I'm sure it would sound extremely dissonant. Especially because the difference (in Hz) between the individual notes isn't exactly the same...
And between B/C and E/F there's even only a semi tone...
Um, yes they probably have. I overcame my laziness and checked where that note falls (at least roughly). Now I feel blue...Tricky-Loops wrote:Has anyone made a song with this theory?:shock:
I'm sure it would sound extremely dissonant. Especially because the difference (in Hz) between the individual notes isn't exactly the same...
And between B/C and E/F there's even only a semi tone...
Erroneous conclusions when equal temperament is that way because we couldn't do any better?JumpingJackFlash wrote:No, you won't.schnapsglas wrote:not sure if we can bring any "musical results" to the table with this method.
Music isn't an exact science. It is what it is because it evolved that way. Trying to shove a load of mathematics onto it is largely futile and will lead to erroneous conclusions at best.
Well-ordering on page 2?Tricky-Loops wrote:I've found an interesting PDF-book about music and mathematic. Maybe someone has more time than I have, and likes to read it...
http://www.math.wustl.edu/~wright/Math109/00Book.pdf
?? Page 2 is blank, what do you mean? The book is from the Department of Mathematic of Washington University...schnapsglas wrote:Well-ordering on page 2?Tricky-Loops wrote:I've found an interesting PDF-book about music and mathematic. Maybe someone has more time than I have, and likes to read it...
http://www.math.wustl.edu/~wright/Math109/00Book.pdfIt caught me off guard!
Page 2 of the book, which is page 16 on the PDF document.Tricky-Loops wrote:?? Page 2 is blank, what do you mean? The book is from the Department of Mathematic of Washington University...schnapsglas wrote:Well-ordering on page 2?Tricky-Loops wrote:I've found an interesting PDF-book about music and mathematic. Maybe someone has more time than I have, and likes to read it...
http://www.math.wustl.edu/~wright/Math109/00Book.pdfIt caught me off guard!
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Exercise 7.7: "Suppose G is a group and g ∈ G. Show that there is a unique group homomorphism ϕ : Z → G such that ϕ(1) = g".Didn't BT do something along those lines on This Binary Universe? Not really sure what the golden ratio is, but it sure sounds interesting:Gamma-UT wrote:Um, yes they probably have. I overcame my laziness and checked where that note falls (at least roughly). Now I feel blue...Tricky-Loops wrote:Has anyone made a song with this theory?:shock:
I'm sure it would sound extremely dissonant. Especially because the difference (in Hz) between the individual notes isn't exactly the same...
And between B/C and E/F there's even only a semi tone...
(Technically, the E is wrong but I doubt that's stopped anyone.)
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