In 1665 Isaac Newton wrote a notebook in which he collected materials for a musical treatise which was never completed. He investigated ways of approximately representing just intonation scales by dividing the octave into many equally sized intervals. Strictly speaking, equal divisions of the octave are incompatible with just intonation, and just intonation intervals are audibly different from the intervals played on a modern equally tempered modern piano. By increasing the number of parts of an equal division, just intonation can be approximated arbitrarily well. Scales with more than 60 microtonal steps per octave, however, never gained wide acceptance in music theory or practice. Newton divided the octave into 612 equal parts so that he ...
In engineering colleges, Acoustics often includes the musical scale topic, which is not very popular...
The Baroque Era encompassed some of the most important scientific advancements in the history of man...
International audienceIn the Opticks (1704), Newton makes an analogy between colours and musical sou...
In 1665 Isaac Newton wrote a notebook in which he collected materials for a musical treatise which w...
In 1665 Isaac Newton wrote a notebook in which he collected materials for a musical treatise which w...
This text revisits selected aspects of Muzzulini's article and reformulates them on the basis of a t...
Equal temperament represents a way of completing the musical circle, and systematically compensating...
Microtonalis: A Systematic Approach to Microtonal Composition is a complement to existing (Western) ...
Extended just intonation is a field with infinite tonal resources, from pure major scales to Asian m...
It was the keyboard instruments, especially the stringed keyboard instruments, that had the greatest...
There is a deep connection between mathematics and music. The music was created first, however, and ...
Abstract: – Intervals between harmonics in the frequency spectra of pitched sounds occur in a patte...
Since the time of Pythagoras (c.550BC), mathematicians interested in music have asked, “What governs...
This creative project was a theoretical investigation as well as a composition. The goal was to cr...
Du Véritable Caractère de la Musique Moderne (E315), a work almost unknown to musical scholars, is a...
In engineering colleges, Acoustics often includes the musical scale topic, which is not very popular...
The Baroque Era encompassed some of the most important scientific advancements in the history of man...
International audienceIn the Opticks (1704), Newton makes an analogy between colours and musical sou...
In 1665 Isaac Newton wrote a notebook in which he collected materials for a musical treatise which w...
In 1665 Isaac Newton wrote a notebook in which he collected materials for a musical treatise which w...
This text revisits selected aspects of Muzzulini's article and reformulates them on the basis of a t...
Equal temperament represents a way of completing the musical circle, and systematically compensating...
Microtonalis: A Systematic Approach to Microtonal Composition is a complement to existing (Western) ...
Extended just intonation is a field with infinite tonal resources, from pure major scales to Asian m...
It was the keyboard instruments, especially the stringed keyboard instruments, that had the greatest...
There is a deep connection between mathematics and music. The music was created first, however, and ...
Abstract: – Intervals between harmonics in the frequency spectra of pitched sounds occur in a patte...
Since the time of Pythagoras (c.550BC), mathematicians interested in music have asked, “What governs...
This creative project was a theoretical investigation as well as a composition. The goal was to cr...
Du Véritable Caractère de la Musique Moderne (E315), a work almost unknown to musical scholars, is a...
In engineering colleges, Acoustics often includes the musical scale topic, which is not very popular...
The Baroque Era encompassed some of the most important scientific advancements in the history of man...
International audienceIn the Opticks (1704), Newton makes an analogy between colours and musical sou...