Musical Acoustics Lecture 16 Interval, Scales, Tuning and Temperament - I

Similar documents
Lecture 5: Tuning Systems

PHY 103: Scales and Musical Temperament. Segev BenZvi Department of Physics and Astronomy University of Rochester

AN INTRODUCTION TO MUSIC THEORY Revision A. By Tom Irvine July 4, 2002

The Pythagorean Scale and Just Intonation

Music Department Columbia University Ear Training Curriculum, Fall 2012 Sing and Play at the Piano Face the Music

Welcome to Vibrationdata

HST 725 Music Perception & Cognition Assignment #1 =================================================================

Lecture 7: Music

The Harmonic Series As Universal Scientific Constant

The Rhythm Name Game! (Xs and Os)

Musical Acoustics Lecture 15 Pitch & Frequency (Psycho-Acoustics)

Music, Science, and Mathematics Mark Sullivan

PHYSICS OF MUSIC. 1.) Charles Taylor, Exploring Music (Music Library ML3805 T )

3b- Practical acoustics for woodwinds: sound research and pitch measurements

Music F193: Introduction to Music Theory

SLAPI v1.1. Documentation

2014A Cappella Harmonv Academv Handout #2 Page 1. Sweet Adelines International Balance & Blend Joan Boutilier

INTRODUCTION TO GOLDEN SECTION JONATHAN DIMOND OCTOBER 2018

Study Guide. Solutions to Selected Exercises. Foundations of Music and Musicianship with CD-ROM. 2nd Edition. David Damschroder

The Composer s Materials

Augmentation Matrix: A Music System Derived from the Proportions of the Harmonic Series

Proceedings of the 7th WSEAS International Conference on Acoustics & Music: Theory & Applications, Cavtat, Croatia, June 13-15, 2006 (pp54-59)

E314: Conjecture sur la raison de quelques dissonances generalement recues dans la musique

The Composer s Materials

Author Index. Absolu, Brandt 165. Montecchio, Nicola 187 Mukherjee, Bhaswati 285 Müllensiefen, Daniel 365. Bay, Mert 93

CSC475 Music Information Retrieval

On the strike note of bells

Calculating Dissonance in Chopin s Étude Op. 10 No. 1

Recursive Designs and Fractional Thinking

Cadet Music Theory Workbook. Level One

Introduction to Music Theory. Collection Editor: Catherine Schmidt-Jones

Music Theory For Pianists. David Hicken

CHAPTER I BASIC CONCEPTS

AP Music Theory Summer Assignment

Curriculum Development In the Fairfield Public Schools FAIRFIELD PUBLIC SCHOOLS FAIRFIELD, CONNECTICUT MUSIC THEORY I

Harmonic Series II: Harmonics, Intervals, and Instruments *

THE INDIAN KEYBOARD. Gjalt Wijmenga

Mathematics & Music: Symmetry & Symbiosis

Musical Signal Processing with LabVIEW Introduction to Audio and Musical Signals. By: Ed Doering

Well temperament revisited: two tunings for two keyboards a quartertone apart in extended JI

Different aspects of MAthematics

Pitch correction on the human voice

Music Theory: A Very Brief Introduction

Reading Music: Common Notation. By: Catherine Schmidt-Jones

Developing Your Musicianship Lesson 1 Study Guide

Measurement of overtone frequencies of a toy piano and perception of its pitch

Implementation of a Ten-Tone Equal Temperament System

LESSON 3. EARS, HABITS & SOUND / FINGER PATTERNS.

Lesson 1. Unit 1. A quarter note is equal to one beat. Say ta to count a quarter note.

Music Theory. Level 3. Printable Music Theory Books. A Fun Way to Learn Music Theory. Student s Name: Class:

Northeast High School AP Music Theory Summer Work Answer Sheet

Grade One. MyMusicTheory.com. Music Theory PREVIEW 1. Complete Course, Exercises & Answers 2. Thirty Grade One Tests.

Oak Bay Band MUSIC THEORY LEARNING GUIDE LEVEL IA

LESSON 1 PITCH NOTATION AND INTERVALS

Del Hungerford, D.M.A Del Hungerford

Introduction to Music Theory. Collection Editor: Catherine Schmidt-Jones

CSC475 Music Information Retrieval

Beethoven s Fifth Sine -phony: the science of harmony and discord

MUSC 133 Practice Materials Version 1.2

CHAPTER CHAPTER CHAPTER CHAPTER CHAPTER CHAPTER CHAPTER CHAPTER CHAPTER 9...

