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MATHS IN PIANO

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F.I.T.K.2.S MATHS IN MUSIC

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Page 1: Group F

MATHS

IN PIANO

Page 2: Group F

GROUP F- F.I.T.K.2.S.Friendship Is The Key 2 Success!!

GROUP MEMBERS- ZION- PROJECT LEADER TYRESE-CHIEF RESEARCHER MUSKAN-COMMUNICATIONS

DIRECTOR GHAZAL-DIGITAL ENGINEER

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“It has become appallingly obvious that our technology has exceeded our humanity.”

-Albert Einstein

‘Mathematics has a hugely important role in the technology

that is all around us and which we take for granted every day; from your mobile phone and laptop to

the systems that keep you safe on a plane or the trials which take place

to ensure the medicines we need are effective. ’

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“Mathematics is involved in some way in every field of study known to mankind. In fact, it could be argued that mathematics is involved in some way in everything that exists everywhere, or even everything that is imagined to exist in any conceivable reality. Any possible or imagined situation that has any relationship whatsoever to space, time, or thought would also involve mathematics.”

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THE BRIEFMath is related to everything including music. Math relates to the rhythm, keys, and tuning. When you are listening to music, you count the beats. When you play the piano, you can count the keys as numbers. The piano needs to be constructed in a way so that when the key is hit a specific frequency is given off frequency is measured in hertz. The 'math' of rhythm is about the time values (note lengths); whole, half, quarter, eighth, sixteenth, just keep halving that and you have the nearly the whole idea. The maths of meter, time signatures, is one of simple fractions.

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‘‘ Music Is Maths’’Music is a field of study that has an obvious relationship to mathematics. Music is, to many people, a nonverbal form of communication, that reaches past the human intellect directly into the soul. However, music is not really created by mankind, but only discovered, manipulated and reorganized by mankind. In reality, music is first and foremost a phenomena of nature, a result of the principles of physics and mathematics. Maths and music are usually organized into two separate categories, without obvious overlap. 

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Maths is everywhere and it is a very important factor in playing the piano. You need rhythm and you need to count the beats. The right hand has to play 4 evenly spaced notes in the same amount of time the left plays 3, also spaced evenly.  So each note in the right hand is played for one fourth of the total interval, while each note on the left is played for one third of the interval.

Maths in piano

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Detailed explanationThe ‘Math' of Intervals is the distance from one pitch to another. Intervals are 'measured' by the number of half steps between two pitches (the distance between any key on the keyboard on the immediate neighbour is a half step.) Knowing the number of letter names and how many half-steps there are between one note and another are what allow you to determine the interval, and what 'quality,' it has, i.e. major, minor, diminished, augmented. Learning intervals is simply counting and memorizing, not anywhere near a 'math function.‘ For acoustics, the physics of sound, a much greater degree of maths is involved. For general music reading, writing and performing, the maths required are basic counting, simple fractions and that is it. You may have heard the maths / music point exaggerated as if the combination of the two were a key to understanding the universe.

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Piano is related to Math in a lot of ways..

One jumps out at you when you look at sheet music is the time signature. Another is the tempo, sometimes given as a metronome rate. Note values are fractions (quarter, sixteenth), so a dotted note means multiply the value by 1.5. These things aren't very complicated, but they are right out there in front.

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A little less visible but even more important is the matter of pitch. A pitch is created by a vibration. In the case of your piano, middle A vibrates a string 440 times a second. Physicists call this a frequency of 440 hertz, or 440 cycles per second.

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If you go up an octave, you double the frequency. Other intervals are other ratios. Going up a fifth (from A to E) multiplies the frequency by 3/2, so E is (about) 660 hertz. The Greeks discovered that two strings played together sounded pleasant if the lengths of the strings were in ratios of small whole numbers: 2:1 (octave), 3:2 (fifth), 4:3 (fourth), 5:4 (third).

