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Trance will never work in outer space! (pg. 2)
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Luke Terry
quote:
Originally posted by moth
Tree falls in the woods and nobody is around OMGOMGOMG


heh
Strep
quote:
Originally posted by SpykeChyld
Damn...this is what happens when you give musicians high IQs


Nope.........this is what you get when you give musicians chemicals! ;)

And why not :crazy:, it serves to push the musical boundries!
Digital Aura
quote:
Nope.........this is what you get when you give musicians chemicals!


LMAO still. Only chemical in this cat is Maxwell House!:D
TranceMuzik02
Isn’t there a limit to what sounds can be made that can be heard by the human ear. How much longer can they keep making new sounds for before they actually run out, or do you think it could be indefinite?
Digital Aura
It would be infinite...
thats like saying there's only 8 notes in an octave and the first and last are actually the same tone so we will probably use up all of the possible combinations of notes and melodies very soon!

With the human ear hearing about 15 -17,000 cps(cycles per second) of sound frequency that gives us an incredible amount to work with...but also you must consider that there's more in a sound than just a frequency.
Theres amplitude, modulation, and other means of manipulating these sounds. ADD complex tones in the mix (that is when vibrations occur at different frequencies and get added together to form a sound) and it really is limitless...

CLASS DISMISSED! lol!:happy2:
State of Matter
What makes something melodic is just the difference in frequencies, so technically there aren't just 12 semitones. You ever hear a DJ set where the track was playing in a key that doesn't exist? It's just because the track has been pitched up or down a certain % so the frequencies have all been adjusted to notes that don't exist on the standard musical scale. As long as the difference in frequency is constant, you have a melody.

While we're talking about sound, I've always wondered if there can be so many low bass frequencies being pumped through your body that it could actually injure you (like stop your heart or something). I know that if sound frequencies get too high they can do damage to your ear, but i want to know the effect of low frequencies on the body.
Digital Aura
quote:
As long as the difference in frequency is constant, you have a melody.
... what the ?


Yes, I've heard some bass notes that have actually seemed to make my hearts rythym beatmatch to the music! Which is pretty scarey if you consider a 140 bpm song!! lol

I think, though, that its more a matter of amplitude in the case of lower frequencies...
Dj Thy
quote:
Originally posted by TranceMuzik02
Isn’t there a limit to what sounds can be made that can be heard by the human ear. How much longer can they keep making new sounds for before they actually run out, or do you think it could be indefinite?


Who says you need to make music for humans only? Dogs and bats can hear stuff we can't... All for animal music :D

And State of Matter, yes, it exists, actually there is already an alarm system based on that (some people call it the brown note). The military division of Thomson (in Germany) has that I think. If a burglar trips the alarm he barely hears anything (too low for him to perceive aurally), but he crumbles down in convulsions.

The brown note itself is 4 Hz at 140 dB it seems.

And even more impressive, scientists found the lowest bass note in the universe(well, we really can't hear it) in september 2003. It's presumed to be produced by a black hole, and is 57 octaves below middle C (about the middle of a piano keyboard). Cosmic soundwaves they call that. And you though Murder was the Bass had a lot of low frequency content :D
SpykeChyld
On the topic...wouldn't air medium just be another property to be manipulated, just like frequency, amplitude, etc...?

If you had a composition and changed the air medium it was played through, (lets keep it simple for now) to say, water...then the peice would sound COMPLETELY different. And thats just going from air to water...what if we further ed with the medium? In theory, could a computer program create a room where you could add and subtract elements and the like to create different versions of the same original sound?

The Motorcycle - As The Rush Comes(underwater mix) it would be incredibly distorted, but would still have a rhythm. What about the As The Rush Comes(surface of Mars mix) it would be slightly less distorted, I would think...but then, I'm not sure of the chemical makeup of the atmosphere on Mars...

Say you take a room that is a complete vacuum...yes, it would be silent...now you slooowly add elements untill you get just enough sound to get what you are looking for...Would this be possible? And if it were possible...imagine the applications...:eyes:





And 57 octaves below middle C!? Holy e!
TranceMuzik02
quote:
Originally posted by Dj Thy
And even more impressive, scientists found the lowest bass note in the universe(well, we really can't hear it) in september 2003. It's presumed to be produced by a black hole, and is 57 octaves below middle C (about the middle of a piano keyboard). Cosmic soundwaves they call that. And you though Murder was the Bass had a lot of low frequency content :D


Just like humans can't see certain light (Infa Red & Ultra Violet) past the spectrum, but can coarse harm to our body, like skin cancer for example. So I guess certain sounds that we can't hear could fu*k our body's up.

Digital Aura
lol...i've created a monster!
xtr3m
Yea, this is going to be a problem when space is going to be used daily, but some electronic brain implants should fix it. =p
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