#shorts
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 15 ต.ค. 2023
- Lumatone is a game-changing instrument for keyboard players, film composers, beatmakers, producers, and microtonal composers. Powered by centuries-old music theory and modern design ingenuity, the Lumatone is all at once intuitive to play, fully programmable, and endlessly creative.
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Seriously, If you dropped an album I would purchase in a heartbeat!
Micro tonal music should have more recognition, so many more song creation potential had been unlocked now
every time i hear microtonal music it sounds more normal… i’m scared
The emotion that this song created: KRONZARFMIFICATION
i edge to this video
💀
edgeworthy video ngl
same
relatable
DO NOT SPREAD JOJO'S COMMENTS
spixy sound font!!
absolutely incredible.
🔥🔥🔥🔥
wish i had the money
using a Novation launchpad can get you started
You can build one for a quarter of the price if you know what you're doing.
the ending reminds me of 花の専門店 by macintosh plus
There are some good bits in here but I'm not as sold as with some of the other pieces.
It's a really cool instrument sound so I'm gonna listen to it a few more times, I think the less conventional song structure/format is growing on me
My favorite is definitely one that was in 41edo though. I don't remember which video it was, but it ended on a really soothing harmonic 7th chord.
What tuning system?
Looks (and sounds plausibly(*)) like 31EDO.
(*)31 note quarter-comma meantone would have the same layout but sound almost the same unless you modulated to more remote combinations of sharps/flats, but the Lumatone channel hasn't yet done anything labeled as other than some number of equal divisions of an octave.
Sorry, but it just sounds out of tune! Not pleasant
You gotta listen to microtonal music for a while to really enjoy it. It’s an acquired taste :)
31-edo always sort of sounds of tune because people are very used to 12 notes instead
It sounds out of tune to you because your ears are still unpleasantly out of tune. Keep listening to more such things, and soon it will be as if you've gone from being color-blind and living in a black-and-white world to being able to see all colors in their full brilliance.
@@Nonononono_Ohno No, it sounds out of tune because "microtuning" lacks the clean frequency ratios that resonate well together. Microtuning promotes a constant dissonance.
@@Origen17 Are you aware of what "resonate well together" really means? In physics, resonance takes place when a maximum of energy is transferred from one oscillator to another. This is the case when both oscillators oscillate either nearly on the same frequency, or, already much less ideal, when one oscillator oscillates on a multiple of the frequency of the other. The second case means that the ratio between the resonance frequencies of the oscillators is a whole number. This is called an octave, and the octave is the most "consonant" of all intervals. However, if the oscillation frequencies of two oscillators are apart by any other frequency ratio, they do not resonate. They do not resonate even if they are apart by the second most "consonant" interval, the perfect fifth.
What you therefore probably meant to say is that "microtuning lacks the clean frequency ratios that are consonant". However, consonance and dissonance aren't something that could be distinguished on a scientific basis. As said before, only two waves of exactly the same frequency are completely in resonance. Already the separation of two waves by an octave produces a node when the two waves are superimposed on each other. The more nodes the superimposition of two waves leads to, the more "dissonant" the intervals are. But where do you want to make the cutoff? When is an interval still consonant, and when is it dissonant? That's a completely human-made thing. In ancient times, only the octave, perfect fifth and perfect fourth were considered to be consonant, and many intervals were considered to be unpleasant and forbidden because they were too dissonant. The ancient Greeks would have been disgusted by what we call "classical music". Nowadays, even the tritone has become a commonly used interval, which a few centuries back was regarded as being far too dissonant and therefore useless and not playable. It's all just a matter of perception, there is no such thing as "microtuning". As someone said above, enjoying complex music isn't innate, it's an acquired taste that needs to be learned and trained.
So trust me, all you need to do is keep an open mind and train your brain by listening to a lot of things like the piece in this video. It won't take long, soon everything will start to sound perfectly "in tune", and a completely new world of unexpected, wonderful beauty will open up for you.