They all hate DISSONANCE. They're all wrong.

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 16 ก.ย. 2024
  • What is dissonance? Why does everybody hate it? (unless they're regular viewers of this channel, in which case they love it). It's a weird phenomenon which doesn't have a very clear definition. I explore the options.
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    Tuning Timbre Spectrum Scale by Sethares
    A History of 'Consonance' and 'Dissonance' by Tenney

ความคิดเห็น • 365

  • @SamWickens
    @SamWickens 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +75

    I remember at university, I once tried to explain basic harmony to my non-musical physicist friend, and when I showed him a tritone, his immediate reaction was that he liked it because it sounded powerful. He had none of the context telling him he should find it unpleasant, so he didn't. And I honestly found that kind of beautiful.

    • @stephenweigel
      @stephenweigel 8 วันที่ผ่านมา +13

      that's how kids react to music. Music prudes' performative disgust towards the avant garde is thoroughly, paradoxically, learned.

    • @diabl2master
      @diabl2master 7 วันที่ผ่านมา +8

      Metalhead probably

    • @Spookatz.
      @Spookatz. 6 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      ​@@stephenweigelwell put!

    • @nathanreiber6819
      @nathanreiber6819 2 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Tensions are heard all over music tho.

  • @jankbunky4279
    @jankbunky4279 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +14

    I could do without the ugly AI generated simpsons characters, personally.

  • @Koettnylle
    @Koettnylle 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +80

    Missed the opportunity of mentioning bulgarian folk music choirs. Their dissonances are sublime.

    • @flowresonance1248
      @flowresonance1248 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +7

      been expecting Kaval Sviri too

    • @r0bophonic
      @r0bophonic 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      Any recommendations?

    • @pingunooty
      @pingunooty 10 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Plz give recs!

    • @spokeydoke
      @spokeydoke 9 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      ⁠@@r0bophonic@pingunooty “atomic bird” by yoko kanno

    • @Plamen_Zhelev
      @Plamen_Zhelev 8 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

      To those asking for recommendations: check out The mystery of the Bulgarian voices, particularly songs from the 70s and 80s.

  • @RichardJNeo
    @RichardJNeo 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +193

    Wtf I love dissonance

    • @Ian_Standley
      @Ian_Standley 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

      Me too 😊

    • @Nooticus
      @Nooticus 11 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@Ian_Standleyme three!

    • @SpencerTwiddy
      @SpencerTwiddy 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +5

      Especially cognitive

    • @rismosch
      @rismosch 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      Ditto

    • @drackaryspt1572
      @drackaryspt1572 8 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      Yes it's great and it can contain so much complex emotion if well utilised.

  • @sp00ky_guy
    @sp00ky_guy 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +68

    The AI imagery makes this video so uncanny

    • @mynameisjack0618
      @mynameisjack0618 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +26

      Yeah. I don’t like it one bit.

    • @jankbunky4279
      @jankbunky4279 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +19

      Agreed! The content of the video seems sound and useful, but the imagery is just *ugly*

    • @ronald3836
      @ronald3836 3 วันที่ผ่านมา

      What AI imagery? The graphics in the video seem all fine to me.

    • @jankbunky4279
      @jankbunky4279 3 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      @ronald3836 2:14 5:57 7:00
      Just as some examples. A bunch of the "simpson" character images, are weird AI generated charicatures.

    • @ronald3836
      @ronald3836 3 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@jankbunky4279 Thanks. These three examples look really good. Would you have preferred them to be hand-drawn?

  • @PierrePblais
    @PierrePblais 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +33

    Always there for you including some gamelan! As a gamelan nerd and someone who trained to tune Balinese gamelan instruments, I can also add that not only is the scale used in gamelan loosely derived from the inharmonic overtones most present in the sound of a gong, the instruments themselves are tuned in pairs with 6 to 12 hz difference between instruments (the amount will change depending on the style of ensemble), this in order to create that beating vibrato you demonstrated with the two sound waves, which Balinese believe makes the sound more complete and alive with taksu, a concept hard to explain but that I can roughly translate to “the spirit of gamelan”…

  • @eyvindjr
    @eyvindjr 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +85

    I think Shoenberg's main mistake was abolishing a tonal centre, not embracing dissonance. Dissonance thrives better when a firm tonal centre is established first, and Shoenberg made systems to take that anchorpoint away.

    • @DBruce
      @DBruce  11 วันที่ผ่านมา +32

      I think I agree with this.

    • @Joie-du-sang
      @Joie-du-sang 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +10

      I think you're right. By taking away any tonal center it makes everything homogenous, and thus makes it very boring. There's no tension and release. See my longer top-level comment for more on this.

    • @rhesarozendaal
      @rhesarozendaal 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +19

      I'm not sure a tonal center would be necessary, but contrast in one form or another probably is. You reminded me of the saying "when everything is urgent, nothing really is". Likewise, if every note is equally important, they all become equally unimportant. Now, I can't think of an example offhand, but I'm sure there's been lots of composers after Schoenberg trying to correct for this. Surely Stockhausen and Boulez must have given this some thought, when they went even further with serialism. Would love to learn more about this.

    • @debrucey
      @debrucey 10 วันที่ผ่านมา

      I mean, I wouldn’t call it a “mistake”. It might be and element of his music that you don’t like, but without it it wouldn’t sound like Schoenberg, and I love Schoenberg.

    • @quel2324
      @quel2324 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +6

      Maybe I'm weird, but there's something hauntingly beautiful and comically cute in Schoenberg's early work (maybe in the 10s/20s) that makes his music incredibly fun to play or listen, even without relying on a tonal centre.
      IMHO Schoenberg's big mistake was abandoning expressionism to pursue the more mathematical 12-tone approach, which takes art away from music. It's the systematization rather than the aesthetic. It's almost an exercise. Just like species counterpoint isn't good music, 12-tone music isn't either.

