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Pitch = Rhythm


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So I was reading this rediculous book (I believe it was The Music Lesson by Victor Wooten), and it mentioned that rhythms are just extremely low pitches....Something like the vibrations from chopping A440 in half a bunch of times would eventually end up being X beats per minute.

Is there any merit to that or is it just fiction?

I thought it was a very good book, by the way. You might want to check it out....

~Kal

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In theory, yes, this is true.

I've also come across some pretty fantastical stuff regarding this topic, like a Swiss (or Dutch) mathematician who wrote a book connecting everything from colours and planets to the octave.

As far as creative foder is concerned, this kind of stuff goes a long way for me. How real or legitimate is it? Couldn't tell you. All I do know is that sound and light are different, and there's no real way to say that the note c# corresponds with our planets orbit around the sun.

Rhythms, though, may be different, as that's what notes are as well. I see it being perfectly plausable. But who knows (not me).

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Guest DOFTS
So I was reading this [ridiculous] book

I thought it was a very good book, by the way. You might want to check it out...

I'm confused

Anyways, are Rhythm pitches? Probably not, but Rhythm are produced by pitches being held for various length of time.

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So if pitches are rhythms, are rhythms pitches? If so, then when I play sixteenth notes on a table, I'm a playing an extremely low pitch? But what about the pitch of me actually hitting the table? Am I playing two notes at the same time? But if me hitting the table has a pitch, isn't that pitch a rhythm too?:w00t:

:wacko:

~Kal

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It's mearly that we percieve vibrations of sufficient speed as pitch. Snakes can "hear" other animals' movements - the extremely low frequency vibrations in the are that are created by a mouse moving are "heard" in a similar way to the way we hear normal sound.

Rhythms of constant or repetitious variety can be compared to pitch relationships. A 2 over 3 polyrhythm is much like a perfect fifth; a 4 over 3 polyrhythm is much like a perfect fourth. (These are Pythagorean ratios.) But as far as the greater complexities of decoration and variation against a pulse (and in modern music, even that pulse isn't constant), these types of comparisons go out the window. Such a non-constant rhythmic surrounding it is as good as noise when translated into the language of pitch.

I'd say its a pretty sweeping statement. Rhythm, and more specifically, pulse, is generally seen as being useful to humans for three reasons - the pulse of the human heart, the varied expressiveness of the fluctuating human voice through language, and the way our brains sort out the world into a stable, linear temporal stream. Pitch, is completely distinct from this, and can't really be compared to rhythm very much. And as far as compositional sensibilities go, they remain to be separate entities.

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I mean, A440 vibrates 440 times a minute, which is quarter notes at Q = 440 or sixteenths at Q = 110. So yeah, pitches are rhythms. But it also means nothing.

A440 is 440 vibrations per SECOND. Which is quarter notes at Q = 26,400, or sixteenths at Q = 6,600.

Henry Cowell wrote some very interesting stuff about pitch/rhythm equivalencies, and even developed a temporal music notation to work with it.

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So if pitches are rhythms, are rhythms pitches? If so, then when I play sixteenth notes on a table, I'm a playing an extremely low pitch? But what about the pitch of me actually hitting the table? Am I playing two notes at the same time? But if me hitting the table has a pitch, isn't that pitch a rhythm too?:w00t:

:wacko:

~Kal

Rhythms are pitches. People find 4/4 drumbeats pleasing because it's creating the (very low) intervals of octave and fifth, if it's just quarter notes, and then if you add eighths, that's another fourth on top of it, making two full octaves. It's called "metric consonance," by some people. And then of course, rhythms like 7 against 13 make "metric dissonance."

The actual range of human hearing (approx. 20 Hz) varies by the type of wave. You hitting a table is a square wave, and could feasibly be heard as a pitch at 15 hits/second, and for some people, even as low as 10. The lowest A that can POSSIBLY be heard as pitch is 13.75 Hz (13.75 cycles/second), but the pitch "A," based on 440, goes down to 3.185 Hz, and even lower. So you could approximate the "A" pitch with a tempo of approximately Q = 96.

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A440 is 440 vibrations per SECOND. Which is quarter notes at Q = 26,400, or sixteenths at Q = 6,600.

Henry Cowell wrote some very interesting stuff about pitch/rhythm equivalencies, and even developed a temporal music notation to work with it.

Oh God, dude. I know.

scraggy. That's awful. And it's not even like it was a typo. That was just pitiful.

:pinch::headwall::sick:

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This just sounds like some graduate student's nonsense thesis that was accidentally published. I mean, WTF?

Lol, it was a VERY good book. I learned a lot....(whether what I learned is actually useful or not is another story...) I would recommend it to any musician. Also, check out Victor Wooten on youtube. He plays bass. You might have seen his amazing "Amazing Grace" clip....

~Kal

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So if pitches are rhythms, are rhythms pitches? If so, then when I play sixteenth notes on a table, I'm a playing an extremely low pitch? But what about the pitch of me actually hitting the table? Am I playing two notes at the same time? But if me hitting the table has a pitch, isn't that pitch a rhythm too?:w00t:

:wacko:

~Kal

Christopher Dunn-Rankin already answered the first question.

