes) allows for a consistent and rich system of harmony for composing and improvising early jazz type of jazz.

AS WE MAY NOTICE THIS SYSTEM OF HARMONY WITH THE FIRST 4 BLUE NOTES (AND  5TH BLUE NOT 6#=7b  MAY BE ADDED) IS ESSENTIALLY A METHOD TO PLAY SOONER OR LATER IN THE MELODY ALL THE 12 NOTES OF THE FULL CHROMATIC SCALE STARTING FROM THE 7 NOTES OF THE DIATONIC SCALE AND RETURNING TO THEM AGAIN.

CONVERSELY ANY MELODY WHICH STARTS AS MELODY OF A DIATONIC SCALE AND THEN EVOLVES WITH ANY TURN AND ANY MOVE INSIDE THE 12-NOTES FULL CHROMATIC SCALE CAN BE COVERED OR ACCOMPANIED WITH THE NEXT ALTERNATIONS OF THE CHORDS OF THE DIATONIC SCALE. IN WESTERN JAZZ IT IS CONCEIVED AS ALTERATIONS DUE TO THE BLUE NOTES WHILE IN EASTERN JAZZ AS ALTERATIONS DUE TEMPORARY CHANGE OF THE NATURAL MINOR TO ONE OF THE CHROMATIC MINORS (HARMONIC, DOUBLE HARMONIC , NEAPOLITAN , PARACHROMATIC MINORS ETC)

As an harmonic personality as in post 36  with the chords that cover all notes of the 12-notes chromatic scale here si the table



Steps of the chromatic scale/Harmonic Personality
1
1#
2
2#
3
4
4#
5
5#
6
6#
7


JAZZ PERSONALITY
1M(ajor) or 1m
1#Dim or 6M
2m(inor) or 2M(ajor)7
7M
3m or 3M(ajor)7
4M or 4m or 4Dim
2M7
5M7 or 5m
5#Dim or 3M7
6m or 6M7
5m
7Dim or 7Major7





Now there are the next ways to chromatize these best two intervals of 5th and major 3rd

A) Chromatizing the 5th:

1) By using the 1s blue not 5# instead of g. 

This gives the harmonic minor  in steps  6-7-1-2-3-4-5#-6 or in c major a-b-c-d-e-f-g#-a and in semitone intervals 2-1-2-2-1-3-1

2) By using the 4#= f#=gb instead of g=5:

This gives   in steps  6-7-1-2-3-4-4#-6 or in c major a-b-c-d-e-f-f#--a and in semitone intervals 2-1-2-2-1-1-3 which may be called Byzantine simple parachromatic scale. It has as 6-notes subscale the  Blues scale 1-1-3-2-3-2.

3) By using the 4th blue note 1#=c#

This gives the melodic minor  in steps  6-7-1#-2-3-4-5-6 or in c major a-b-c#-d-e-f-g--a and in semitone intervals 2-2-1-2-1-2-2

B) Chromatizing the major 3rd

1) By using the 2nd blue note 2#=d#  which gives the Neapolitan scale in steps  6-7-1-2#-3-4-5-6 or in c major a-b-c-d#-e-f-g-a and in semitone intervals 2-1-3-1-1-2-2.

It contains the chromatic 5-chord 3-1-1-2  known also as Huzam

2) By using both the 1# and 5# 

in steps  6-7-1#-2-3-4-5#-6 or in c major a-b-c#-d-e-f-g#-a and in semitone intervals 2-2-1-2-1-3-1

which is again the inverse harmonic minor .


3) By using both the 1# and 4# and  keeping the 1

In steps 6-7-1-1#-2-3-4-4#-6 or in c major a-b-c-c#-d-e-f-f#-a and in semitone intervals 2-1-1-3-1-1-3  which is the Byzantine double parachromatic and has as 6-notes subscale the Blues scale 1-1-3-2-3-2.



C) Chromatizing both the 5th and major 3rd.

1) By using both the 1# and 4# and not keeping the 1

In steps 6-7-1#-2-3-4-4#-6 or in c major a-b-c#-d-e-f-f#-a and in semitone intervals 2-2-1-2-1-1-3  which has as 6-notes subscale the Blues scale 1-1-3-2-3-2.

It contains the chromatic 5-chord 2-1-1-3  known also as Samba

2) By using the 2# and the f# 

In steps 6-7-1-2#-3-4-4#-6 or in c major a-b-c-d#-e-f-f#-a and in semitone intervals 2-1-3-1-1-1-3  which is the Byzantine 2nd double parachromatic .

