Daily reminder that electronic music is the new classical.
Connor Adams
Anyone who doesn't listen to classical music is a total piece of shit.
Justin Edwards
>tfw reading Glenn Gould's diaries >tfw at some point he literally loses all of his skills immediatly >tfw 30 years of intense practice just to play te Goldberg's Variations once and a few fugues from the AoF
Fuck, it's heartbreaking, truly. Also as a pianist it's basically my worse nightmare: he basically went from being one of the most successfull virtuoso in the word to a complete amateur who misses most notes and can't keep rythm in a matter of days.
Evan Anderson
He over-exaggerated. Look at his disco, he was recording consistently. Also his Brahms was one of his last recordings and he didn't practice them until a week before the sessions
I mean occasionally there are some pretty tasty tone clusters in there but honestly I can't understand the appeal of a whole piece that sounds like this
Jonathan Mitchell
Reminder that your IQ has to be around 135 to enjoy Ferneyhough.
Noah Gutierrez
Welp, guess I'm too smart for him, then.
Ryder Scott
ice cold
and quads to boot.
Ryder Ross
what's your occupation?
Gavin Turner
Sup Forums shitposter
Adrian Cooper
Just leaving a few left handed piano pieces here, move along
Reminder that the most advanced mathematical applications of music theory are no more difficult than Grade 8 mathematics.
>b-but muh inversions!
Brody Allen
We need to get some IUTeich into music somehow
Sebastian Peterson
I would disagree I would think the physics of harmonics would apply to music theory, and harmonics aren't grade 8 math. sure whole number ratios would be but so few instruments have perfect harmonics like that. intonation is more complicated than you probably realize
Owen Sanchez
Not really because intonation and tuning is separate from music theory. But the fact that you pointed it out as more advanced than music theory since the more compositional aspects are apparently more barren in this regard seems to prove my original point further.
I'm not saying music is easy. The art of is difficult, but the mathematical aspect of it, especially 20th century music, definitely is.
Logan Wright
I always like to look at this website whenever I contemplate mathematics and music theory
its mostly bs and arbitrary coincidence i think, but there is something satisfying about the perfect geometry of chords that symmetrically divide the octave
I sort of want to get the augmented triad tattooed to my body
Dylan Brooks
Get out you nerds, this is classical thread, not algebra class.
Isaiah Cruz
wrong
Owen Moore
t. dumb American
Connor Brown
here
Even though I was railing against math vs. music above, I don't think it's a coincidence. the list of geometrical beauties inherent in the diatonic scale of Western music is endless. For example, one of my favouites:
Are you familiar with modes? Have you or anyone else had difficulties remembering them? This is a little-known fact about them. In every mode, the scale degree of the flattened note is also reciprocally the number of the mode which contains a flattened version of the number of the mode under consideration. So: in mode 2 (Dorian) there is a flat scale degree 3. Therefore, mode 3 (Phrygian) will contain a flat 2.
Another way to think about it: mode 7 (Locrian) contains FIVE flattened scale degrees (2, 3, 5, 6, 7). Now, which modes have flat 7th scale degrees? Yeah, modes 2, 3, 5, 6, and 7.
Some people may know this already but I went to music school and things like that are not commonly taught when addressing the modes (or more accurately, the tonal system in general).
Colton Richardson
but the Dorian is tonally more of a minor counterpart to the mixolydian so I don't exactly see the significance since the Chromatic scale is missing key members of the overtone series anyway.
William Anderson
>but the Dorian is tonally more of a minor counterpart to the mixolydian Well it can be both, clearly.
>the Chromatic scale is missing key members of the overtone series
When I'm talking about "flattened" notes, these aren't chromatic, it's just customary to relate them to the "unflattened" Ionian (major) scale.
Anthony Jenkins
woah this is interesting.
Oliver Sullivan
>tfw high schoolers than don't purchase music hijack your thread
Parker Baker
giving money to the shitty world of modern classical academia.
Anyone know the pw for the Christmas music in the Renaissance folder?
Jaxon Flores
I dont go into jazz threads. Pretty much just classical and any thread with Bach in the OP
Isaac Adams
hmm
Logan Bell
What does 11:10 and 7:5 mean?
John Cook
11:10 is bedtime and 7 to 5 is the work schedule
Cooper Wood
they're tuplets. basically play 11 eighth notes in the time it would take to play 10 eighth notes. 7:5 means that 7 notes will be played in the time it take to play 5 of those eleven
Luis James
if anyone has questions about complex notation get at me