  • @poissonpuerile8897
    @poissonpuerile8897 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +30

    Very amateur musician here. Your videos make even the most arcane topics fascinating and accessible. Bravo!

    • @garybeman9497
      @garybeman9497 11 วันที่ผ่านมา

      aren't we all really just amateurs? I absolutely love that David presents in a way that makes me (at least) feel like we're all in this together. So as you say - accessible. Thank you for your comment it 'resonated' with me 😇 and thank you David , looking forward to your video on cognitive dissonance! 😵‍💫

  • @OrchestrationOnline
    @OrchestrationOnline 8 วันที่ผ่านมา +13

    I'm an unashamed tonal populist composer with a 4-decade career, and there's no way my music could work without dissonance. I love it. I don't know who this "everyone" bloke is, but he sure isn't me.

    • @dabeamer42
      @dabeamer42 3 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Hey Professor Goss -- nice to see you!

    • @OrchestrationOnline
      @OrchestrationOnline 3 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@dabeamer42 Hey my guy, good to see you.

  • @Maurice75
    @Maurice75 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +23

    My teacher used to say that it's all in the context of music. Somethings might sound "off flavour" but in the right context...

    • @anomymouse5043
      @anomymouse5043 10 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Guitar virtuoso, Guthrie Govan, discussed about improvisation in some video. He had, not sure of this, a background track with probably just a root and the fifth. Next he played either minor or major stuff over it (edit: and moved between two). First the switch sounded wrong and odd, but soon the ear got accustomed to it.
      This goes probably further: death metal, swing jazz and traditional classical sound very different. But the listener accepts the rules that we have, say a lot altered 7th chords and variations from blues melodies.

  • @luc8639
    @luc8639 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +47

    eyo why the hell they do the simpsons Ai in this bih?

    • @ronald3836
      @ronald3836 3 วันที่ผ่านมา

      You want them to hire artists to create a YT video?

    • @Adam-cc3zd
      @Adam-cc3zd 2 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      ugh it's so lame, I haven't watched a david bruce vid in a while and wasn't particularly thrilled to see that. it was jarring...dissonant, even

    • @LemonJefferson
      @LemonJefferson วันที่ผ่านมา

      ​@@ronald3836 this is literally common practice

    • @ronald3836
      @ronald3836 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@LemonJefferson So you are now defending the little guy against "tech bro" David Bruce? I hope you will not forget to feed your horse.

  • @hhdhpublic
    @hhdhpublic 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +37

    Nice to notice that you included merzbow in the experimental roster. I must admit that you managed a perfect clickbait title, it triggered me enough to watch this instantly because goddamn, the title is sooooo wrong :D Especially personally since I love a lot of music that includes dissonance from jazz to extreme metal

  • @addyd.3140
    @addyd.3140 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +9

    15:00 Chorus pedal for organ! Replicating the slight out-of-tuneness of a group singing or playing together is a highly attractive effect to musicians of many modern/pop styles as well. Even just the thickness of a doubled lead vocal in a pop song or the classic 80's chorus effect guitars. Anyways, thanks again for a wonderful video DB!

  • @4dultw1thj0b
    @4dultw1thj0b 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +35

    Not these AI Simpsons images omg

  • @henrikmulders8633
    @henrikmulders8633 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +16

    The fourth is a dissonance 😂 as all viewers of Elam Rothem‘s Channel know. Early Music Sources

    • @thepotatoportal69
      @thepotatoportal69 10 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Only between the lowest voice and any other voice though. They are considered dissonances because they sound like they should resolve to a 5th or a 3rd, not because they sound unpleasant or discordant.

    • @henrikmulders8633
      @henrikmulders8633 10 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@thepotatoportal69 Well of course, but that relativates the drama 😉

  • @TheGrenvil
    @TheGrenvil 6 วันที่ผ่านมา +8

    I love how people are complaining about the "dissonance" of the AI images

    • @judef
      @judef 5 วันที่ผ่านมา +6

      musical dissonance is actually good unlike the dissonance of the images though

    • @ronald3836
      @ronald3836 3 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      is it because people know they were AI generated that they decided to hate them (just like they don't hate cars that replaced horse and carriage, etc.)? They look pretty good to me.

    • @Adam-cc3zd
      @Adam-cc3zd 2 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      @@ronald3836 no it's that they look weird because they're AI. I would think it's very obvious to most people, they contain all of the characteristic AI "art" elements that make them uncanny

    • @ronald3836
      @ronald3836 2 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@Adam-cc3zd How can they look uncanny if they don't even try to be photo-realistic? The uncanny argument does not apply here.

    • @Adam-cc3zd
      @Adam-cc3zd 2 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      @@ronald3836 It's not about them being photo-realistic in this case (because it's a cartoon style), but they have a lot of the AI characteristics that make them obviously a poorly done recreation and not genuinely done in the art style. take the frame at 2:15 for example, the audience members don't actually look like simpsons characters lol. their bodies are morphing into each other, lines are badly done, eyes missing, etc. it's obviously supposed to be in the simpsons style, but is very clearly not genuine because of how bad it looks

  • @racheddar
    @racheddar 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +12

    Don't diss dissonance

    • @DBruce
      @DBruce  11 วันที่ผ่านมา +6

      that's a better title!

  • @lemon_milk1216
    @lemon_milk1216 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +37

    Great video as usual, David, but I really wish you didn’t use AI images as b-roll; they feel just a bit tacky and certainly very uncanny. I’m sure there are plenty of people who would love to create art for a video as (otherwise) well-crafted as this!

    • @ronald3836
      @ronald3836 3 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      Will you pay them?

  • @gobletgobletstein5672
    @gobletgobletstein5672 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +12

    saw all the bad AI in the intro and shut off the video. it looks awful, man. AI artefacting is super distracting.

    • @unoaotroa
      @unoaotroa 7 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      What?!? It’s hilarious!