3) By using both the d# and g#
which gives the double harmonic minor 

In steps 6-7-1-2#-3-4-5#-6 or in c major a-b-c-d#-e-f-g#-a and in semitone intervals 2-1-3-1-1-3-1 .


We comment moreon the above:

 The Byzantine parachromatic minor utilizes the 3rd blue note f# if it would be a modification of the a natural minor In other words it would use f# instead of f and as a parachromatic minor it would be a b c db e f gb=f# a  or in semitone intervals 2-1-1-3-1-1-3 .   The 3rd blue note f# is utilized also in 6 notes  blues scales and country jazz music 2-1-1-3-2-3 or in notes a, b, c , c# , e , f# , a . The harmonic minor uses the 1st only Blue note that is g# instead of G in a natural minor and the double harmonic minor both 1st and 2nd blue notes the g# instead off g and D# instead of d. The Byzantine parachromatic minor scale is slightly less chromatic compared to the double harmonic minor and it was used in cosmic celebrations while the harmonic and double harmonic minor in Religious hymns. The scale that would use only the d# blue note therefore the a-b-c-d#-e-f-g-a,  in semitone intervals is the 2-1-3-1-1-2-2 is nothing else than the Mela Sulini, Raga Sailadesakshi, Raga Trishuli, Houzam: (Greece) or Neapolitan (Italy) scale. The scale that would use both the c# and d# blue notes would be the a-b-c#-d#-e-f-g-a,  in semitone intervals is the 2-2-2-1-1-2-2 which is the double melodic minor or Arabian scale also known as Kokilapriya, Raga Kokilaravam, or  Heptatonia tertia. The 7-notes scale as variation of the a natural minor that would use both the f# and d# blue notes would be the  a-b-c-d#-e-f#-g-a,  in semitone intervals is the 2-1-3-1-2-1-2 which is nothing else than the Bayat-e-Esfahan, Sultani Yakah, Zhalibny Minor, Armoniko minore: (Greece) or the 4th mode of the harmonic minor. The 7-notes scale that would use only the f# blue note is the  a-b-c-d-e-f#-g-a,  in semitone intervals is the 2-1-2-2-2-1-2 which is nothing else than the dorian mode of the G major scale. Notice also that the  Ney flute scale when converted to the equal tempered 12-notes scale would be an 8-note scale 2-1-1-2-1-1-3-1 or a-b-c-c#-d#-e-f-g#-a , and it contains the 3  blue notes c#, d#=eb and g# . The Ney 8-notes scale resembles a combination of the melodic minor and the harmonic minor.


We remind the reader that in the online notes here we call a sequence of 7 interval that sum-up to 12 semitones a mode and all cyclic permutations of it as the scale that the mode belongs. Thus any cyclic permutation of the 2-1-1-3-1-1-3  is considered again as the parachromatic Byzantine scale but at a different mode of it.

Other very well known 7-notes Byzantine scales but different from the parachromatic , also in  the chromatic family are the harmonic minor (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minor_scale#Harmonic_minor_scale ) and double harmonic minor (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Double_harmonic_scale). 

244. LONG CHIMNEY (BRANCHE TUBE) IN LOW AND BASS WHISTLES TO LOWER THE TOTAL LENGTH AND MAKE THEM EASIER FOR FINGERING

 LONG CHIMNEY (BRANCHE TUBE) IN LOW AND BASS WHISTLES TO LOWER THE TOTAL LENGTH AND MAKE THEM EASIER  FOR FINGERING

The idea (and patent) of Yamaha with a long chimney or brach-tube just after the mouthpiece and of about 2/3 of bore size compared to main tube was so as to convert close-open acoustics (with odd only harmonics ) to open-open (with both odd and even harmonics). See e.g. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LzHasH3Acxw

But it has another effect too: It lowers the total length of the tube. This technique applied to low and bass whistles  makes them of considerably shorter length . This will make the covering of  the holes with the fingers a lot easier . Even the "pipers grip"might not be necessary now.
In  the next photo we see a  D4 clariphon (chalumeaux) with along chimney (about 1/3 of the sum-total length of both tubes . The brache has diameter about 2/3 of the diameter of the main tube) which converts it from closed-open acoustics to open-open acoustics. Nevertheless the same technique will make a Low D4 whistles with a fipple a lot shorter!

The next pictures are of corresponding Long Chimney soprano saxophones with cane reeds and sax mouthpieces as the Venova of Yamaha, or Cylisax of Linsey
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6wa0mPEmJI0
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J0Ka4M_CvVY
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1B5fTwSC4QQ