Microtonic Alternative -

Author: [Your Name] Publication: Journal of Experimental Musicology Date: [Current Date] Abstract The hegemony of 12-tone equal temperament (12-TET) has naturalized the concept of the tonic as a fixed, repeatable pitch class. This paper introduces the Microtonic Alternative : a theoretical and practical framework wherein the tonal center is established not by a pitch from the standard chromatic scale, but by a microtonally inflected frequency (e.g., a quarter-tone, a seventh harmonic, or an irrational interval). Through analysis of repertoire by composers such as Ben Johnston, Easley Blackwood, and contemporary microtonal electronic producers, this paper argues that the microtonic functions as a destabilized yet perceptible anchor. We propose that this alternative challenges two pillars of Western tonality: the octave equivalence principle and the closure of the circle of fifths. Results from a pilot listening study suggest that listeners can habituate to a microtonic center within 60–90 seconds, indicating the viability of alternative pitch hierarchies. 1. Introduction In traditional tonal music, the tonic is sovereign. Whether in Bach or Beyoncé, the pitch class C (or A, etc.) provides a zero point of gravitational force. However, the advent of microtonal synthesis, just intonation (JI), and non-Western scales has raised a fundamental question: Can a tonic be located “between the keys”?