While I am not a talented musician, as an engineer I became interested in the science of music. Tonight I want to talk about:

An Integrated Music Chromaticism Model

Marion BANDS STUDENT RESOURCE BOOK

THE FRINGE WORLD OF MICROTONAL KEYBOARDS. Gjalt Wijmenga

Student Performance Q&A:

MELODIC AND RHYTHMIC EMBELLISHMENT IN TWO VOICE COMPOSITION. Chapter 10

Unit 1. π π π π π π. 0 π π π π π π π π π. . 0 ð Š ² ² / Melody 1A. Melodic Dictation: Scalewise (Conjunct Diatonic) Melodies

Music Fundamentals 1: Pitch and Major Scales and Keys. Collection Editor: Terry B. Ewell

All rights reserved. Ensemble suggestion: All parts may be performed by soprano recorder if desired.

Lesson Week: August 17-19, 2016 Grade Level: 11 th & 12 th Subject: Advanced Placement Music Theory Prepared by: Aaron Williams Overview & Purpose:

Mathematics and Music

Modes and Ragas: More Than just a Scale

Understanding basic tonic chord structure and how the singer can find her note from the pitch blown

The unbelievable musical magic of the number 12

The Cosmic Scale The Esoteric Science of Sound. By Dean Carter

Modes and Ragas: More Than just a Scale

AP Music Theory Westhampton Beach High School Summer 2017 Review Sheet and Exercises

Math and Music. Cameron Franc

Alleghany County Schools Curriculum Guide

WHAT INTERVALS DO INDIANS SING?

Mathematics of Music

DAT335 Music Perception and Cognition Cogswell Polytechnical College Spring Week 6 Class Notes

1 Ver.mob Brief guide

Ear Training for Trombone Contents

Raymond Johnson Drone Tones: Guided Practice

Tonal Polarity: Tonal Harmonies in Twelve-Tone Music. Luigi Dallapiccola s Quaderno Musicale Di Annalibera, no. 1 Simbolo is a twelve-tone

Intermediate Midpoint Level 3

Working with unfigured (or under-figured) early Italian Baroque bass lines

INTERVALS Ted Greene

The high C that ends the major scale in Example 1 can also act as the beginning of its own major scale. The following example demonstrates:

AP Music Theory Syllabus CHS Fine Arts Department

Lecture 1: What we hear when we hear music

MUSIC PROGRESSIONS. Curriculum Guide

Grade One. MyMusicTheory.com

Theory and Sightreading for Singers LEVEL 2. The EM Music Voice Method Series. Written by. Elizabeth Irene Hames and Michelle Anne Blumsack

ENGR 3000 Technology of the Steel Pan Lecture 1. Lecturer: Sean Sutherland

Progressive Music Examples.

Rhythmic Dissonance: Introduction

Consonance in Music and Mathematics: Application to Temperaments and Orchestration

ALGEBRAIC PURE TONE COMPOSITIONS CONSTRUCTED VIA SIMILARITY

Transcription:

Musical Acoustics, C. Bertulani 1 Musical Acoustics Lecture 16 Interval, Scales, Tuning and Temperament - I

Notes and Tones Musical instruments cover useful range of 27 to 4200 Hz. 2 Ear: pitch discrimination of 0.03 semitones à 30 distinguishable pitches in one semitone. (much more than needed!). (one semitone = 1/12 of an octave) Musicians select discrete frequencies in an array: SCALE One of the frequencies = NOTE Note is also a symbol in a musical staff, or refers to a key on a piano, etc. Note is sometimes synonymous to TONE

Scale and Temperament 3 SCALE A sucession of notes in ascending order (e.g., Pythagorean, just, meantone, equal temperament). TUNING Adjustment of pitch to correspond to an accepted norm. TEMPERAMENT A system of tuning in which intervals deviate from acoustically pure (Pythagorean). INTONATION Degree of accuracy with which pitches are produced.

Pythagoras and the monochord 4 Ancient Greeks - Aristotle and his followers - discovered using a Monochord that certain combinations of sounds with rational number (n/m) frequency ratios were pleasing to the human ear. f 1 L f 1 f 2 L 2 L 1

Jump few centuries: Piano keyboard 5 Do Re Me Fa So La Ti Do

6 Consonance Frequencies in consonance are neither similar enough to cause beats nor within the same critical band. Many of the overtones of these two frequencies coincide and most of the ones that don t will neither cause beats nor be within the same critical band. Ex 1: f 2 /f 1 = 2 Frequencies in consonance sound nearly the same.

7 Ex 2: f 2 /f 1 = 3/2 Consonance Match of harmonics not quite as good, but the harmonics of f 2 that don t match those of f 1 are still different enough from the harmonics of f 1 that no beats are heard and they don t fall within the same critical band.

8 f 1 f 2 L 2 L 1 Pythagorean scale Ancient Greeks - Monochord most pleasant sounds with f 2 /f 1 = 2 and f 2 /f 1 = 3/2 à L 1 /L 2 = 2 and L 1 /L 2 = 3/2 Building a scale (Pythagoras) To get more pleasant tones multiply, or divide, strings by 3/2. Problem: new string length might be shorter than the shortest string or longer than the longest string. Solution: cut in half or double in length (even repeatedly) because strings that differ by a ratio of 2:1 sound virtually the same.

