That's weird - this thread is actually growing towards sensible statements instead of what's normal - a sensible thread that goes silly!
G or A?
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- KVRian
- 854 posts since 14 Jul, 2003 from Netherlands
Good point. Although music can stand on itself, it does some of it's finest work accompanying sensations for the other senses, such as visual works like cinema or olfactory sensations from food.
That's weird - this thread is actually growing towards sensible statements instead of what's normal - a sensible thread that goes silly!
That's weird - this thread is actually growing towards sensible statements instead of what's normal - a sensible thread that goes silly!
"...Everything we see or seem is but a dream, within a dream."
MySpace site: http://www.myspace.com/MarcJX8P
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MySpace site: http://www.myspace.com/MarcJX8P
Virb: http://www.virb.com/marcjx8p
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- KVRian
- 854 posts since 14 Jul, 2003 from Netherlands
Well - it would be nice if you could start by wiping the floor OF the entire café, some people didn't clear up after the last few competitions and there are still a few stray notes lying around.Jonny X wrote:Now-a-days we only have to record at 96khz or even 192 to make any old shite sound amazing, I gonna cook up a sample of white noise recorded in 192Khz/64bits that will whip the likes of the chems and the prodigy, and obviously wipe the floor with the entire café
(I think there are more G's than A's by the way).
"...Everything we see or seem is but a dream, within a dream."
MySpace site: http://www.myspace.com/MarcJX8P
Virb: http://www.virb.com/marcjx8p
MySpace site: http://www.myspace.com/MarcJX8P
Virb: http://www.virb.com/marcjx8p
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- KVRAF
- Topic Starter
- 8708 posts since 24 May, 2002 from Tutukaka, New Zealand
Oi! You implying my thread started out silly?That's weird - this thread is actually growing towards sensible statements instead of what's normal - a sensible thread that goes silly!
You mean you guys seriously use more than one note
- KVRAF
- 8445 posts since 18 Apr, 2004
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- KVRian
- 854 posts since 14 Jul, 2003 from Netherlands
I would never DREAM of insinuating that this thread was silly... I just meant to... well, I already said that...kritikon wrote:Oi! You implying my thread started out silly?That's weird - this thread is actually growing towards sensible statements instead of what's normal - a sensible thread that goes silly!![]()
You mean you guys seriously use more than one noteWouldn't that sound a bit tuneful or something? It's difficult enough making music without introducing complicated things like bloody tunes FFS.
Hmmm...
Err....
Is it too late to just pick a note?
"...Everything we see or seem is but a dream, within a dream."
MySpace site: http://www.myspace.com/MarcJX8P
Virb: http://www.virb.com/marcjx8p
MySpace site: http://www.myspace.com/MarcJX8P
Virb: http://www.virb.com/marcjx8p
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- KVRAF
- 8389 posts since 11 Apr, 2003 from back on the hillside again - but now with a garden!
- KVRAF
- 3266 posts since 22 Sep, 2003 from under the sun
Extract from http://www.uk-piano.org/edfoote/ :kritikon wrote:Personally I prefer the note G (although I occasionally use E as well).
I find there is a definite audible difference between G and A, but I don't have a website to host MP3s.....could someone post an example so that we can see if there really is any difference between G and A.
Well Tempering and Key Character
The defining characteristics of Well Temperament is the tonal variety that exists between the keys. The comma is neither condensed into a few combinations nor spread evenly among all; rather, it is dispensed into the various keys in differing amounts.
This allotment of dissonance was the subject of intense debate among the theorists and musicians of the 18th and 19th centuries, yet there was a common form to virtually all Well Temperaments. The common form was that the "all white note" keys of C major and A minor, (with no accidentals in the key signature) contained the most harmoniously tuned Maj3rds, far more in tune than our modern Equal Temperament. The other “simple” keys such as G, F, or E minor were slightly tempered. Keys with yet more accidentals, (requiring the use of more black notes), absorbed greater amounts of the commas, causing the dissonance to increase in those keys. Hence, there was a range of harmony and dissonance available to the composer.
Associations between emotional response and musical harmony are very old; they were discussed in ancient Greece. Certain tunings (modes), were considered warlike, others were felt as peaceful. Some tuning, according to Plato, should not be heard by developing young minds, while exposure to others was considered essential to the full development of one’s potential.
By Beethoven’s day, the concept of “ Key Character ” (in which different keys conveyed specific emotional meanings), was much refined. A widely read and influential list of keys and their affective qualities, written by Christian Friedrich Daniel Schubart and published posthumously in 1806, contained the fashionable descriptions for all major and minor keys. In this list, he describes the “character” of keys thusly:
“C minor. Declaration of love and at the same time the lament of unhappy love. ---All languishing, longing, sighing of the love-sick soul lies in this key.” “E major. Noisy shouts of joy, laughing pleasure and not yet complete, full delight lies in E major.” “C# minor. Penitential lamentation;.......sighs of disappointed friendship and love lie in its radius.” “C major is completely pure. Its character is: innocence, simplicity, naivety, children’s talk”2
These were descriptions for audiences that expected and wanted to be emotionally moved. Modern sensibilities don’t provide the context for quite that much scenery in music today, and modern atonal tuning has provided little key character for at least a century. However, we can still be affected by the composer’s use of dissonance and harmony, if the contrasts are there.
In a significant number of people, purely tuned (consonant), intervals, cause physiological reactions such as heart-rate, respiration, pupil dilation, etc. to indicate a sedative, restful response; while highly tempered (dissonant) intervals tend to cause stimulative effects. This suggests that differing levels of physical consonance and dissonance can be valuable tools for a composer intent on eliciting emotional responses from a sensitive audience.
Accepting that any specific emotional "meaning" a musical key represents is an ineffable quality, (since "meaning" is subjective and depends on far more than the tuning), it is still obvious that Just intervals have a different musical nature and effect from tempered ones. The harmonic journey that is the piano sonata allows ample opportunity for a composer to juxtapose musical tension with points of rest; to artfully move the listener from edgy anticipation to welcome tranquility. This is tonality at work.
Edward Foote
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- KVRAF
- Topic Starter
- 8708 posts since 24 May, 2002 from Tutukaka, New Zealand
Thanks Wopelka........that was better than Temazepam.
I really needed some sleep, and I always find any book on theory does a perfect job....
zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz....
I really needed some sleep, and I always find any book on theory does a perfect job....
zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz....
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- KVRAF
- 3057 posts since 9 Apr, 2003
thanks for that excerpt and the link, Wopelka -- I knew there were different ways of tuning but had no idea about taking advantage of different shades of dissonance in different keys 
5 twelve

