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Acoustics of Music Week 3 : Semester 2

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Discrete set of pitch relationships (notes) to yield maximum consonant combinations ... The minor third between notes 2 and 4, (4/3)/(9/8) = 32/27 = 1.'185' , does not ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Acoustics of Music Week 3 : Semester 2


1
Acoustics of MusicWeek 3 Semester 2
  • Aims
  • To demonstrate principles used to construct
    scales and discuss their use as a resource for
    melody, harmony and rhythm
  • Learning Outcomes
  • A definition for scales, Pythagorean Scale, Just
    Scale, Equal Temperament.

2
  • Review of last week
  • How we hear combination tones depends on anatomy
    and perception.
  • When frequency difference between two
    simultaneous notes is a sub harmonic of both,
    then consonance gt dissonance
  • Consonant intervals given by simple integer
    ratios, they include
  • Octave 2 Perfect fifth 3/2 fourth 4/3
  • Major 3rd 5/4 Minor 3rd 6/5 Tone 9/8
  • Scales

3
Scales
  • Discrete set of pitch relationships (notes) to
    yield maximum consonant combinations
  • Scales are the resource upon which to build
    melodies, harmonies and rhythms
  • Consonant intervals arise when frequency ratios
    are whole number fractions
  • e.g. octave 2/1, fifth 3/2, fourth 4/3, third
    5/4, etc
  • However, building a scale not as straightforward
    as it may at first seem

4
Psychological perspective
  • Notes are clearly identifiable entities
  • (even when in harmony or modulated)
  • Notes help us remember melodies
  • Notes help us share ideas
  • For the mind to cope with music it must
  • be able to recognise patterns
  • draw on familiarities and cultural references
  • be challenged by invention

Igor Stravinsky was the master of exploiting
consonance and dissonance. Drawing on familiar
references and offsetting with daring new sounds
5
Real Pianos not quite tuned this way!
  • Octave 2/1
  • Fifth 3/2
  • Fourth 4/3
  • Third 5/4
  • Minor Third 6/5
  • Tone 9/8

Tuning the ideal piano
6
Intervals Not Concurrent
7
Musical Notation
  • Diatonic - seven notes, i.e. C,D,E,F,G,A,B
    white notes on piano (Key of C)
  • We can represent these notes on lines called
    staves.
  • Chromatic twelve notes all notes black and
    white

Piano Keyboard
8
Harmonic Series
  • Whole number multiples of fundamental
  • HS f , 2f , 3f , 4f , ......... nf
  • e.g. from middle C (261Hz)
  • f 261Hz , 522Hz , 783Hz , 1044Hz ,
    ................... n x 261 Hz.
  • Intervals 2, 3/2, 4/3, 5/4, ...

9
Pythagorean Diatonic Scalebuilt of fifths and
octaves
Go up in fifths
Bring into octave range
Also go down a fifth to get fourth
Sort in ascending order
10
Deriving Pythagorean Chromatic Scale
To get twelve note scale go up and down in fifths
11
Problems with Pythagorean Diatonic and Chromatic
  • Major third not the most consonant interval Ideal
    (5/4) 1.250 - Pythagorean (81/64) 1.265.
  • Pythagorean Comma (Wolf)
  • Chromatic scale - semitone intervals that
    alternate in frequency ratios of 1.053 and 1.068.

12
Triads
  • Three note chords
  • Major (happy) or Minor (sad)
  • Triads have intervals
  • fifth (3/2)
  • major third (5/4)
  • minor third (6/5)

13
Just Diatonic Scale Built on Triads
  • Triad at a fifth above, multiplying by 3/2
  • i.e. (3/2) (1) (5/4) (3/2) (3/2) (15/8)
    (9/4)
  • Triad at a fifth below, dividing by 3/2
  • i.e. (2/3) (1) (5/4) (3/2) (2/3) (5/6)
    (1)
  • Gives three triads 2/3 5/6 1 5/4
    3/2 15/8 9/4
  • Bring in octave range (multiply by 2 or 1/2) and
    sort

14
Problems with Just
  • There are two whole tones
  • 9/8 1.125 called the major tone,
  • 10/9 1.1 called the minor tone.
  • The semitone has a ratio of 16/15 1.06'.
  • The minor third between notes 2 and 4,
    (4/3)/(9/8) 32/27 1.'185' , does not have the
    desired ratio of 6/5 1.2.
  • The perfect 5th between notes 2 and 6,
    (10/6)/(9/8) 40/27 1.'481' does not have the
    desired ratio 3/2 1.5.

15
Tempering
  • Compromise between requirements
  • true tone intonation (3/2, 3/4..etc)
  • freedom of modulation (different keys sound same)
  • convenience in practical use
  • (e.g. keyboards can play along with fretted
    guitars)

16
Equal Temperament All intervals same frequency
ratio
17
Compromise from ideal consonant intervals
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