The new shape of music: Music has its own geometry, researchers find

User rating: 4.5 / 5 after 134 vote(s)

The figure shows how geometrical music theory represents four-note chord-types -- the collections of notes form a tetrahedron with the colors indicating the spacing between the individual notes in a sequence. In the blue spheres the notes are cluster ...
The figure shows how geometrical music theory represents four-note chord-types -- the collections of notes form a tetrahedron, with the colors indicating the spacing between the individual notes in a sequence. In the blue spheres, the notes are clustered, in the warmer colors, they are farther apart. The red ball at the top of the pyramid is the diminished seventh chord, a popular 19th-century chord. Near it are all the most familiar chords of Western music. Credit: Dmitri Tymoczko, Princeton University

The connection between music and mathematics has fascinated scholars for centuries. More than 200 years ago Pythagoras reportedly discovered that pleasing musical intervals could be described using simple ratios.


Full story »

All News summaries from General Science news
All News summaries for April 17, 2008