applies to all of these assertions.JumpingJackFlash wrote:It is false just as many times as it is true.
this is my whole objection, this is just a lot of lingo. here is some language in an effort to justify the thesis: 'the overtone series'. WHAT? what tendency does anything in a diatonic scale have ie, what does it need to do as an overtone? That really is nonsense. The overtone series just is. This implies that any tone with enough energy to generate harmonics demands the diatonic paradigm.JumpingJackFlash wrote:Sorry, but this is just nonsense.sammy24 wrote:Each pitch wants to resolve naturally, and by naturally we mean based on the inherent characteristics associated with tonality and the overtone series.
there has been a thrust since forever to enforce hegemony of this whole kind of thing; functional harmony/tonality, the diatonic paradigm, as natural and right.
these are things which reside inside a convention. it is not going to have this overarching meaning, this is reaching for something.
I'm just really glad I don't fall into this sort of trap creating music, restricted by needs that aren't necessary!