Thank you so much for the resources in the lecture! It’s so hard to find decent content online about maths and music, especially presented by someone who understands the mathematical side rigourosly...
Only found Gresham lectures via this lady’s interview on Radio 6. I agree with the other comments about being able to hear short examples but otherwise really enjoyed this and look forward to the next one and also other lectures from Gresham College. 👍
Thank you so much for uploading the lecture. She explained in a logical and systematic way that even a beginner like me finds it comprehensible. It made me want to take the professor’s course. Her passion for music and the recipes of music radiates. I highly appreciate her generous sharing.❤
It would have been nicer 😂 if you could have used a demonstration to compliment or support your explanation. Beside that you seem to be very enthusiastic as a lecturer.
frankly annoying to have to listen to her bleating on breathlessly about entertaining pattern symmetries without playing the examples, nor delving into the creative processes that produced them.
This is the kind of lecture I was looking for and well presented. Thank you!
Thank you so much for the resources in the lecture! It’s so hard to find decent content online about maths and music, especially presented by someone who understands the mathematical side rigourosly...
Fantastic lecture
Only found Gresham lectures via this lady’s interview on Radio 6. I agree with the other comments about being able to hear short examples but otherwise really enjoyed this and look forward to the next one and also other lectures from Gresham College. 👍
Thank you so much for uploading the lecture. She explained in a logical and systematic way that even a beginner like me finds it comprehensible. It made me want to take the professor’s course. Her passion for music and the recipes of music radiates. I highly appreciate her generous sharing.❤
Absolutely awesome!!! The only "problem" is the absense of subtitles. In my case, in Brazilian Portuguese.
I have Third Age students...
Have studied group theory, never thought of applying it to music.
Bravo.
awesome
the four basic waves are Sine, Tube, Saw and Noise. Hear me A Loren Emmerich production on soundcloud.
wow
👍👍👍👍👍
Was anyone else disappointed by how close the actual answer was to 479 million / 48 ?
It would have been nicer 😂 if you could have used a demonstration to compliment or support your explanation. Beside that you seem to be very enthusiastic as a lecturer.
I think her students have packets that have the examples.
And you can easily see why the grid entry system in DAWS is so powerful, it is independent.
Mmmmm, sweet 18th century white dudes from Europe. That's THE source of music. Nobody else knows of it.
Doesn't even play a recording of her own composition. Weak.
frankly annoying to have to listen to her bleating on breathlessly about entertaining pattern symmetries without playing the examples, nor delving into the creative processes that produced them.