    • @ronald3836
      @ronald3836 3 วันที่ผ่านมา

      What specific AI artefacts are you seeing in the first 30 seconds?

  • @LesterBrunt
    @LesterBrunt 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +13

    It hits at one of the core aesthetics values our culture holds. I know that in Gamelan, they value sound that 'moves', that 'vibrates', that is 'alive', and so some things that to some western ears might sound horrible out of tune, sounds good to them.
    To me that just conclusively proves that all these perspectives are just that, a perspective on a more larger thing. I can see both sides, how spot on intonation is beautiful, how it is so calm and pure, how it boosts the overtones. But I can also see how detuning creates these wonderful vibrant tones that shimmer and feel alive.
    I take the Cage approach to sound, that it is all good, it is all just sound. I can listen to a Mozart piece and get lost in the wonderful rhythms of functional harmony, and at the same time I can listen to Schoenberg and be fascinated by the unique textures, beautiful contours, etc. I like the sound of 12ET, of just intonation, of a minor 2nd interval, or any other kind of tuning. It is just sound.

  • @Android480
    @Android480 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +8

    A little touch of dissonance is always supremely beautiful, like those first 2 examples

  • @muse4ik
    @muse4ik 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +6

    Dissonance is where all the feels are, without it all you're expressing is a desire to have a nap

  • @LisztyLiszt
    @LisztyLiszt 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +5

    In my view, it wasn't the abandonment of tonality that put people off western art music since Schoenberg, at least not that on its own. It was the abandonment of meter and pulse and doing to rhythm what 12 tone music did to harmonic tension and repose. I think it's why composers like Bartok, Stravinsky, and Prokofiev were and still are popular. Their music tends to have a rhythmic vitality which engages the audience in a way Stockhausen and Webern usually don't.

  • @billsybainbridge3362
    @billsybainbridge3362 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

    Yet again a useful video piece, David! What is still to be explored theoretically is that Dissonance has as much to do with Timbre, Rhythm, Texture, and Formatics as it does Melody or Harmony. That is what recent works in many popular genres are exploring more fully (perhaps) than in prior musical eras - finding the Dissonance in ALL the Musical Factors, and further... rotating through the Aesthetic Facets of Tension, Release, Expectation, Prediction, and Surprise in each of them. They surely DO exist, yet are just waiting for us to highlight them through the regularity and rarity of expression in sound.

    • @DBruce
      @DBruce  11 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      Yes I wanted to explore timbre and texture in particular, but couldn't find the space here. So many fascinating moments from my own experience as a composer about that.

  • @broad_cat
    @broad_cat 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +5

    12:49 This has all the energy of a toddler whispering 'No that's naughty' to themselves right before they do something naughty. lmao
    Also Simpsons Tantacrul is my sleep paralysis demon.

    • @DBruce
      @DBruce  11 วันที่ผ่านมา +10

      that's just a photo of Tantacrul I took the other day 😂

  • @ourson66
    @ourson66 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

    I was actually typing this as you just mentioned the gamelan! Another instrument is the Trinidadian Steel Pan where pans are deliberately detuned ever so slightly so that when played in large numbers, the resulting "shimmer" is a magical, beautiful component of the instrument's overall sound. While I'm with you David, most of Schoenberg's music leaves me scratching my head (or maybe covering my ears), one of the things his highly mathematical take on music composition seemed to do, was to make future composers (such as yourself, and me) less afraid of dissonant chords or combinations, because the modern ear has been weaned on movie scores and music that celebrates dissonance. The original audience for Stravinsky's Rite of Spring might have fled the theatre at the roof-rattling dissonances contained in that score, but modern audiences talk about how it sounds like the score to a scary movie, and don't bat an eyelash at the dissonance. I tend to be a bit of a tonal traditionalist in most of my music, but when used at the right moment, dissonance is a powerful tool.

  • @jules153
    @jules153 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

    Dissonance=emotion. Think about it.
    Also I think the Amazonian people experiment confirms what we need to know. After listening to thousands of hours of non-disonant music obviously most westerners hear dissonance as bad sounding.

  • @cometsmith
    @cometsmith 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +9

    Loved the video! As always your analysis is super poignant, and provides a lot of insight into a topic I thought I knew a lot about! It makes me kind of sad to see all of the AI tho. Besides the moral issues, it kind of looks sloppy. I would much rather see stock images or poorly-made images made by hand than AI generations. They look a little uncanny, and just off-putting in an otherwise very clean and polished video.

  • @ThomAvella
    @ThomAvella 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +5

    +1 to your point on schöenberg's 12-tone work. i definitely prefer the work of his pupils berg and webern in that idiom! berg seemed to have a better ability to reconcile 12-tone materials and tonal structures, and webern pushed even further into alien territory and created a bunch of truly haunting things.

  • @spiralganglion
    @spiralganglion 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +22

    Enjoyed the video, though it makes me sad to see AI-generated images at all, let alone aping the style of a big cultural institution like The Simpsons in a way that goes a bit beyond mere reference or parody. It invites a whole host of complicated feelings on taste and authorship, which don't seem relevant at all to the point of the video. (Well, except in the meta-ironic sense that these creative choices could be described as "dissonant", but I don't think that's intentional or well-supported, hah). Hopefully in the future you'll avoid AI-generated slop.

    • @xvvvvr
      @xvvvvr 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +8

      agree it feels like im watching a youtube kids video that happens to be an essay about something worth discussing

  • @funkrobert99
    @funkrobert99 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +7

    It would be interesting to have seen an example coming from drum and bass. Synths are often described as filthy or disgusting - go to a rave to hear the various other adjectives, which are often hilarious and creative! Apart from heavy distortion and effects, I know that some in synthesisers a second oscillator will be detuned to give it a more dissonant sound.

