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The video is called: Why guitarists USED TO play more in tune! (Microtonal Frets)

However, around 6:30 he explains why C# and Db are NOT the same fucking note. Holy shit.

Mind blown again.

The video is called: Why guitarists USED TO play more in tune! (Microtonal Frets) However, around 6:30 he explains why C# and Db are NOT the same fucking note. Holy shit. Mind blown again.

(post is archived)

[–] 2 pts

The biggest mistune in TET is the minor 7th, e.g. C..B-flat. B-flat should yield a division of G..C just as E is the division of C..G. The minor 7th in TET has a frequency ratio of 1.782 yet should be 1.75 compared to tonic following division of the octave. So where we should have a fairly consonant sounding ratio of 7/4 we get obvious dissonance. This is a very flat 7th and hard to do on a guitar since you can only bend upward. But next time you really want to make a minor 7th interval sing, try flattening it noticably. It's beautiful.

[–] 0 pt

Das wild

[–] 0 pt

They ARE the same fuckin note. Microtonals are only interesting for autists.

[–] 0 pt

Incorrect, bro. Microtonals (aka tuning) is for timbre. Most real instruments produce a distribution of frequencies across the desired pitch. On a spectrograph you'd see a bump rather than an infinitely thin line at the desired frequency. These bumps are typically wide enough to hide the detuning inherent to TET. High spectral content also works to hide detuning, even if the overtones are themselves quite narrow. But if you have pure sine waves at specific frequencies any detuning becomes VERY apparent in the form of beat notes. The closer an instrument gets to pure tone, the worse detuning will sound. So while microtonals on a snare drum are indeed for autists, they are absolutely necessary for additive synthesis, autotune and vocoder filtered sounds, and some real instruments with simple harmonic content.

[–] 0 pt

Bah. I refer you to a piano keyboard. Between C and D is C# (Db). Endy story.

[–] 0 pt

Ones a programming language and the other is a database. Totally different

[–] 0 pt

hmm he only showed equal temperment and 1/4. i wish there was someother kind of temperment he could have experimented with