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#1 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: orlando, florida, usa
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scales for wind chimes
what a fun project. i bought some 3/4 " copper pipe and a pipe cutter, used an online tuning calculator, and made a set of wind chimes. thing is, i think i might be getting too much dissonance for a set of chimes (which should sound relaxing, basically--although i am trying to add a few notes of definite mysteriousness. trying to create a more exotic scale). maybe i could get some advice here?
i'm not yet sure where the dissonance is coming from--i need to do more testing. but here are the intervals i used. 1, 2, 3, #4, 5, b7, 8, 9, #9 (forgive my mixing of sharps and flats. this is how i like to think of the scale.) so as you can imagine from this, my primary impulse was to create a set of lydian chimes. i had some pipe left over after the fifth and started playing with these other intervals. questions: 1. i thought that since that sharp 9 is in a higher octave, it wouldnt conflict too much with the natural third in the lower octave. and it's not, near as i can tell. the sharp nine may, however, be in conflict with another interval, which i cant remember right now. any ideas? 2. i think the flat 7 is in conflict with something, too. 3. my fifth might be a bit out of tune. i seem to remember the fifth conflicting with one of the higher notes. but obviously, it shouldnt conflict with the flat 7 or the sharp nine... i dunno. is this a bad choice for a scale? did i do something stupid? a number of options are open to me right now. what happens if i replace the lower major 3rd with a minor third that matches the sharp nine up above? (i think i might lose the lydian feel. what scale is: 1, 2, b3, #4, 5, b7, 8, 9, #9? but here's another, maybe more serious question: is the dissonance i'm hearing coming from too many notes that are a major second apart? cause with wind chimes, notes of the scale often sound together, of course. so i mean, if i remove that 2 there, i wont have to hear 2 and 3 sounding together, or the 1 and 2. so maybe i should *remove* some notes from this scale. what do you guys think?
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#2 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Oct 2002
Posts: 522
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cool idea,
I think that the half step in between the ninths is going to make it sound bad. I would've gone for more of a chordal approach. I feel like a min9 would've sounded cool. Or maybe two chords stacked on each other, although there would be repetition, you could make the lower notes the roots and then stack the rest on top. I'd like to hear a recording of your chimes |
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#3 |
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Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: orlando, florida, usa
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actually the ninth to the sharp ninth sounds excellent. those top three notes all sound ok, even when sounding together. but there are clashes, somewhere, between the high notes (starting with flat 7) and the low notes. basically something in the high registers is clashing with the bottom notes. dont know what it is yet.
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#4 |
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It might be the 9# and 2? Try getting rid of the second.
Is it possible to test each one with each other? Let's see... 9 notes... each note has 8 other notes.... so that'd be 72... that's a lot. Any chance that you could record it? |
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#5 |
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it's the sharp nine and the flat seven! they're a second tritone within a scale that already has one (the root--sharp four).
so i guess it's one of two things...
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#6 |
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oops, no. i made a mistake in that last post. thats not a tritone.
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#7 |
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wait. yeah.
im in the key of b. a is the flat7 and d sharp is the sharp nine. thats my second tritone... someone help. should i remove or alter that flat seven? or the sharp nine?
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#8 |
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you have a tritone between 1 and #4... the interval between b7 and #9 is an augmented third (a perfect fourth)
1 #4 b7 #9 together that makes a min7b5 I think your problem is that you have a 2, #9, and 3. In the same octave those are all a minor 2nd apart (imagine it a 2, #2, and 3). Also you have a #4 and 5 which is another min2. I don't know, i'm just guessing. The b7 is A and the #9 is D, not D#... D# would be the 3rd... this is confusing me... so I guess you do have 2 tritones... but when i play them together it doesn't sound bad to my ears (A D# F B).. i don't know. Last edited by snufeldin; 04-28-2005 at 08:19 PM. |
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#9 |
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Latin Wedding Band
Join Date: Oct 2004
Location: San Francisco Bay Area
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hey Fortymile,
Hows that mental excersise I gave you coming alone? Hmmm. ok. Here's a suggtestion for your wind chimes. make a short pipe and a long pipe an octave apart. Then divide the difference between them into six. Add this dimmention to the dimention of the smaller pipe and keep adding it until you get six pipes. You should get this scale. Equiptatonic Scale This is a pentatonic scale Where the notes between the prim and the octave are equally spaced. Should sound nice.
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#10 |
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"The b7 is A and the #9 is D, not D#... D# would be the 3rd... this is confusing me... so I guess you do have 2 tritones... but when i play them together it doesn't sound bad to my ears (A D# F B).. i don't know."
----ARGH!!!! i mixed my scales! i always do this! any key im working in, i move it over into the key of C in my head. here, i made the mistake of not remembering that, and i was thinking of the upper octave in the key of C. what an error. to get it straight once and for all: B, C#, D#, F, F#, A, B, D, D# which is: 1, 2, 3, #4, 5, b7, oct, #9 (a b3 if thought of in lower octave), 10 (a major third if thought of in lower octave). this is a grating chord when played as a chord, obviously. i need to eliminate and change some things. why did i do it this way. los boleros, ill try that on piano. but my chimes need to have the lydian sharp four. that was the initial goal here. as for your exercise, i havent been working on music since i last posted here. i need to convert that exercise over to piano, and i am very lazy.
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#11 |
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I think this would sound cool... just an idea.
C E B C G 1 3 7 8 12 or, since you want to add in the #4 C E B C F# 1 3 7 8 #11 I think that m2 between 7 8 would sound cool |
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#12 | |
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Latin Wedding Band
Join Date: Oct 2004
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Quote:
C major = F Lydian So if you make it F-G-A-B-C-D-E-F, you will have your sharp fourth.
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#13 |
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i know what the lydian scale is. you know me, LB, i'm all about modes.
the problem is that i built a scale where the 'bottom half' is lydian and the top half is something else. something that clashes. the bottom sounds fine. great, even. but the upper notes were all experimental, and they're clashing with the bottom half of the scale, especially when they sound together. i wasnt thinking in terms of 'chords.' i didnt bother to think about how chimes would sustain for a very long time. so thats the purpose of this post. i'm keeping at least the 1, 3, #4, and 5. anything else is up for grabs. what other intervals can 'work' with lydian? as for the reason why i did this scale in B instead of, say, F, it's because my initial pipe length was random--whatever looked about right to my eye. i then used an online calculator to give me the lengths for the chromatic scale with that initial length as the tonic. technically these chimes use as a tonic a microtone that falls between b and c--i was a little off with that first cut. but it's fine. the scale is in tune relative to itself.
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#14 | |
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Latin Wedding Band
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Quote:
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#15 |
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the flat7 is in there already. youre saying strike the 9 and sharp nine and substitute a flat 9? that would be like the phrygian note, right?
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