Title: The Math and Music Connection
1The Math and Music Connection
- Or
- Pythagoras
- Forefather of Rock n Roll?
2When people think of great pioneers in music no
doubt some of these people come to mind
- Beethoven
- Mozart
- Jimmy Hendrix
Surprisingly some of the most important musical
discoveries were made long before any of these
men were born.
3In 6th century B.C. lived a man named Pythagoras
- PHILOSOPHER
- MATHMATICIAN
- SPIRITUALIST
- VEGITARIAN
- ASTRONOMER
- FOUNDER OF THE NOW FAMOUS PYTHAGOREAN THEOREM
4Pythagoras was determined to discover the hidden
connection in all things.
- He believed beneath all that we perceive to be
real was a mathematical abstraction. - It was these sets of secret abstractions that
in turn made up the perfect numerical harmonies
of the universe. - He related this concept to the realm of music by
finding a way to express musical tones in
mathematical form.
5One day while passing a blacksmiths shop
Pythagoras noted differences in the sound of
various hammers striking the anvil.
- Tonal difference was related to the size and
weight of the hammers - A hammer weighing exactly twice as much an other
hammer produced a sound one octave in difference - A difference in pitch of a fourth as well as a
fifth were produced by two other hammers with a
weight ratio of 43 and 32 respectively
6Pythagoras theorized that number,in the form of
weight, seemed to control musical tone.
- He decided to further investigate this theory.
- He used many different methods to test it.
- Some involved different length pipes and various
weights attached to strings. - Perhaps the easiest to explain involved string
tension.
7Pythagoras set up two sets of strings each with
the same degree of tension.
- He then dived one exactly in half.
- When he plucked at the shorter string the sound
it made was a pitch exactly one octave higher
than longer one. - He concluded once again that number, this time
being amount of space, again seemed to control
tone.
8He than continued to test different lengths of
string.
- Holding the string at 2/3 its length produced a
sound pitch difference of a fifth.
- A string held at ¾ its length produced a pitch
difference of a forth. - His theory was proven sound (no pun intended)
9Not surprisingly the method Pythagoras used
closely resembles the structure of the modern
guitar.(only ½ the fret board is pictured)
- ½ way down the neck of the guitar counting by
fret spacing is what is known as the 12th fret or
octave. - The A and B notes on the E string are known as
the fourth and fifth of the scale and are located
at approximately the same ¾ and 2/3 distances as
Pythagoras models.
A
10Okay so maybe the not exactly the forefather of
rock and roll.
- His tone ratio was later discovered to be off by
1.36 in exact pitch difference when ran through
an entire scale. - He did however establish a firm connection
between music and mathematics that would be
carried on by the school of Plato and
neo-Platonists for generations.
11The End
12Bibliography
- http//www.aboutscotland.com/harmony/prop.html
- http//www.newgenevacenter.org/biography/pythagora
s2.htm - http//guitar-primer.com/Folk/Fingers.html
- http//www.math.niu.edu/rusin/uses-math/music/
- http//www.homepages.kcbbs.gen.nz/rtomes/alex-ha.h
tm - http//www.library.scar.utoronto.ca/ClassicsC42/Ho
lder/MUSIC.HTM