Regarding the question of whether you are playing two pitches at the same time: Technically yes (as long as you hitting the table is more or less clearly pitched). It's actually a very slow form of granular synthesis what you are doing, which is one of the methods to generate sound electronically: You have extremely short sound fragments, so-called "grains", that are played in extremely rapid succession thus creating a new tone. The resulting sound has both qualities of the pitch(es) of the original grains and the speed at which the grains are repeated.

Well, I generally agree that it may often be pointless to do such comparisations as it goes a bit against how we hear stuff. Hitting a table 5 times a second may be a "pitch" but we won't hear it as such, because of the already mentioned limits of our ears, so it may seem like a rather academic question.

-However- this idea can become quite practical when dealing with electronic music, where you can create smooth transitions between audible, individual pulses and pitches. The border between extremely low pitches and fast pulses can be very interesting (and is, again, quite typical for pieces created with granular synthesis).

This is of course almost impossible to do on classical instruments, as no human player can generally play so fast tone repetitions that it sounds like a pitch. However there are certain instrumental techniques which deal with this border. One of the most common way of turning pitches into pulses in instrumental music is when two notes are so close to each other that they start to beat.

Assume a cello for example, which plays a double stop, starting on an unison and slowly sliding into a greater interval. You will then hear a slow beating that grows faster and faster till it vanishes, due to the frequency differences of both notes.

Another way to instrumentally show the dual nature of pitches and pulses would be things like fluttertonguing on wind instruments. Generally this will produce a "pulse" sound, although a very rapid one. But if you play an extremely low note (let's say on a trombone) with fluttertongue the frequency of the played pitch and the frequency of the fluttertongue won't be very far away from each other, so they'll influence each other and break the tone apart in curious ways, as an interference.

Even pieces like Ligeti's "Atmosph

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Gardner -

Great insight. This concept is also shows itself in microtonal and some large extremely polyphonic compositions. For the latter, the reverse (pitch becomes a series of indistinct rhythmns ) can happen too wherein faced with such a large disparate array of pitches there really is not pitch but rather a tidal rhythmn (such as the sound of waves breaking upon the shore) -- examples would be some of the gigantic polyphonic pieces for 40 or more voices in the high rennaissance . The problem of course is listenability - notice this stuff isn't done too often (the next period in Western music where it starts to occur is with the very late Romantic pieces - the opening accompaniment of Gurrelieder is one example where pitch and rhythmn begin to meld - -and this border is crosseds with greater frequency starting in the 1950's and 60's - Ligeti's Requiem, some Stockhausen (like Gruppen), Penderecki (Threnody and some of his choral work at that time) and later to present day in electronic music). In sum, as has been said, rhythmn and pitch are equivalent but is perceptible only at the extremes of human perception. Of course, without electronic enhancement and amplification, its utility is very limited.

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Pitch is all vibrations of air right? so there must be Rythms in the vibrations or else there is just a single Rhythmic pulse. Like a drum(not timpani). But if it is able to "ring" then it has a pitch. And the _-__-__-__-__-_ osolation(sp), dont you need two Crests of a wave to measure its distance? And that would mean two that come systematicly(sp) after each other? That sounds like rhythms to me. But Rhythm seems like it can't have pitch. Only because it is just a single pulse amd then it is over.

I had a ear training book that tryed to explain it.

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People find 4/4 drumbeats pleasing because it's creating the (very low) intervals of octave and fifth, if it's just quarter notes, and then if you add eighths, that's another fourth on top of it, making two full octaves.

Is there any research that verifies this? To me it sounds suspiciously like a dated bullshit excuse to consider European music superior to others. And before someone comes and says that it's okay to make up your own theories about this stuff, I'd like to point out that the claim that people find certain rhythms or meters pleasing because of certain acoustic principles is very much a testable (and falsifiable) scientific claim, probably falling in the realm of neurology and psychoacoustics. So I think asking for a reference is fully legitimate. That said, I would be pleased and interested if one is provided.

By the way, superimposing a 2 and 4 or 1 and 3 beat on 4/4 quavers would result in a very low octave, and adding eighths would be another octave on top. A fifth would have to be a triplet of some sort. If we have the 4/4 beat and add eighth notes and eighth-note triplets, you'll have the first four harmonics nicely represented, but I haven't heard that beat a lot in disco music. Leading me again to think the hypothesis is somewhat weakly constructed.

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Good point. And if we'd even add the fifth harmonic (which is usually clearly audible in most instruments) we would even have to add quintuplets to these. While physically it can be said that there's no strict difference between a rhythmic pulse and tone, neurologically they are handled differently. So personally I'm very sceptical of theories that make a psychoacoustical link between rhythmic and harmonic concepts. ("Sceptical" doesn't mean I'm necessarily against it, just very careful.)

However, as I mentioned, it can be very interesting if you move towards the border of these phenomenons where they actually overlap.

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