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From:
Ian Pojman
To:
Date:
Tue, 5 Sep 2000 13:22:50 -0500
Subject:
RE: [idm] f e^MUSIC x dx / Solar System rock
Msg-Id:
<GNENLFEHEAMCLLIMHOOHKEHPCAAA.ian@webice.net>
In-Reply-To:
<Pine.GSO.3.96.1000905105909.15178B-100000@falco.kuci.uci.edu>
Mbox:
idm.0009.gz
ohhh dude, youre totally right. :P nice title btw, ahah :) i was actually thinking of incorporating fractals otherwise, structurally. ie, number of measures, key change, chord change, etc. but yeh nothigns exciting about some parabolae :P lates ian/delphi
quoted 55 lines -----Original Message-----> -----Original Message----- > From: Brian MacDonald [mailto:brianm@kuci.org] > Sent: Tuesday, September 05, 2000 1:10 PM > To: Insanity Defense Materializes > Subject: [idm] f e^MUSIC x dx / Solar System rock > > > > While I've never dealth with fractals, and anything more than just tones, > I've played around with mathematical formulae back in the college days as > far as programatically generating tones within a given range. > > Speaking as a math geek and a music geek, I hate to say the results were, > more often than not, pretty dull. But that's to be expected, of course. > (Again, I was just dealing with tones -- or something that would be just > one out of a gazillion tracks comprising a typical track we'd talk about > here, so take this with a micron of salt.) > > The most interesting equations were ones associated with physics, > chemistry, or astronomy. Things involving rigorous mathematics (your > bell curve formulae, your quadratic formulae) were the ones that usually > didn't sound as interesting. It does really depend on *how* you use these > formulae of course, so I don't mean to dis my mathemetic bruthas and > sistas. :) > > And I'm not saying any of this to discourage folks from using raw math to > make music.. In fact, I encourage it. But as long as raw math isn't the > *only* thing that involved in creating the music. It's the fine tuning, > tweaking, and subsequent human input that will make pieces like this > interesting and memorable... (again, all IMHO) > > Speaking of which, my *very first* record I ever bought (for 25 cents at a > garage sale) when I was 9 years old was this astronomical data simulation > record called "Johannes Kepler's Harmony Of The Worlds". Each track > essentially combines the vibrations, tones, and beats generated by the > nine planets, using each planet's size, radius of orbit, orbit angle, etc. > as parameters to the sounds each would generate. All combined, the > results were pretty damn disturbing. Coil wished they could make bowels > churn like this record. And this is coming from a Coil fan. :) > > ======================================================================= > Brian MacDonald <brianm@kuci.org> > KUCI 88.9 fM in Irvine, CA -- Orange County > > "Zee Robot attacked zee computer -- in zee outer space...!" > ======================================================================= > > > > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org > For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org > >
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