Title: Physics 371 March 7, 2002
1Physics 371 March 7, 2002
Acoustics for Musicians
- Consonance /Dissonance
- Interval frequency ratio
- Consonance and Dissonance
- Dissonance curve
- The Just Scale
- major triad
- construction of just scale
- origin of the diatonic scale
21. Musical Interval
We perceive the intervals as being the same if
the RATIO of the frequencies is the
same example 12 ratio (octave) 200Hz-gt
400Hz
or 400Hz -gt 800Hz 23 ratio
(fifth) 200Hz -gt 300Hz
or 400Hz -gt 600Hz divide or multiply
all frequencies by same number -gt same interval
a musical interval is defined by frequency RATIO
32. Consonance and Dissonance
relative dissonance between pure tones dissonant
when both tones in same critical band
beats
4Dissonance Curve for Complex Tones
Sethares, UW EEC
5Conclusion simple number ratios between
frequencies are consonant
"simple" number ratios, e.g. 21
("octave") 32 ("fifth")
5/4 ("major third") Physical basis
(conjecture) no beats between overtones
(overtones either agree exactly or not at all).
63. Construction of the Just Scale
freq. ratio of the THE TRIAD
4 5 6 (major
triad) or divide by 4 1 5/4
3/2 2 C
E G C call
first tone of scale C and assign to it a
frequency of 1unit (1 unit can be any number of
Hz) to get Hz, you could multiply by any number
you like, e.g. multiply by 60
240Hz -gt 300Hz -gt 360Hz -gt
480Hz
7Just Scale
white keys of the piano THREE TRIADS
multiply e.g. by 240 240 270 300
320 360 400 450 480Hz
8read off frequency ratios of intervals
name example ratio octave C - C 2 just
sixth C - A 5/3 fifth C - G 3/2 just
fourth C - F 4/3 just major third C-E
5/4 just minor third E - G 6/5
9if we call the first frequency (C) 1 the
frequencies become C D
E F G A B C
D 1 9/8 5/4
4/3 3/2 5/3 15/8 2 9/4
inter- val 9/8 10/9
16/15 9/8 10/9 9/8 16/15 incr
12.5 11.1 6.7 12.5 11.1 12.5
6.7 STEP 1 1 1/2 1
1 1 1/2
the "major just diatonic scale"
10Frequencies and frequency deviations measured in
CENT
octave 12 semitones 1200 cent proportion
examples