  • @BronDunbar
    @BronDunbar 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    As a music educator prepping the new school classes, Thank you! This ties together a number of units, starting this fall! I have followed this channel for years! This is one of your most inclusive discussions yet. And, it would be nice to see more women represented. Ie: Pauline Oliveros, Bulgarian folklore women’s choirs, Inuit Throat singing, or the melisma of cantaoras of flamenco such as Niña de los Peines, or voices such as Betty Carter, Sarah Vaughan, Carmen McRae. Again, wonderful work. Fantastic discussion.

  • @ReubenCornell
    @ReubenCornell 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +9

    01:55 Sweet Jesus! This comparison is certainly... something.

    • @2li678
      @2li678 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      Agree 😶‍🌫️

    • @ForkySeven
      @ForkySeven 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      The crazy thing is that composers at the time took themselves just that seriously as to compare using more dissonance in their music to some kind of noble "emancipation". They used that language themselves.

  • @jake_ams
    @jake_ams วันที่ผ่านมา

    When I was 6, my piano teacher used the Bartok piano school. I can’t be happier that I went through „dissonance“ hell - it built up my absolute hearing and also being able to impro any song I like today :)

  • @sjlearning149
    @sjlearning149 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +6

    Want some witchcraft?…take the third harmonic of C2 (G3) and the 4th harmonic of B1 (B3) and Isolate them and play them against each other. It should be a consonant major 3rd but its dissonant as hell. The trick is that harmonics aren’t actually pure tones but instead they are amplitude modulated by their fundamental. This means that no matter how hard we isolate them they still carry relics of their fundamental that cannot be removed with filtering and that original minor second relationship of C2 and B1 cannot be removed from the apparent major third. The cool bit about this is that it shows why Fourier analysis and frequency analyzers can give an incomplete picture and that sometime oscilloscopes are needed to see the full picture.

    • @addyd.3140
      @addyd.3140 11 วันที่ผ่านมา

      That sounds fascinating. I'd love to see some kind of video/demonstration for those of us less technologically/DAW savvy, such as myself.

    • @richardchapman8855
      @richardchapman8855 10 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Perhaps a simpler way of putting this is that the G3 you mention, being a partial of C2, would have as its partials the overtones of C2 and those overtones would be dissonant with B3.

    • @sjlearning149
      @sjlearning149 9 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      @@richardchapman8855 Actually its weirder than that..I'm talking isolating it completely to G3 using a series of high Q peaking filters. You are right though that harmonic spacing would be a dead give away and is something people don't think about enough.

    • @JonasCVogt
      @JonasCVogt ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา

      I appreciate your exploration of harmonics but would like to clarify some points from a physics perspective.
      When you isolate the third harmonic of C2 (which corresponds to G3) and the fourth harmonic of B1 (which corresponds to B3), you're combining frequencies that should form a consonant major third. If you're perceiving dissonance, it could be due to the tuning system used. In the equal temperament tuning system, intervals are adjusted so that the octave is divided into equal steps, which can cause intervals to be slightly detuned compared to their pure ratios in just intonation.
      Regarding your observation that harmonics are amplitude-modulated by their fundamental: In acoustics, harmonics are indeed integer multiples of the fundamental frequency and can be considered pure sine waves when isolated. An amplitude-modulated sine wave is by definition not a pure frequency because the modulation introduces additional frequencies (sidebands) into the spectrum. This means that an amplitude-modulated sine wave no longer exists as a single pure frequency but includes a spectrum of frequencies.
      However, in the natural generation of harmonics (like on a string instrument), the harmonics are not amplitude-modulated by the fundamental in this way. If the harmonics are properly isolated using filters, the influence of the fundamental frequency should be negligible. This means that the original minor second interval between C2 and B1 should not affect the consonance of the isolated major third interval formed by their harmonics.
      As for Fourier analysis, it provides a comprehensive breakdown of a signal into its components and delivers a complete picture of its spectral content. While oscilloscopes display time-domain waveforms, they may not reveal frequency-specific details as effectively as Fourier transforms or spectrum analyzers.
      It's possible that the dissonance arises from slight deviations in tuning or imperfections in the harmonic isolation process. I recommend checking the tuning system you're using and ensuring that the harmonics are accurately isolated to truly assess the interval's consonance.

  • @Howard_Wright
    @Howard_Wright 5 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    The deliberate slight mistuning effect is used in lots of places that many may be unaware of. It's basically the chorus effect. In 12 string guitars, mandolins and other string instruments that use pairs of strings, these are usually tuned close to, but not quite at, the unison or octave. The slight mistuning gives a richer, chorussed sound. The same thing happens with string orchestras. The main reason many violins playing together sound richer and more interesting than a single violin is the many small mistunings. Same with piano tuning, where there are two or three strings for the same note, these are typically tuned at slightly different frequencies, to give a richer sound. The borderlands between these very slight mistunings (rich, chorus sound) and somewhat larger mistunings (less pleasant dissonance) is an interesting area of discussion.

  • @KnjazNazrath
    @KnjazNazrath 4 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Xenakis mentioned! The rabbit hole to Hangars Liquides emerges!

  • @kyle-silver
    @kyle-silver 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

    I think it’s also a false dichotomy to say that music has to be beautiful to be “good”. Composers like Bret Dean do a particularly good job of creating compelling and narratively interesting sound worlds that aren’t traditionally “beautiful” but are nonetheless fantastic compositions

  • @jayducharme
    @jayducharme 2 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Another wonderful analysis! Thanks. And of course, remember Charles Ives' memorable quote: "Stand up and taken your dissonance like a man!"

  • @nichttuntun3364
    @nichttuntun3364 7 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Refreshing and inspiring. Thank you.
    A lot of dissonance content can be found in Italian 70th and early 80th movie soundtracks from Morricone and Riz Ortalani (especially Don't Torture a Ducking or Canibal Holocaust), to name just a few examples. I love it.

