I have to say this is one of the most unique videos I've ever stumbled across. To think that numbers make sound when you're calculating them. To think that there is a mathematical way of producing sound as you're finding numbers
I used several programs. Ultrafractal to create the image, AudioPaint and Photosounder to create the audio, and general purpose audio tools to add reverb, etc. Although I think this one is "as is". Best wishes
An idea: Hear the zoom into a point. Pick a point (like from zooming visualisations of Mandelbrot set) and spiral to it. Time is the angle and on the radius we have frequencies (like here vertical). As we change the angle - the radius decreases and we hear more and more details (coming from lower or upper frequencies depending on definition). Radius always is scaled to be mapped on to 27.5 - 4163Hz frequencies.
No, every row becomes an oscillator. The frequency of the oscillator depends on image height, volume on brightness of every pixel. the image was (if I remember correctly) 500 pixels tall, so there are 500 oscillators in total. It's a kind of massive additive-synthesis.
@DirtySinusoid I use several: Ultrafractal to generate the picture, Audiopaint and Photosounder to transform into sound, Spear and Audiosculpt (mac) for analysis, and some general-purpose audio programs to manipulate the waveform, show spectrogram, etc (Adobe Audition, etc).
shit I was thinking of something like this. I have a feeling one day computers will become so powerful that a song made by the mandlebrot synced up with the universe will phase cancel it into oblivion.
i looked like you (best way to describe) basicly put the picture down and let the computer run over it and see what notes hit like a misic box in sence.is that correct? try putting mandelbrots equation on a music scale. a way to make new notes. or try in 432 hz, or on different instraments.or take the picture you did it withand make the outer edge straight( keep the fractals on the edge, just straighten it so you can line it on a scale. did i explain that last part well enough? likebreaking down a box, the box doesnt change just cut one side and it lays down flat. please comment back, i really think what im trying to describe is sound and could possibly make new possibly playable notes. thank you
The fun thing about this is that when you zoom into the sound, it will play te exact same sound. Fractals are almost a natural pattern. Think of a picture of a line on your computer. When you zoom into that line it will become more jagged. When you zoom into those jagged edges, they resemble the straightness of the line you started with. The scalability is true of fractals, and have been proven to occur nearly everywhere in nature. Nature is scalable, and thus this sound is too.
@Adam Andersen , not really, the sound of the universe is a resonance frequency. Look up "Aum" "um" or "om" this is the sound of the universe. precisely why Buddhist monks chant it. They believe all life resonates at this frequency. The universe has been proven to though.
*Why Fractals Used In Music Generation?* Because music usually consists of repetition of note patterns with small deviation/variation (excluding vocals, sfx, tpain/autotune etc). And fractals have small recursive copies of theirselves (self-similarity). Therefore, fractals are better for music generation.
Pardon me. First, Thank you for this wonderful recording! Secondly, what software did you use to construct this? I have some interesting experiments in mind. I am an audio engineer, and I use a white noise calibration for the rooms that i am in,. I wish to try and calibrate my studio to a mandlebrot frequency, and examine the acoustics as well as other demensions of this marvelous mathematical tool. Would you mind terribly? Marcusjetson gmail ( cant put the at or the dit com) thank you so much!
We were sitting around talking about music and math. I was wondering what a fractal sounded like. Anybody that would take the time to make a youtube video about it I would to take to coffee some time.
I was actually planning on programming something like this over the weekend, glad to see it has been done already though =). Quick question, how is the image played? You mentioned that the x cordinate is time and y is the frequency of the sound but are you just picking 1 row of pixels? Averaging all the values in a column?
Hi Gustavo! I find your videos to be beautiful and very creative congrats. Here's my problem though: I need to do a music project for a class I'm taking right now. Could you tell me which programs you used to create this. I'm not a very good programmer so I need to know if I have to program a lot. Please let me know.
I have to say this is one of the most unique videos I've ever stumbled across. To think that numbers make sound when you're calculating them. To think that there is a mathematical way of producing sound as you're finding numbers
People have turned math into music many times
You are right, every time I listen to this, I get chills down my spine. Could it be that this sound is the sound of Universe?
Yes it is
Sound of nature
The sound have some infrasound, i.e. low frequency waves < 16 Hz.
I used several programs. Ultrafractal to create the image, AudioPaint and Photosounder to create the audio, and general purpose audio tools to add reverb, etc. Although I think this one is "as is". Best wishes
Well done, I would like to see more like this.
An idea: Hear the zoom into a point.
Pick a point (like from zooming visualisations of Mandelbrot set) and spiral to it. Time is the angle and on the radius we have frequencies (like here vertical). As we change the angle - the radius decreases and we hear more and more details (coming from lower or upper frequencies depending on definition). Radius always is scaled to be mapped on to 27.5 - 4163Hz frequencies.
No, every row becomes an oscillator. The frequency of the oscillator depends on image height, volume on brightness of every pixel. the image was (if I remember correctly) 500 pixels tall, so there are 500 oscillators in total. It's a kind of massive additive-synthesis.
the mandelbrot set just landed in my living room...
thanks and peace.
it is very simillar to sounds that NASA voyager took from different planets as flying by them
Loco Roco I was thinking the same thing, it sounds like storms on Jupiter I believe
Or Saturn can’t remember
@@budslack3729 it sounds like every image putted into CoagulaLight1666
Yeps, I agree...that sound is uncanilly similar! Some coincidence?
