Why Middle"C" on a piano?
Simply, because Macs start up with a C chord.
hm, um...maybe not..
Simply, because Macs start up with a C chord.
hm, um...maybe not..
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Franny wrote:Wegman wrote:Thats the inherent note i was referring to, everything in nature seems to have a resonance at or near a frequency of C.
It's known electric motors run in the key of C. Try it. Flip your vacuum on and hit a C chord, perfect harmony.
I like to think it explains why C is the middle note on a Piano...i don't truely know if this the reason though?
If anyone does know the reason for middle C please chime in.
Aside from the fact that it's Do in the solfege Do, Re, Mi...
Could it be our human voice defaults to C?
....The piece can be extremely simple, however it is excellent in it's simplicity. Let's look at the probably the simplest, and yet most well known and catchy riffs of all time, Smoke on the Water. Why does just about everybody know that tune"? It's brilliant in it's simplicity. I hope that kind of make the point.
Why Middle"C" on a piano? Simply, because Macs start up with a C chord.
Franny wrote: everything in nature seems to have a resonance at or near a frequency of C.
I like to think it explains why C is the middle note on a Piano...i don't truely know if this the reason though?
RhythmMan_BluesRockFolk wrote:
If middle C is 440...
Franny wrote:You hoo guys....i never said what frequency of C that most sounds of inanimate objects are at or near.
In my original post i mentioned to just tap, or knock on things to find where their range sits on the musical scale. Most things, NOT everything will be round the note of C in any frequency.
Wegmans mentioning of a vacuum being in C is purely coincidental as it's manmade.
If we really want to over complicate things we can arrange a meeting where the Taos Hum can be heard just to keep things interesting.
Irminsul wrote:Nice piece, as always.
My own take on music is that it's made up of two parts - to borrow from old Latin terms and esoteric philosophies, "music" is made up of "animus" - organized sound that can be written down, reproduced and recorded - and "anima" the musicality, the spirit, that scientifically unmeasurable quality that makes us feel, or be transformed in some way or some degree.
I believe that the "anima" of music will forever remain elusive and evade cold analysis. Let me give you an example. In terms of music theory (animus - scientific, leftbrained stuff) I can take a single line from arguably one of the greatest pieces produced by Western Europe - Beethoven's 9th symphony - (Chorale) and lay it out on a data table both in tone and rhythm. The rhythm is almost childishly simple, four bars of four quarter-notes, ending with an eigth note and holding on a half note. The tones are:
F# F# G A A G F# E D D E F# F# E E
Wow, big deal right? I mean this is almost comically facile. I could take that rhythm and that cadence, and come up with a dozen variations that still hold to the form.
YET.....
Why is it that this ridiculously simple passage can cause the souls of so many to soar? Why is it so moving, so powerful? To take my experiment further, lets use Herr Beethovens same rhythym and use one of my note variations instead -
A A F# A B B F# B D C# B A F# E A
Hmmm...tonically it works. Harmonically it works. Yet why is it oddly...inferior?
What you are dealing with here is the mystery of musicality in music - the anima. The undefinable draw, the beauty, the power. To bring it to the realm of the visual, science can explain all day long what happens in the atmosphere during a sunset, but science is left mute when asked to explain why a sunset is beautiful.
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