  • @Arden7one
    @Arden7one 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    Just like silence and noise, dissonance has had its place in the musical scene I believe for centuries, no? ❤Thank you our good sir, another educational video on a brilliant topic

  • @DavidTMarchand
    @DavidTMarchand 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +9

    There's a GLARING logical inconsistency early in the video that frankly invalidates the whole argument for me.
    1:15 The standard 3x3x3 Rubik's cube has no red/orange edges, nor any red/orange/yellow corners, since red and orange are on opposite sides of the solved cube. Those pieces simply do not exist. Now we could be dealing with non standard coloring of course, EXCEPT…
    1:10 …the UNSOLVED cube features BOTH a red/green edge AND an orange/yellow/green corner, AS WELL as a white/green edge, meaning (once solved) the green face would have to share an edge with the red, orange, yellow and white faces, leaving only blue on its opposite side. Which is exactly how a STANDARD Rubik's cube is colored! Indeed, if you look at the solved cube in the video, there's nowhere for an unseen green face to be placed that would touch the visible red, orange AND yellow faces, even though the UNSOLVED picture features green touching ALL of those colors.
    I expect a public apology by tomorrow.

    • @RD-db7pi
      @RD-db7pi 8 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      As a cubing nerd, i can confirm i am absolutely apalled by this

  • @tuc5987
    @tuc5987 9 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    I'd argue that most people's whistling resembles a Schoenberg piece.

  • @Joie-du-sang
    @Joie-du-sang 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

    It's interesting to note that just ten years before Schoenberg created twelve tone music, Stravinsky premiered The Rite of Spring. The Rite is dissonant AF, and while the premiere was ... interesting, it quickly became accepted. Nowadays, it's performed all the time by orchestras and I don't think it's particularly controversial. But at the same time, twelve tone works are mostly not performed, except for a few pieces by Berg, including his Violin Concerto.
    So what's the difference? It's not dissonance or harshness. The Rite is about as harsh as it gets in many places. I think the difference is just that a lot of twelve tone music is both "harsh" _and boring_. IMO, it's just very difficult to make a really interesting and emotionally engaging piece using the twelve tone system. Certainly, the absolute serialism that followed demonstrated how this sort of rigidity leads to really awful music.
    Meanwhile, there's lots of very dissonant music that people find far more engaging, like The Rite or Messaien's Quartet for the End of Time. I think these are just better pieces of music than most twelve tone music, at least for the things I look for in music, which is obviously very subjective.

    • @DavidSaulesco
      @DavidSaulesco 9 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Agree very much with this.
      Also, I think that a piece like the Rite uses compositional and structural elements like repetition and rhythm (also re: someone else’s comment about more musical parameters than just harmony) to give the listeners something to hold on to when their sense of chordal structure was being bludgeoned.
      Irrespective of whether or not Stravinsky wanted to “pander” to an audience or not, I believe the fact that Rite was always supposed to be an epic, public-facing piece as opposed to something academic and perhaps primarily intellectual influenced it/the composer. I haven’t actually gone looking - yet - for anything to either prove or disprove this theory of mine, but it rhymes with for instance your assessment (with which I personally concur) as serial music as boring, for the reasons you state.
      That’s not to say that a composition using serial techniques needs to be boring, but I sure think it can be.

  • @Globularmotif
    @Globularmotif 4 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I love dissonance in all art. And you are totally right. The addition of a 2nd to a major triad is maturation for what would otherwise be a child like simplicity.

  • @martynspooner5822
    @martynspooner5822 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    A lot of what makes music good is the tension and release but I guess everyone likes what they like and that's beyond argument.
    Thanks for the great video.

  • @ramahadranhennessy9300
    @ramahadranhennessy9300 9 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Love your discussion of Debussy as impressionist painter of dissonance, very well framed

  • @evennorthug2585
    @evennorthug2585 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

    I have great respect for David and his videos, but on this matter, I think he's a bit conventional. To me, dissonance is about dissonant intervals (1, 2 & 6) or harmonic chords being contextually dissonant. Also, dissonance could arise from multiple equal intervals, f ex pairs 1+1, 2+2, 3+3 ..... 6+6 (3-note structures) and expansions on this principle. The dim triad is not a faulty minor, and should not be explained as such. Neither is the aug chord a tweaked major consonant. It's just dissonant. The central dissonance is the tritone, resolving by counter motion to a major triad, all symmetric around the 'd' axis. Key could be detected by cadence or by the family of chords used. But it's better detected by the dominant, of which there is only one. It should be meaningful to talk about dissonant function (contextual) and dissonant structure. The Tonnetz got tremendous impact, and for too long dominated completely, ignoring dissonants. In later decades, dims and augs were central to building chord spaces, vastly expanding the progressional options. So much so, that voice leading spaces came along. Mathematicians found structure in chaos, but music theorists went on with the namedropping exercises: Wagner, Mahler .... and of course the Wiennese guys and all that followed from around World War I. I like to think of harmonics as a sea of dissonance, with islands of consonance. This might be radical. So I would very much like to hear other people's view on my reflections.

  • @tableface77
    @tableface77 7 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Lydian has a tritone and I've heard it mentioned many times that it's the brightest mode. And the soothing sound of the major 7th interval when heard in context of the maj 7 chord. Always fascinated me

  • @Darm0k
    @Darm0k 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    I thought for sure this video would include a clip of the female Bulgarian folk singers that was making the rounds on music theory youtube a year or so ago. It's very dissonant, and very cool.

  • @luisfncosta
    @luisfncosta 5 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Congrats on the video! It’s such a fun way to explain the concept of dissonance.
    I wanted to point out something at 08:50. The first harmonic is actually the fundamental. The word you were looking for is "overtone," since the first overtone is double the fundamental frequency.

  • @PaulAirs
    @PaulAirs 6 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I was tone deaf coming into this video, but there's just such an excellent quality and watchability to your content that I stuck it out and learned a thing or two.