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The interval from A to E (a fifth), in equal tempering, isn't exactly 3/2 = 1.5, but 2^(7/12) = 1.4983. (The "^" represents an exponent.) The interval of a fourth isn't 4/3 = 1.3333, but 2^(5/12) = 1.3348. The interval of a third isn't 5/4 = 1.25, but 2^(4/12) = 1.2599. I won't say exactly what equal tempering is, but you might be able to figure it out from what I said, depending on your math level. Equal tempering is related to a "logarithmic scale."

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 Black keys on the piano are shown as sharps, e.g. the # on the right of C represents C#, etc., and are shown only for the highest octave. Each successive frequency change in the chromatic scale is called a semitone and an octave has 12 semitones. 

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The word chord here means two notes whose frequency ratio is a small integer. Except for multiples of these basic chords, integers larger than about 10 produce chords not readily recognizable to the ear.

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The interval between C and G is called a 5th, meanings; the second is a subset of the first. and the frequencies of C and G are in the ratio of 2 to 3. The major third has four semitones and the minor third has three. The number associated with each chord, e.g. four in the 4th, is the number of white keys, inclusive of the two end keys for the C-major scale, and has no further mathematical significance. Note that the word "scale" in "chromatic scale", "C-major scale", and "logarithmic or frequency scale" has different meanings; the second is a subset of the first.

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|--Octave--CDEFGAB1

|--5th--C D E F2

|--4th--G A B3

|-Maj.3rd-C # D #4

|-Min.3rd-E F #5

|G # A # B6

|C8

We can see from the " to an octave above that a 4th and a 5th "add up and a major 3rd and a minor 3rd "add up" to a 5th. Note that this is an addition in logarithmic space. The missing integer 7.

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The "equal tempered" (ET) chromatic scale consists of "equal" half-tone or semitone rises for each successive note. They are equal in the sense that the ratio of the frequencies of any two adjacent notes is always the same. This property ensures that each note is the same as any other note (except for pitch). This uniformity of the notes allows the composer or performer to use any key without hitting bad dissonances. There are 12 equal semitones in an octave of an ET scale and each octave is an exact factor of two in frequency. Therefore, the frequency change for each semitone is given bysemitone12 = 2 orsemitone = 21/12 = 1.05946. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .This defines the ET chromatic scale and allows the calculation of the frequency ratios of "chords" in this scale. How do the "chords" in ET compare with the frequency ratios of the ideal chords? The comparisons are shown in Table 2.2b and demonstrate that the chords from the ET scale are extremely close to the ideal chords.

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The errors for the 3rds are the worst, over five times the errors in the other chords, but are still only about 1%. Nonetheless, these errors are readily audible, and some piano aficionados have generously dubbed them "the rolling thirds" while in reality, they are unacceptable dissonances. It is a defect that we must learn to live with, if we are to adopt the ET scale. The errors in the 4ths and 5ths produce beats of about 1 Hz near middle C, which is barely audible in most pieces of music; however, this beat frequency doubles for every higher octave.

Chord Freq. Ratio Eq. Tempered Scale

Difference

Min.3rd: 6/5 = 1.2000

semitone3 = 1.1892

+0.0108

Maj.3rd: 5/4 = 1.2500

semitone4 = 1.2599

-0.0099

Fourth: 4/3 = 1.3333

semitone5 = 1.3348

-0.0015

Fifth: 3/2 = 1.5000

semitone7 = 1.4983

+0.0017

Octave: 2/1 = 2.0000

semitone12 = 2.0000

0.0000

Ideal Chords versus the Equal Tempered ScaleIdeal Chords versus the Equal Tempered Scale

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You may not need to know the math behind music, but it is truly important to you. Music sounds good to us because of its mathematical patterns - rhythms and pitches - and math has been used over the years to make music sound better. Math and music belong together.

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Thank You !!

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Made by- Zion Tyrese Ghazal Abdullah Muskan Sethi