Monday, January 26, 2015

You can use these HTML tags and attributes:


A piano tone has a very rich and inharmonisk range, and by extracting each overtone I could recreate piano timbre synthetic. I have also built up the sound with piano tones have been like overtones, thus crossing the boundaries between tone, timbre, range and harmonics.
In my last post I mentioned Stockhausen and the early sound studios. Stockhausen was one of those who explored the ability to synthesize sound (with an audio synthesized?) With sinusoidal tone generators. simplicity vacuum In theory, one could make any sound by stacking sine tones superimposed. Mathematician Fourier showed in 1822 that any periodic function can be described as a sum of sine and cosine waves. In practice it should prove to be virtually impossible, at least with contemporary equipment.
With today's computer technology can make it. The program I use, "Spear", let me also select and make simple changes on partials. Posts in electronic music, compositions Date: 9th February 2014 by Karsten Post navigation Stockhausen about form, rhythm, pitch, timbre Contemporary society simplicity vacuum
You can use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title = ""> <acronym title = ""> <b> <blockquote cite = ""> <cite> < code> <del datetime = ""> <em> <i> <q cite = ""> <strike> <strong>
login Recent posts Eivind Groven organ Ultima 2014 What is contemporary? - Part 2: When contemporary music was cool What is contemporary? - Part 1 Contemporary society Tone, tone, chord Archives September 2014 August 2014 May 2014 February 2014 September 2013 May 2013 April 2013 August 2012 March 2012 December 2010 Categories electronic music instruments compositions concerts contemporary else Debussy at the piano Norwegian classical composers Piano mp3
Karsten Djupdal

No comments:

Post a Comment