Re: [LAU] from 4 to 400 Hz

From: Rustom Mody <rustompmody@email-addr-hidden>
Date: Sun Jul 17 2011 - 11:41:50 EEST

On Sun, Jul 17, 2011 at 1:21 PM, Philipp Überbacher
<hollunder@email-addr-hiddenwrote:

> Excerpts from Rustom Mody's message of 2011-07-17 05:33:44 +0200:
> > I am preparing to give a talk on the wider ramifications of music.
> > One of the things I wish to demonstrate is that things that look
> different
> > are merely analogs but at different scales.
> >
> > eg if something vibrates at 400Hz we hear a sound of A-flat. If it
> > 'vibrates' at 4 Hz we hear a beat.
> > In the same analogy a 2 vs 3 poly-rhythm (should?) change to a do-so
> chord.
> > And so on.
>
> I suggest you do some experiments before you give a talk. At 4 Hz you
> won't be able to hear anything, you won't even be able to reproduce a
> 4 Hz sound with common speakers.
>

You took me quite literally, [I did put the vibrate into quotes :-) ]
Let me spell out the experiment in more detail:
Say I have a rhythm in 4/4 time -- 4 even quarter notes, bar repeating every
second played by say a click. [What kind of click I am not very sure; sharp
with few harmonics would be best I expect]
Now if there were some (realtime) way of sliding the tempo from 1 sec to
millisec I expect the separate clicks would vanish into a hum at some stage.

This (and other such experiments) is what I want to demo.
Ive started looking at chuck.
How does it compare with puredata?

> > Is there some kind of software where I can make a 4 Hz beat and pull a
> > slider or a freq text box entry until it sound like a A-flat note?
>
> puredata springs to mind, it's easy to use and has everything you need.
>
> Regards,
> Philipp
>
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Received on Sun Jul 17 12:15:02 2011

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