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View Full Version : I think my next video is going to discuss the science of art


Snouter
07-26-2008, 01:50 AM
I will touch on the Golden Mean utilized by painters, Newton's observation that everything can be defined in numbers, and then segueway into how music is also numbers. I will do this by playing the Third Stone From the Sun riff in the original E and then up a whole step to F#, not because I memorized notes, but because I simply transferred the interval relationship to a different location. Then I will play the same riff on the keyboard to demonstrate how easy it is once the numbers and related intervals are recognized. especially since they will fit basic patterns.

fat mike
07-26-2008, 08:14 AM
and you posted this in jeruslem why? not that youre not welcome here of course :)

Dreamintree01
07-26-2008, 09:31 AM
I will touch on the Golden Mean utilized by painters, Newton's observation that everything can be defined in numbers, and then segueway into how music is also numbers. I will do this by playing the Third Stone From the Sun riff in the original E and then up a whole step to F#, not because I memorized notes, but because I simply transferred the interval relationship to a different location. Then I will play the same riff on the keyboard to demonstrate how easy it is once the numbers and related intervals are recognized. especially since they will fit basic patterns.

Rock on, rocker.

Snouter
07-26-2008, 11:11 PM
I keep trying to find the moment to make a presentation vid, but then I think I might as well incorporate the observations into lyrics for a song. It is interesting to compare and contrast the keyboards which is a straight forward linear thing with each white and black key being a half step apart, and guitar which is more three dimensional with overlapping intervalic relationships that in some ways make it more challenging than keyboards in that chords intervals cannot be as close. But in other ways, creates physical layouts which are an advantage over keyboards in terms of soloing scales, pentatonics, arpeggios, triads and intervals.

Snouter
08-07-2008, 12:02 AM
How did you like my vid about Tara fat mike, you fat flucker? Tara is so fluckin' hot I must admit. Insane broads, as many are, are sexy.

fat mike
08-07-2008, 01:24 AM
intersting guitar work as is par-no idea who tara is-watched a few of the other vids about her and still not clued...

Betrade
08-07-2008, 07:39 AM
I will touch on the Golden Mean utilized by painters, Newton's observation that everything can be defined in numbers, and then segueway into how music is also numbers. I will do this by playing the Third Stone From the Sun riff in the original E and then up a whole step to F#, not because I memorized notes, but because I simply transferred the interval relationship to a different location. Then I will play the same riff on the keyboard to demonstrate how easy it is once the numbers and related intervals are recognized. especially since they will fit basic patterns.

It's believed by some that Michelangelo painted parts of the body into the Sistine chapel. The famous painting of God creating Adam actually shows a profile of a brain and brain stem, among other examples. He was very knowledgeable when it comes to human anatomy, and many believe that he actually performed autopsies in order to learn more. Leonardo Da Vinci did as well.

Just pointing out that other sciences besides math pop up in art, and that Buonarroti may have been pointing out that the brain is God, or vicey voicey.

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