Hello Musicians! (even if you are not, feel free to contribute!)
Without needing a full explanation, we all understand how close this is to "everything."
Please Chime in with your musical understanding/analogy/music theories/scales/octaves/keys etc. etc.
in comparison with the 7 densities, progressions, wandering, inversion, etc. etc.
Things you do in music, how do you relate them to the lawofone?
Harmonizing, chromatic scale, circle of 5th, etc. Why do you think it is "structured" this way and how the 7 densities relate to it?
Why do you think B-C and E-F doesn't have ♯ or ♭ ? (sharp/flat)
Which density would BC, EF represent? and if they don't have sharps/flats, what does that mean to you? do you feel they have different progress?
I'll start off by saying that musical octaves are literally infinite with which ever direction they go (meaning off the keyboard/piano) the only problem is that we cannot "hear" them after a certain point. The sound/vibration become too high or low.
A - B - C - D - E - F - G
Do - re - mi - fa - son - la - si <---- (fyi, this is not in the same order as the alphabetical notes, i.e. Do is C, and Re is D etc.)
1? 2? 3? 4? 5? 6? 7?
I hope that with our combined understanding in music, we may explore and find out more about the densities and more!
- With l/l
Without needing a full explanation, we all understand how close this is to "everything."
Please Chime in with your musical understanding/analogy/music theories/scales/octaves/keys etc. etc.
in comparison with the 7 densities, progressions, wandering, inversion, etc. etc.
Things you do in music, how do you relate them to the lawofone?
Harmonizing, chromatic scale, circle of 5th, etc. Why do you think it is "structured" this way and how the 7 densities relate to it?
Why do you think B-C and E-F doesn't have ♯ or ♭ ? (sharp/flat)
Which density would BC, EF represent? and if they don't have sharps/flats, what does that mean to you? do you feel they have different progress?
I'll start off by saying that musical octaves are literally infinite with which ever direction they go (meaning off the keyboard/piano) the only problem is that we cannot "hear" them after a certain point. The sound/vibration become too high or low.
A - B - C - D - E - F - G
Do - re - mi - fa - son - la - si <---- (fyi, this is not in the same order as the alphabetical notes, i.e. Do is C, and Re is D etc.)
1? 2? 3? 4? 5? 6? 7?
I hope that with our combined understanding in music, we may explore and find out more about the densities and more!
- With l/l