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:: Thursday, March 20, 2008 ::

The Geometry of Music


Dmitri Tymoczko at Princeton University, where he teaches and has developed a geometric method of representing musical chords.
"When you first hear them, a Gregorian chant, a Debussy prelude and a John Coltrane improvisation might seem to have almost nothing in common--except that they all include chord progressions and something you could plausibly call a melody. But music theorists have long known that there's something else that ties these disparate musical forms together. The composers of these and virtually every other style of Western music over the past millennium tend to draw from a tiny fraction of the set of all possible chords. And their chord progressions tend to be efficient, changing as few notes, by as little as possible, from one chord to the next."

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:: Dan 20.3.08 [Arc] [0 comments] ::
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