Added: 3 years ago
From: AaronAndrewHunt
Views: 11,549
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  • Sounds out of tune?

  • cacofonias de satan

  • what a waist

  • @treyguy09 thanks; I watch what I eat.

  • Hammer....

  • ORGANIST YOU'RE DOING IT IN THE WRONG WAY.... XD i know how is difficult using tonal plexus and you're better than me but the choice of organ is a bit creepy

  • it sounds flat

  • @FunkMasterFelix yes, many of the pitches of Just Intonation will sound flat in comparison to 12ET, the just like many of the pitches of 12ET will sound sharp in comparison to Just intonation. It's a matter of familiarity. Getting used to the one or the other makes the one or the other sound comparatively flat or sharp.

  • @AaronAndrewHunt excuse me, let me get this straight.

    each note has different selections of "fine" tuning to match the pythagorian equivalent for each other note... or am i wrong?

  • @thanoulijonroth it's 41ET comma regions with each region having 5 JND inflection fine tunings. 41ET is a nearly Pythagorean tuning. 205ET breaks the octave into JND steps.

  • @AaronAndrewHunt cool! thanks a lot

  • @FunkMasterFelix You sound like an idiot.

  • I love it! Beautiful!

  • sounds horrible

  • soittotateiliha: one thing is to divide 12ths into smaller units (allways a half of a half of a half... 24th, 48th ...) and another would be dividing an original unit AKA with english words as "an octave". why not dividing the "octave" into 13, 10, 7 or 100 units? then we'll write music based on thirteenth, tenths, sevenths or hundredths

  • lego have really stepped up

  • @TFUCURD lol

  • this is very strangely beautiful

  • this sounds like crap

  • Can you do dynamics on that?

  • Still based on 12 notes system, somebody needs to go to the next level, something metric style will be great

  • Why ?

  • Because by using a metric notation system things would be a lot easier to learn write and reat... no nead for high end conservatories and everything fits inside of a metric system EG: 5, 5.25, 6.11 and the would actualy be no end to it sucha s a note writen like "5.142536" all the MHz frequencies could be writen in a very simple form

  • Okay let's assume music is metricated. The closest match to the perfect fifth interval would be six tenths of an octave, and end up being a nasty 720 cents. But play with the idea, compose some 10-et stuff and lemme know how it works for you

  • @fheroneeightytwo take yours frets of a guitar, replace it with 10 frets, see what happens, i would be interested to hear your inventions, if u do this u must into into account the space gettin smaller bettwen the frets

  • Yes I thought about doing that already or learning to play the violin in my own metric notation style

  • @fheroneeightytwo no, actually it's not based on the 12 note system at all. It's 41 x 5 = 205ET.

  • @AaronAndrewHunt  the one used harry partch?

  • Aha - I always said that I know : beetwen 2 guitar or bass frets are adlist 5 microtones...

  • Well, there are an infinite number of tones between frets because of the mathematical qualities of sound waves. You can illustrate this by using frequency numbers, like 432.3 Hz and 432.3255 Hz. It's all about how small a microtonal interval the human ear can perceive.

  • 211 Tonos Ecualizados. Muy interesante ya ke la dada peculiaridad del instrumento emite una polifonía ke vá más allá de cualkier concepto estilista del aburrido.. ..Bah!, kise decir, la común Escala de 12 Tonos Ecualizados. Mentes Brillantes como esta son las ke proyectan un amplio porvenir de magnificencia y creatividad proyectada esféricamente expansiva.

    211 Notas per Ottava e molto interessante ya che e un número PRIMO!!!

  • Geinig.

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