  • @r0bophonic
    @r0bophonic 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    Inspired by this video, I went searching for Alban Berg on streaming platforms. On Berg’s page I found something very odd: a brand new 2024 release by a generic electronic dance pop group using his name. I went searching for others tracks made by the publisher, Erdix, and found a similar group called “Arvo Pärt” with similar generic dance pop that sounds like it could be the output of one of the new AI music generators. From what I can tell, I suspect some “entrepreneur” is trying to make money using the names of 20th century composers to spam the algorithms with AI music. 😒

  • @jacobrobbins3147
    @jacobrobbins3147 6 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Dissonance is what made me fall in love with music

  • @agsmith001
    @agsmith001 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

    perhaps it has a lot to do with tension and release. for myself, the Debussy example would be the extreme to one side (the crashing wave example is perfect), with no tonal center always releasing and Schoenberg on the other where there is no tonal center either but instead of releasing it builds tension and never releases. 🤔

  • @TopaT0pa
    @TopaT0pa 2 วันที่ผ่านมา

    thank you for that video. Absolute masterpiece!

  • @nathanbarnes4740
    @nathanbarnes4740 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    Having thought about these concepts for quite a while, in my own composition I have abandoned the concept of consonance and dissonance. To me they are too heavily associated with tonality that even in the modally based pieces I write, those words have no practical relevance. I think of them as highly technical terms in relation to tonality only (and of course earlier western music where their concepts were equally established though at times a bit different).
    I prefer to think about harmony contextually in terms of either inducing stabilty or inciting instability. That can happen over the space of a single chord, a progression, or as I write polyphonically most of the time, within a single voice in relation to whatever else is going on.
    I would also like to point out that as dodecaphonism, in some ways, diminished the standard tension and release model present in tonality, the ability of the composer in such systems to achieve that ebb and flow in other ways was opened up considerably. It forced composers to look beyond just harmony and focus on the other aspects of music; timbre, texture and voicing etc. to create that tension and release. If you come to that music with only reference points from tonality, then a lot of those dimensions will be opaque. Making the music much harder to relate to. Niw while I don't write dodecaphonically I am thankful that the Second Viennese School did what they did to open up the horizons of Western music.

  • @ShaharHarshuv
    @ShaharHarshuv วันที่ผ่านมา

    What you are saying makes sense to whoever studied even a little bit of sound sythesis. The "buzz" effect you relate to is a common effect.

  • @ericleiter6179
    @ericleiter6179 9 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Great to see another David Bruce video...they are so rare anymore! But, as always, they are brilliant, entertaining and educational at the same time, thank you. I also have to say, it has been a pleasure hearing much more of David's music being programmed on classical radio stations than ever before-at least here in the Midwest of America anyway...keep up the good work!!! When is the sequel to Guardians of Tonality coming out btw? Arnold Strikes Back??? Revenge of the Minor Second??? Can't wait!

  • @robertray2714
    @robertray2714 8 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    I feel like atonal stuff is the musical equivalent of finding out about linguistic prescriptivism and taking it to mean that words have no meaning. Neither words nor intervals have i n h e r e n t meaning, but they both do rest on shared conceptions. When there are no shared conceptions as is the case with atonal music, people will not find meaning. Schoenberg and his ilk basically tried to make the Esperanto language in music without considering that no one spoke it or wanted to speak it.

  • @BackspinZX
    @BackspinZX 9 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Oh hey, another DB vid that makes me want to rethink my way of looking at music!
    Sweet! :D

  • @josephatthecoop
    @josephatthecoop 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Dissonances are intervals that I was taught to dislike hearing as a listener, but learned to love creating as a musician, especially as a singer.

  • @robingunnarsson6412
    @robingunnarsson6412 8 วันที่ผ่านมา

    "Less familiar" is the core definition of dissonance.

  • @dabeamer42
    @dabeamer42 3 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I remember reading a comment (probably in a newspaper) from the 70's or so, looking back on the previous few decades of how things went "in the concert hall" (generically speaking). The author wrote about the dissonant music being programmed by the big orchestras, and how "the public stayed away in droves". That's the first thing that comes to mind in defining dissonance -- music that the average music listener finds unpleasant.
    And hooray for Tantacrul (7:14 and 17:40)!

  • @povilzem
    @povilzem 3 วันที่ผ่านมา

    The harshest dissonance demands the cleanest resolution.
    But we must remember. In medieval music a perfect 4th was considered dissonant. Where do we go once we've reached the crunchiest cluster?
    There needs to be a give and take, push and pull. Simplicity after complexity.

  • @maxwellkowal3065
    @maxwellkowal3065 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    Context is key 🔑

  • @flexprog3374
    @flexprog3374 4 วันที่ผ่านมา

    5:56 "Salut, ça farte ?" Damn, Debussy is up to date with the youngsters on this one lmao.

  • @Nilmand
    @Nilmand 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    "Stand up and take your dissonance like a man"
    ~Charles Ives

  • @ronald3836
    @ronald3836 3 วันที่ผ่านมา

    The video is a pleasure to watch, despite all the dissonance.

  • @mattnieri1202
    @mattnieri1202 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

    That mijwiz sounds amazing!

  • @ShaharHarshuv
    @ShaharHarshuv วันที่ผ่านมา

    Even though, the expectations or "what people are used to" do play a huge part in how they enjoy new music, and you cannot neglect this as a composer.

  • @latheofheaven1017
    @latheofheaven1017 วันที่ผ่านมา

    In the 1980s particularly, electric basses were often processed through an Eventide 910 Harmonizer set to a pitch ratio of -0.1 or +0.1 mixed in with the original signal. This made a big, rolling vibrant sound that was anything but dissonant.

