When I was in music school each one of us in the class were asked to research a favorite piece of music and give a presentation to the class...My ears chose Tristan and Isolde. I just got tired of blatant sounding key changes in music prior to Wagner. But Wagner's sound was truly revolutionary for me...exactly what I was looking for ....a blurring of key changes...a breath of fresh air in music. That, to me , set the stage for the 20th Century
OMG! That's a ton of information right here. at least for a total novice like myself. Instant favorite and I will definitely re-watch this many times to come.
Thank you for taking the time to creating these invaluable videos. The only thing that I don't understand is why you say the perfect fifth is right between the octave because I thought it was the tritonus (6 steps/half tones). So if you divide a string in 2, the frequency doubles and you get the octave. I understand this but when you divide the same string into 3 equal parts, is the length of the string sounding like a perfect fifth made out of 1 or 2 of these 3 parts?
My goodness, the fact that there are people making a living doing worthless crap on UA-cam, and these videos remain relatively unseen (so far), is such an injustice.
When I was in music school each one of us in the class were asked to research a favorite piece of music and give a presentation to the class...My ears chose Tristan and Isolde. I just got tired of blatant sounding key changes in music prior to Wagner. But Wagner's sound was truly revolutionary for me...exactly what I was looking for ....a blurring of key changes...a breath of fresh air in music. That, to me , set the stage for the 20th Century
OMG! That's a ton of information right here. at least for a total novice like myself.
Instant favorite and I will definitely re-watch this many times to come.
Very well explained, and great editing :)
Great video, loved seeing Drew play the guitar "properly." Well done!
Very well done. You deserve way more views.
fantastic
Brilliant video! You are the Bernstein of UA-cam!
"One day he hear the most beatfull souds..." *BLIN BLAN BLANK AAAAAAAAAAA*
how is it even possible this has so few views
Really good content!
Thank you for taking the time to creating these invaluable videos.
The only thing that I don't understand is why you say the perfect fifth is right between the octave because I thought it was the tritonus (6 steps/half tones). So if you divide a string in 2, the frequency doubles and you get the octave. I understand this but when you divide the same string into 3 equal parts, is the length of the string sounding like a perfect fifth made out of 1 or 2 of these 3 parts?
My goodness, the fact that there are people making a living doing worthless crap on UA-cam, and these videos remain relatively unseen (so far), is such an injustice.
I completely agree!
Nice video! But two things: 1. You said medieval when you meant to say renaissance. 2. Please tune the piano!
pythagoras is holding beans because one of the pythagorean doctrines was to restrain yourself from beans
Thank you for noticing!