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| 21 Aug 2016 07:20 PM |
I'm doing this project called, "math is everywhere" You choose a topic and then explain three things how it's related to math I chose music because I play piano, but I'm not quite sure how to explain how music is related to math |
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Ordinari
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| Joined: 11 May 2013 |
| Total Posts: 8399 |
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| 21 Aug 2016 07:21 PM |
i play piano but i have no idea either
。:.゚that's the trashcan. feel free to visit anytime。:.゚ |
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Alex50529
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| Joined: 10 Mar 2015 |
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| 21 Aug 2016 07:21 PM |
count how many notes are in a song?
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| 21 Aug 2016 07:22 PM |
| I guess when doing math and writing songs, you'll have to think critically. |
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| 21 Aug 2016 07:22 PM |
@alex I need to write atleast 3-5 sentences about it Don't think that'll cut it |
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chanyeohl
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| Joined: 28 Mar 2016 |
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| 21 Aug 2016 07:22 PM |
mathcore
i got them bad boy blues baby |
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| 21 Aug 2016 07:23 PM |
| Measures are based on fractions (ie a quarter note makes up 1/4 of the measure) |
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Alex50529
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| Joined: 10 Mar 2015 |
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| 21 Aug 2016 07:23 PM |
idk
half notes plus normal notes = 1 1/2 note?
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cooper135
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| Joined: 29 Jan 2011 |
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| 21 Aug 2016 07:24 PM |
| How long does the sound travel? |
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| 21 Aug 2016 07:24 PM |
| it took mathematics to build your instrument |
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| 21 Aug 2016 07:24 PM |
4 seems to be a very common number in music
Like really
Listen to almost any song
1. Some beat 2. Some beat with a tiny change at the end 3. Same beat as 1 4. It changes
Then later the song repeats 1-4
And after all, you have to count things and divide things and add things and do it so often that it's second nature
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| 21 Aug 2016 07:25 PM |
| each pitch in regards to music has a specific frequency in hertz |
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chanyeohl
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| Joined: 28 Mar 2016 |
| Total Posts: 1984 |
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| 21 Aug 2016 07:26 PM |
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=baenrE6yVlY
i got them bad boy blues baby |
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| 21 Aug 2016 07:26 PM |
I read every comment and I'll put it into consideration, thank you
"HOW OLD ARE YOU" Same age as you, 13 |
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| 21 Aug 2016 07:30 PM |
There is a wikipedia article on it. Here are some excerpts:
"Some composers have incorporated the golden ratio and Fibonacci numbers into their work."
"A musical scale is a discrete set of pitches used in making or describing music. The most important scale in the Western tradition is the diatonic scale but many others have been used and proposed in various historical eras and parts of the world. Each pitch corresponds to a particular frequency, expressed in hertz (Hz), sometimes referred to as cycles per second (c.p.s.). A scale has an interval of repetition, normally the octave. The octave of any pitch refers to a frequency exactly twice that of the given pitch."
"Succeeding superoctaves are pitches found at frequencies four, eight, sixteen times, and so on, of the fundamental frequency. Pitches at frequencies of half, a quarter, an eighth and so on of the fundamental are called suboctaves. There is no case in musical harmony where, if a given pitch be considered accordant, that its octaves are considered otherwise. Therefore, any note and its octaves will generally be found similarly named in musical systems (e.g. all will be called doh or A or Sa, as the case may be)."
"Expanding on the methods of musical set theory, some theorists have used abstract algebra to analyze music." |
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| 21 Aug 2016 07:31 PM |
So you're in like 7th or 8th grade I'd just write about how the whole system of measures, time signatures, and notes are related to fons |
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| 21 Aug 2016 07:32 PM |
measures
prithee transport thyself to tarnation |
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Coevality
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| Joined: 24 Jul 2011 |
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| 21 Aug 2016 07:33 PM |
| well in music, there are soundwaves, which are related to math because they like sine waves I guess |
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CattIeya
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| Joined: 17 Feb 2015 |
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| 21 Aug 2016 07:34 PM |
| measures, beats, and timings is all i could think of |
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| 21 Aug 2016 07:35 PM |
counting rests
multiplying the measures of rests to find how many beats there are
and then the following video
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2lbABbfU6Zc |
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