Sure! Qualifications: I am bored, and a musician.
24 notes in an octave is pretty intense. It sounds like this:
https://instaud.io/fyfFrom there it talks about
quartertones. That's 4 tones per note, or 96 tones in total. It sounds approximately like this, though a qualified Plays of Style musician will cringe at the uneven temperment of my playing:
https://instaud.io/fydOr if you prefer:
https://instaud.io/fycThis may as well be a slide. There's almost an unlimited amount of variation here.
I have no idea what a zur or an oslak sounds like, but since they each have both melodic, rhythmic, and harmonic elements, I can guess a stringed instrument or maybe percussive woodwind playing. I'll just keep using synths if you please.
A tonic note is whatever begins a chord. We can take any one of the 96 tones in an octave as our tonic so long as it satisfies the requirements of the scale. The degrees of the quartertone scale is simply 1-96
For the ekxox chord, 1-7-17 is the progression - first the tonic, then the 7th quartertone above the tonic, and the 17th. There are 79 ekxox chords available within an octave, and the last 7 extend into the next. Both of the non-tonic notes are prime numbers, which is absolutely miserable to translate into our usual 12 note scale. Fortunately, I'm a genius when it comes to automation in FL Studio Here's every ekxox chord from a4 to a5:
https://instaud.io/fyaBeautiful. A charming yet evocative chord that brings to mind the harmonics of bees. I had to pitch-shift the last 17 chords because of limitations in the way FL handles its mapping formulas, and because simply pitch-shifting each channel would be too imprecise - 1200 cents in an octave means each note is 12.5 cents apart, and Harmor can't handle fractional pitch changes as easily.
Here it is paulstretched:
https://instaud.io/fybThe ozse is somewhat more pedestrian, but more harmonically pleasing - it only contains one prime number, which is shared with ekxox. The chords sound like this:
https://instaud.io/fy7Again, I pitch-shifted the last 24 chords to cover the ones that rise into the next octave. Here it is paulstretched:
https://instaud.io/fy9The stylistic components are more complicated, and where the virtuosity of a player comes in to conquer such an amazing musical system. I can only imagine the utterly mind-bending ways that instrumentalists in this form overcome its intrinsic harmonic limitations, but I could guess that the instruments involve eliminate some of the dissonance. In any case, here's some random full chord noodling and a sick Taiko beat:
https://instaud.io/fy6Disclaimer: I am not a musician. I've also had 3 1/2 hours of sleep. Edit: Moved to instaudio, because I don't think my dropbox will be too happy about this