Math & Music

Hi. I'm posting this because I want to know which are the reasons that cause people to say "math is music". Personally, I play the guitar and I find that the patterns of the distances between notes can be described mathematically. Well, something I also need is someone from the oriental side (India, Singapore...) to recommend me classical songs or studies famous from the oriental side. If anyone could add something for me to get familiarized with the specific application of math in music, ill be thankful. I hope no one gets mad for a post not 100% related to math...

Note by Diego E. Nazario Ojeda
7 years, 3 months ago

No vote yet
1 vote

  Easy Math Editor

This discussion board is a place to discuss our Daily Challenges and the math and science related to those challenges. Explanations are more than just a solution — they should explain the steps and thinking strategies that you used to obtain the solution. Comments should further the discussion of math and science.

When posting on Brilliant:

  • Use the emojis to react to an explanation, whether you're congratulating a job well done , or just really confused .
  • Ask specific questions about the challenge or the steps in somebody's explanation. Well-posed questions can add a lot to the discussion, but posting "I don't understand!" doesn't help anyone.
  • Try to contribute something new to the discussion, whether it is an extension, generalization or other idea related to the challenge.
  • Stay on topic — we're all here to learn more about math and science, not to hear about your favorite get-rich-quick scheme or current world events.

MarkdownAppears as
*italics* or _italics_ italics
**bold** or __bold__ bold

- bulleted
- list

  • bulleted
  • list

1. numbered
2. list

  1. numbered
  2. list
Note: you must add a full line of space before and after lists for them to show up correctly
paragraph 1

paragraph 2

paragraph 1

paragraph 2

[example link](https://brilliant.org)example link
> This is a quote
This is a quote
    # I indented these lines
    # 4 spaces, and now they show
    # up as a code block.

    print "hello world"
# I indented these lines
# 4 spaces, and now they show
# up as a code block.

print "hello world"
MathAppears as
Remember to wrap math in \( ... \) or \[ ... \] to ensure proper formatting.
2 \times 3 2×3 2 \times 3
2^{34} 234 2^{34}
a_{i-1} ai1 a_{i-1}
\frac{2}{3} 23 \frac{2}{3}
\sqrt{2} 2 \sqrt{2}
\sum_{i=1}^3 i=13 \sum_{i=1}^3
\sin \theta sinθ \sin \theta
\boxed{123} 123 \boxed{123}

Comments

Hey Diego,

Brilliant is a perfectly fine place to talk about music. My understanding of music theory is wayy weaker than my math so I am not much help to you in talking about the mathematics of music. Much to my misfortune, I am also entirely illiterate in the classical music of Asia.

But for what it is worth, Right now I am listening to:

New Order

For cultural comparison, I am from Portland Oregon where we make and listen to a whole lot of indie, softish, angsty rock&roll. This is what a band from Portland sounds like.

Peter Taylor Staff - 7 years, 3 months ago

Log in to reply

Luckily, my dad has 2 Ph.D's in music theory and a masters in choral composition, and is teniored teaching music theory at William and Mary. I play the piano, and I would love to chat about the amazing-ness of the math behind the music, and what makes chords and harmony actually sound good. ;)

Finn Hulse - 7 years, 3 months ago

Music and math are more closely related than you could think. I know a little music theory and I can tell you that fractions are crucial for understanding and reproducing rhythms, you have to be somewhat good at arithmetics for recognizing note ranges, and that certain symphony movements have patterns that may be interpreted in a mathematical way. I think I also heard something about Rachmaninoff's music being related to the golden ratio in some way, but I'm not completely positive about that. :)

José Marín Guzmán - 7 years, 3 months ago
×

Problem Loading...

Note Loading...

Set Loading...