Specifically Saturn and it's rings
After watching Veritasium's video on XN+1 and the logistic map, I can hear the branching in the audio!
thanks! one of the most beautiful things I've listened to!!
Achim Buchweisel wtf r u talking about
@DirtySinusoid I use several: Ultrafractal to generate the picture, Audiopaint and Photosounder to transform into sound, Spear and Audiosculpt (mac) for analysis, and some general-purpose audio programs to manipulate the waveform, show spectrogram, etc (Adobe Audition, etc).
DUDE! I heard something like this in my head on 1000ug of LSD!
Dmt too, lot of metallic gongs sound and dub delay fx
Fractals Hide something from us
That’s literally the reason I’m here bro
I’m sure you would, frying your brain like that will certainly cause some major auditory hallucinations
I'm I detached from the social dogma yet?
No, this is still pleb territory. Normie tier.
real
I was born in the wrong generation this is real music
check out Klaus Lang. ;)
Gucci gang
Very ethereal. Reminds me of some of the synth settings used by Pink Floyd (Listen to Meddle, you'll understand)
This sounds like Big Bang.
Sounds like the 9th circle of God damn hell
Today i have discovered something unique and amazing with this video
wow that is so cool
pretty spicey
shit I was thinking of something like this. I have a feeling one day computers will become so powerful that a song made by the mandlebrot synced up with the universe will phase cancel it into oblivion.
i looked like you (best way to describe) basicly put the picture down and let the computer run over it and see what notes hit like a misic box in sence.is that correct? try putting mandelbrots equation on a music scale. a way to make new notes. or try in 432 hz, or on different instraments.or take the picture you did it withand make the outer edge straight( keep the fractals on the edge, just straighten it so you can line it on a scale. did i explain that last part well enough? likebreaking down a box, the box doesnt change just cut one side and it lays down flat. please comment back, i really think what im trying to describe is sound and could possibly make new possibly playable notes. thank you
Sounds like that trippy section in Pink Floyd's Echoes.
Using this to test speakers
Reeeeealy weird. Neat. Kinda scarey. Definately makes me want to understand it.
The opening sounds like the start of Knights of Cydonia by Muse.
this is very unnerving
love it! when sounds like human survived in the end.
The fun thing about this is that when you zoom into the sound, it will play te exact same sound. Fractals are almost a natural pattern. Think of a picture of a line on your computer. When you zoom into that line it will become more jagged. When you zoom into those jagged edges, they resemble the straightness of the line you started with. The scalability is true of fractals, and have been proven to occur nearly everywhere in nature. Nature is scalable, and thus this sound is too.
the sound of god
@Adam Andersen , not really, the sound of the universe is a resonance frequency. Look up "Aum" "um" or "om" this is the sound of the universe. precisely why Buddhist monks chant it. They believe all life resonates at this frequency. The universe has been proven to though.
it creeps me out
is there some free software for mac that does the same thing as audiopaint?
What's that thing on the top right?
what relationship does this have to a fractal?
*Why Fractals Used In Music Generation?*
Because music usually consists of repetition of note patterns with small deviation/variation (excluding vocals, sfx, tpain/autotune etc). And fractals have small recursive copies of theirselves (self-similarity). Therefore, fractals are better for music generation.
I feel there are maybe more interesting methods to turn the brot into sound
Check codeparade
Pardon me. First, Thank you for this wonderful recording! Secondly, what software did you use to construct this? I have some interesting experiments in mind. I am an audio engineer, and I use a white noise calibration for the rooms that i am in,. I wish to try and calibrate my studio to a mandlebrot frequency, and examine the acoustics as well as other demensions of this marvelous mathematical tool. Would you mind terribly?
Marcusjetson gmail ( cant put the at or the dit com) thank you so much!
It sounds like the cries of the lost.
We were sitting around talking about music and math. I was wondering what a fractal sounded like. Anybody that would take the time to make a youtube video about it I would to take to coffee some time.
Infinity frequencies
I was actually planning on programming something like this over the weekend, glad to see it has been done already though =). Quick question, how is the image played? You mentioned that the x cordinate is time and y is the frequency of the sound but are you just picking 1 row of pixels? Averaging all the values in a column?
Ofuck
using what program? this would be interesting to try some experimenting on..
Very not bad.
Has anyone thought taking all the different frequencies of the audible spectrum and putting them all together in 1 song?
Adam Andersen It would sound harsh.
Buğra Kadirhan yah that bitch will be chaotic
That would sound like the color brown
Have you ever heard this underwater?
i wonder what is the base)
The base is x²+c
pusda
Hi Gustavo!
I find your videos to be beautiful and very creative congrats.
Here's my problem though: I need to do a music project for a class I'm taking right now. Could you tell me which programs you used to create this. I'm not a very good programmer so I need to know if I have to program a lot.
Please let me know.
This is going to give me nightmares
Why could i hear minecraft cave sound 14 faintly while this was playing
i just came
Krell Music.
Weird
Mandelbrot Set - The Fingerprint of God
God's name is very holy, be careful.
Wrong mapping yet
a like the sound, but music isn`t really fractal here, picture is... good job anyway
Horrible