  • @oronyahalom
    @oronyahalom 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

    Microtonal differences are not usually relevant to dissonance, it’s usually referred to as “out of tune”. in the instruments shown they create the effect known as “chorus”, because It resembles a group of human voices. It's harder to sing precisely than to play most instruments precisely, so we are used to this sound. This kind of sound attribute is relevant to the term “timber” (next video?).
    The “usual” dissonances refer to the scale we are playing, usually the major scale, due to historic reasons (see Adam neely video 18th century etc.). Those dissonances have degrees of “irriness” according to culture and fashion. For example, the blues 7th was once considered a dissonance and nowadays it is totally acceptable. for the issue of the triton go see the Adam Neely video.
    There is also a difference between a dissonant interval (two notes) and a dissonant chord. an interval by itself lacks the harmonic context, and therefore i don't consider it to be dissonant or consonant. a chord, on the other hand, is bound to become dissonant after adding to it a certain amount of different extensions (a topic suitable for Adam's videos).
    a voicing of a chord effects its dissonancity, because of the chorus effect mentioned earlier. for example, close low notes sound “muddier” than close high notes.
    As a composer one of my goals is to use as many dissonances as I can, and still come up with music that “sounds good”, whatever that means. I can't enjoy atonal music yet, so I try to create within the confinement of tonal music .for example we can use a dissonant chord progression or introduce an out-of-scale note. As you rightfully mentioned, this kind of use is not only acceptable, it is the cause of most of the extreme emotional effects of music. For example a song or a piece using only full triads would be BORING. it usually helps to omit the defining 3rd, or suspending it with 2 or 4. Those are “light dissonances”, compared to out of scale notes like the sharp 5th (augmented chords, see debussy’s use of the whole tones scale). There is a fine line between using those dissonances as garnish and composing a challenging yet listenable piece. I think Stravinsky was a master at this, and as you mention, many movie scores nowadays.
    dissonances are spicy spices that make a dish interesting and deep, that's why many musicians like them. it's not for everyone’s pallet but it's an acquired taste, so it can be taught.

    • @rhesarozendaal
      @rhesarozendaal 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      completely off topic, but i just noticed in another comment the british spelling of "centre", where i'm used to spell "center". Your "timber" leapt out to me as a pun on that, but i'm sure you totally didn't intend that :D

    • @jestemqiqi7647
      @jestemqiqi7647 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      @@rhesarozendaal It may be a reference to Tantacrul's video about Thoughty2 where he pronounces 'timbre' as timber.

    • @oronyahalom
      @oronyahalom 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      ​@@rhesarozendaal honest mistake...

    • @JScaranoMusic
      @JScaranoMusic 8 วันที่ผ่านมา

      ​@@rhesarozendaal I noticed that too, and thought for a second that it was the US spelling, but isn't it always spelt "timbre" regardless?

  • @theoforde-stiegler
    @theoforde-stiegler 4 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Beautiful musical tension seeking resolution or surprise.

  • @voicemagic
    @voicemagic 17 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา

    The minor triad is in the harmonic series.: 10th-12th-15th harmonic. That's the minor triad in just intonation.
    If you have C as fundamental, than you have 10=E / 12=G / 15=B => E-minor.
    (If you are looking for a more piano-tuning-style version you can go for 16-19-24 which gives you the minor triad with the fundamental as the root.)

  • @bernarddaigle2830
    @bernarddaigle2830 7 วันที่ผ่านมา

    The "warmth" of a string section playing in unisson comes from the fact that the individual players are all a bit "off" in their pitch. If they all played perfectly in tune, it would sound like one instrument.

  • @nuberiffic
    @nuberiffic 4 วันที่ผ่านมา

    amazing that you managed to talk about intentional dissonance for nearly 20 minutes without mention the blues which is built around the tritone and the flat 9th; the two most dissonant intervals

  • @liti1554
    @liti1554 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Musicians work with contrast,tension/release in dynamics cadense direction and all kinds of expressive factors inkluding ..consonance/ dissonance.

  • @daanbaas2962
    @daanbaas2962 11 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I love your videos! Great attention to detail and the subjects are always interesting. 💪

  • @GrinningFeline
    @GrinningFeline 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    Nature* proved that nurture is more important than nature when it comes to harmony

    • @GrinningFeline
      @GrinningFeline 10 วันที่ผ่านมา

      *Nature the journal

  • @jcb4258
    @jcb4258 10 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Let's not forget either that two dissonant voices can create surprizing harmonies. This video is constructed like a piece of music since it's about challenging expectations, but also halve baked ideas. David, thank you for challenging us with the dissonance concept. You are adding sophistication to our humble ears and thinking ability! All is indeed about context, connexion and relation! Your references to Eastern european chant, egyptian "flutes", indian and, as covered by established research, amazonian music do not need to fit, the helpful, but quite limited western views or of theories (or should we say French) on harmony. In The Netherlands they "The one who writes stays."? There is plenty to write or make great videos about to adjust and challenge well established occidental views. Thank you, this is a contribution towards a better humanity. I am already waiting for your next video.

  • @rasmusn.e.m1064
    @rasmusn.e.m1064 4 วันที่ผ่านมา

    A horrible chef can cook you an awful meal with fish to convince you that fish can taste good; you can vomit and swear to never eat fish again, the chef can then eat the dish and choke to death on the bones of the fish, and the chef might still be right.
    That's how I feel about Schönberg.

  • @TopaT0pa
    @TopaT0pa 2 วันที่ผ่านมา

    my grandpa (born 1930) was all about 12 tone music - got me into playing Jazz =)

  • @ronaldcatullus
    @ronaldcatullus 9 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Breaking news! Most people don’t actually understand half the words or concepts they use and stake positions on!

  • @halflearned2190
    @halflearned2190 8 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Another banger of a video, damn!

