Hi Scott, this is referring to your video 'Using Colors to Show Pitch Hierarchy in Schubert's "Mein!" '. You disabled comments on that video, but this is really important. Representing key shifts with color was a brilliant idea, and truly highlights changes within a piece of music, but there is one thing I think would improve it. Would you be able to recreate that video, but rather than assigning the notes around the color wheel chromatically, align the color wheel with the circle of fifths? This way, similarity between keys will be represented by a similarity between colors, rather than the nearly random color representation produced by the chromatic approach. I am working on a project to find a relation between visual and auditory art, and it would be a huge help if you could do this. I also think that making this alteration would better represent what you were trying to get across in the video.
@robcolone85466 жыл бұрын
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@MM-hq2bd6 жыл бұрын
This is great! Pledge to public radio folks. We do it for the love of it. Cheers!
@HarmoChopin6 жыл бұрын
C'est amusant, mais la voix du ténor surplombe un peu les autres voix en volume sonore, c'est dommage. Néanmoins, ça me donne bien envie d'écrire une fugue, moi aussi ; il va falloir que je dégage du temps pour cela, car pour ma première fugue, j'ai mis 35 heures : kzbin.info/www/bejne/d4KWYmSIoKqMi5I
@WillyJunior6 жыл бұрын
sounds like a music degree... if that makes sense
@ScottMurphyIdeasAboutMusic6 жыл бұрын
This does make sense: it is part a work of art, part a promotional piece, and part a pedagogical example, as I will use this as a model in my counterpoint class. I've added some academic analysis in the captions.