Claviton is a 31-tone keyboard initiated by the composer and pianist Georg Vogel. I had the opportunity to work with him in his instrument workshop and also build a Claviton for myself. The idea of keyboard instruments with more than 12 keys per octave dates back to the 16th century, with the construction of the Archicembalo with 31 tones per octave by Nicola Vicentino (1511 – 1576).
I use this keyboard to apply a tuning system that I have calculated, based on tuning systems used in Iranian Dastgah and Arabic Maqam music, in order to enable a polyphonic texture in Arabic Maqam and Dastgah music of Iran.

The following table displays tuning systems:
- Tuning systems calculated by Farabi and Ibn Sina more than 1000 years ago. (Cent Calculations are taken from the following Book (1))
- Tuning systems calculated by Farhat based on his research on current Dastgah music in Iran. (Cent Calculations are taken from the following Book (1))
- Tuning systems used by Mohammad Hosseyn Yegane on his Dotar, which I calculated based on his recordings (Cent Calculations are taken from the following Book (2)
- Forster, Cris. Musical Mathematics: On the Art and Science of Acoustic Instruments. San Francisco, Calif.: Chronicle Books, 2010.
- Ahmadi, Seyed Amir Abbas. “Anwendung computergestützter Programme zur Berechnung von Stimmungssystemen am Beispiel des iranischen Dotarspielers Mohammad-Hoseyn Yegane, 2021.”