Building a Pythagorean scale Assume shortest string length = 1 (whatever units). Longest one length = 2. Let us start: 1 3 2 = 3 2 and 2 3/2 = 2 2 3 = 4 3 E.g. 100 Hz 133 Hz 150 Hz 200 Hz This four-note scale is thought to have been used to tune ancient lyre 9

Building a Pythagorean scale - continued Let try more (using intermediate frequencies 4/3 and 3/2): 4 /3 3/2 = 4 3 2 3 = 8 9 and 3 2 3 2 = 9 4 But 8/9 < 1 and 9/4 > 2. Solution: divide or multiply by 2, as they will sound nearly the same. à 8 9 2 = 16 9 and 9 4 /2 = 9 8 Pentatonic scale: popular in many eastern cultures. 10

11 Building a Pythagorean scale - continued Western Music has 7 notes à Let us continue: 16/9 3/2 = 16 9 2 3 = 32 27 and 9 8 3 2 = 27 16 One version of the Pythagorean scale. Many frequency ratios of small integers à high levels of consonance. Mostly large intervals, but also two small intervals (between the second and third note and between the sixth and seventh note).

Pythagorean scale 12 Across a large interval, the frequency must be multiplied by 9/8 (e.g., 32 /27 x 9 /8 = 4 /3 and 4 /3 x 9 /8 = 3/2). Across the smaller intervals, the frequency must be multiplied by 256/243. In fact, 9/8 x 256/243 = 32/27, 27/16 x 256/243 = 16/9. 9/8 = 1.125 = change of ~12% (whole tone) W ( full step ) 256/243 = 1.053 = change of ~5% (semitone) s ( half step ) Going up in frequency: W s W W W s W

Pythagorean scale Instead of W s W W W s W let us start with previous W: W W s W W W s C 1 D E F G A B C 2 Do Re Me Fa So La Ti Do ß (solfège) Nonmusicians do not notice the smaller increase in pitch when going from Me to Fa and from Ti to Do. 7 different notes in the Pythagorean scale (8 including last note, which is one diapson higher than the first note, and thus essentially the same sound as the first). The eighth note has a ratio of 2:1 with the first note, the fifth note has a ratio of 3:2 with the first note, and the fourth note has ratio of 4:3 with the first note. Origin of the musical terms the octave, perfect fifth, and perfect fourth. 13

Pythagorean scale G sounds good when played with either the upper or the lower C. It is a fifth above the lower C and a fourth below the upper C. Multiplying the frequency of a particular C by one of the fractions in the table above gives the frequency of the note above that fraction. Table on right shows the full list of frequency intervals between adjacent tones. Exercise: Assuming C 5 is defined as 523 Hz, determine the other frequencies of the Pythagorean scale. 14

15 Just Scale (origin: Ptolemy-Greece) Besides 2:1, 3:2 and 4:3, Ptolemy also observed consonance in frequency ratio 5:4. Ratios 4:5:6 sound particularly good à C major scale. Note in C scale are grouped in triads with frequency ratios 4:5:6 Start with C i = 1 à C f = 2. To get the C i :E:G frequency ratios 4:5:6 represent C 1 as 4/4 à E=5/4 and G = 6/4, or 3/2. Next triad (G,B,D). Start with G = 3/2, multiply by 4/4, 5/4, and 6/4 à G = (3/2)x(4/4) = 12/8 = 3/2, B = (3/2)x(5/4) = 15/8, D = (3/2)x(6/4) = 18/8 = 9/4.

Just Scale Intervals D=9/4 > 2xC i à divide it by 2 to get it back within the octave bound by C i and C f. Then D = (9/4)/2 = 9/8 Last triad (F,A,C f ): easier to start with C f backwards. To the get the next set of 4:5:6 frequency ratios à multiply C f by 4/6, 5/6, and 6/6 à F = 2x(4/6) = 8/6 = 4/3, A = 2x(5/6) = 10/6 = 5/3, C f = 2x(6/6) = 12/6 = 2. Just Scale Intervals for a C major scale. Multiplying the frequency of a particular C by one of the fractions in the table gives the frequency of the note above that fraction. 16

Just Scale Intervals Just Scale interval ratios. There are three possible intervals between notes: 9/8 (a major whole tone = 12.5% increase same as Pythagorean whole tone) 10/9 (a minor whole tone = 11.1% increase) 16/15 (a semitone = 6.7% increase slightly different than smallest Pythagorean) 17 Just Scale Intervals and common names à Exercise: C 4 is the frequency or note one octave below C 5 (523 Hz). Calculate the frequencies of the notes in the Just scale within this octave.