  • @ohwhen7775
    @ohwhen7775 7 วันที่ผ่านมา

    It really is a fascinating question to ask oneself, there are times where the simplest of chords to me are the most "dissonant", which at the very least informs me that context is important. Just a simple return to the I chord to finish a piece as a simple triad or even diad or root note could very well be the last thing I want to hear, unironically. I think that's because music that does this so well really conveys a sense of finality to the whole thing and I'm just there wanting to wander forever, never to return. More specifically the use of dynamics, rubato, touch, timing, honestly those aspects alone amaze me at just how many times they trump over harmonic complexity of either a given chord or progression. But then I have to ask myself, can what I'm feeling in that moment emotionally, necessarily be defined as "dissonant", because I _usually_ wouldn't call it that. For me this has only been a recent interpretation of the word over the past few years, or decade, as there came a point I'd start to listen to music differently, more maturely even. It could also include harmonic contrast. I'd love to know other's thoughts on whether what I described at the beginning of this paragraph correlates to their own understanding of dissonance or not!
    In the past I understand dissonance to mean either a lack of harmonic consistency (or periodicity to reference the video), be it music with no tonal center and/or some extreme, random use of non-harmonic sounds, chord structures containing a meaningful lack of periodicity to them, (whether resolved or not, _I think_). Ahhh still hard to express clearly into words.
    Take Bartók's 3 Part Piano Concerto, for me the string parts in 5ths are utter consonance no matter what motion they're moving in, I'm not really offended by them in any way, and I say that while understanding where, via use of dynamics and "sautillé" I think at the end of one particular section, where Bartók is _probably_ trying to shift or increase the tension during those parts. I do feel what he's putting down there and if that's "dissonance" well then there ya go I suppose. Whereas I'd describe the bashing and clashing done on the piano to be what I'd traditionally categorize more so as "dissonant".
    Similarly Ives' "Central Park In The Dark", yeah believe it or not I'm not remotely offended by the polytonal strings at all, it's again the later clashing of all the other percussive, piano and horn parts that lead me to the word dissonant quicker than any other word I can think of.
    There is another fascinating and perhaps unexplored aspect to this psychology that I've been thinking of recently, not sure if it's 100% valid or not, and it might be a bit of a hot take. But maybe I'm "supposed" to be more offended by music than I usually am, or more vulnerable to it. I tend to live a sheltered life away from people and so tend not to engage in the same experiences as most (for various personal reasons), I don't get into some of the same types of tensions and relationships that a lot of folk do, on account of not valuing them. And so lyrics often times miss the mark altogether. There are absolutely exceptions though lyrically, from the hilarious to the humiliating. This makes instrumental music all the more powerful because it can provoke a strong emotional response without any lyrics.

  • @calleja332
    @calleja332 4 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Dissonance is like salt, not enough is boring, too much will make you hurl.

  • @billklemm7284
    @billklemm7284 9 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I find dissonance and consonance to be great vehicles for suggesting motion in music. Dissonance in western music tends to be used as active chords that we want to move to resolve into consonant resting points. There’s a satisfaction of resolving the perceived conflict.

  • @DerekPower
    @DerekPower 10 วันที่ผ่านมา

    What a birthday present [when this was uploaded]
    Also: Hippie sings “Sunshine on My Shoulders” on a hot day … and gets punched. I guess this is an example of consonance being unpleasing 😉

  • @gavbrown01
    @gavbrown01 10 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Excellent video and made me thoughtful about disonnance in a way I am usually not (but likely to return to within 3-5 minutes). P.s. I caught the easter egg about the end music being your name

  • @LaNwamNi
    @LaNwamNi 6 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา

    Dissonance = the good stuff. The consonant stuff is like the time between rounds in a boxing match.

  • @tverdyznaqs
    @tverdyznaqs 9 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    There's also something to be said about visual or thematic dissonance, such as, for example, extensive use of AI simpsons imagery in a video where the topic has no relation to the simpsons what so ever...
    Sorry for bein mean, it's just very distracting and the information being presented is harder to digest when the video is edited like that.

  • @BsktImp
    @BsktImp 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Perfect 4th: hold my beer.

  • @londrescatamarca
    @londrescatamarca 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +7

    the colonization of consonance

  • @bennycole1257
    @bennycole1257 18 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา

    To me, in a more technical sense, something with more complex ratio sounds more dissonant. An octave has a 2:1 ratio… so simple you don’t always even perceive it as a different pitch. A tritone (depending on the tuning system) has a 45:32 ratio, which is much more complex. Add in more pitches and the ratios become more complex still!
    I think dissonance is like spicy food. Adding some kick when appropriate keeps things from tasting (or sounding) bland. Some people like hella kick to their food, but it’s not for everybody all the time.
    I like my music with a bit more spice than most people, but that’s because I’ve been eating musical peppers for a long time haha

  • @johnmccool5716
    @johnmccool5716 10 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Excellent job using a Philippe Jaroussky version of Pur ti miro! I think the version you used is the best example of the dissonance but I love the version with him and Nuria Rial.

  • @g-ray4088
    @g-ray4088 4 วันที่ผ่านมา

    16 tone equal temperament is an interesting tuning system

  • @coral9872
    @coral9872 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Starting at 11:28, there's a very disturbing example of dissonance portrayed. This is by no fault of David, but to my fellow forbidden breakdancers (epileptics), please heed this warning. I am not usually triggered by sound, but this was no bueno.

  • @_WeAreSeeds_
    @_WeAreSeeds_ 11 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Thank you very much for this amazing video! As andrew bird put it in his beautiful song "don the struggle"
    "...but dissonance is energy while consonance reminds you of your poverty..."

  • @matsburman5615
    @matsburman5615 6 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I think the harmonic series proves that The Blues is the basis for all music. It does, after all, outline a 13 chord with a #11. 😁

    • @alsatusmd1A13
      @alsatusmd1A13 5 วันที่ผ่านมา

      And to renovate an obsolete musical term, “musica recta” hits a wall there and you have misleadingly write a major 13th for 13/4 to make 13/11 read as a real third.