Pierce Chapter1
Pierce Chapter1
John R. Pierce
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W. H . Freeman and Company
New York
To Max Mathews, whose Music V and whose kind and
patient counsel started many things in many places.
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Co1ttents
Preface ix
I Sound, Music, and Computers 1
2 Periodicity, Pitch, and Waves 14
3 Sine Waves and Resonance 38
4 Scales and Beats 64
5 Consonance and Dissonance 76
G Consonance, Dissonance, and Harmony 87
7 Ears to Hear With 102
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title about acoustics, though we would say that the book is about musical
acoustics and psychoacoustics and, in addition, about music in general.
In this century some musicians have looked to science and technology
for new directions in music without concentrating on the word acoustics.
These have included Edgard Varese and Hermann Scherchen. This has not
been the chief current of musical thought, nor has music been a part of the
mainstream of science. The greatest influence of science on music has
come through the development of means for recording and reproducing
the sounds of music played on conventional musical instruments. The
phonograph, with its later electronic advances, and radio revolutionized
the role of music in our lives as radically as photography, motion pictures,
and television have changed our world of visual experience. Today the
computer and digital technology in general are working fantastic changes
in the recording and transmission of sound, and in the generation of
musical sounds.
This book is indeed about acoustics- both the physical acoustics
pertinent to the understanding of conventional musical instruments and
the sounds they produce, and the psychoacoustics that helps us to under-
stand the perception of musical sounds. But it is about acoustics in relation
to music and musical ideas.
The changes that computers and their descendants will continue to
work in music will come partly through fresh insights of musicians who
work with new sounds. But computers have opened up new ways of
analyzing and experimenting with sounds, and new ways of investigation
the response of human beings to sound, including musical sounds. Today
we know far more about sounds and their perception than we did in the
pre-electronic era. And we will know more in the future.
Figure 1-1 K; ummhoms, a Renaissance
We can be sure from past experience that new sounds and new
group of double-reed instruments.
understanding of sound will affect the course of music profoundly. Better
sounds have always produced different music.
Musical instruments have improved greatly in range and quality in the
past few centuries, and certainly up to the beginning of this century. In
part, this improvement resulted from (1) the development of better, more nization and sound itself, the music that they produced was different in
easily playable instruments, especially brass instruments with valves and style and sound. They did not confront the past on its own ground.
woodwinds with better key mechanisms; (2) the increasing skill of instru- In our century, electronic sounds in general have had a profound
mentalists; and (3) an expansion of the range of musical sound, as com- effect on some nonelectronic music. When Edgard Varese wrote Deserts in
posers and performers developed and exploited new effects and new 1954 for taped sound and orchestra, he was proud that he had provided
idioms. such continuity of sound quality that it is hard to detect transitions from
Whether or not we wish to call such change progress, it brought an tape to orchestra. Some of Krzysztof Penderecki's music of the 1960s for
expansion in the variety of orchestral sound. Think for a moment of the conventional orchestra deliberately imitates "electronic" sound quality, as
sounds of Bach, Mozart, Wagner, Debussy, and Stravinsky. As successive does some orchestral writing of Yannis Xenakis a little earlier. In such
generations of composers expanded into new territories of concept, orga- works, written at a time before synthesized and computer-produced
4 THE SCIENCE OF MUSICAL SOUND Sound, Music, and Computers 5
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Rules in music are not canned algorithms that we can use in making a
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Figure 1-4 A page from the score of Krzysztof Penderecki's Polymorphia.
computer solve cut-and-dried problems over and over again. What, indeed,
is the place of computers in music?
Hiller and others have pursued the idea of the computer as a com-
poser, or at least, as a tool in manipulating musical material. I will say little
about the computer as a composer's aid, for that is a subject unrelated to
understanding and generating musical sounds.
We may note, however, that some help that the composer needs can
be and is supplied by a computer. One of the most useful tasks that a
computer can do is to produce musical scores of high quality in a day when
even clear hand copies of music have become excessively expensive. Leland
Smith's pioneer SCORE program is now available for IBM (or IBM-com-
patible) personal computers. It produces scores of excellent, publishable
quality. It is easy to make changes and to extract instrumental parts from a
full orchestral score. T he input to SCORE is the computer keyboard.
Many later programs have been developed for producing musical scores on
both Macintosh and IBM computers, including Finale, Professional Com- Figure 1-7 Herbert A. Deutch, with the earliest prototype
poser, and NoteWriter. Some allow playing on a pianolike keyboard of the Moog synthesizer, which he helped invent.
input.
T he role of the computer in composition goes beyond the production
of a neat final score. Computers are used to store and manipulate musical menr. Therefore, analog synthesis did not have a musical impact compara-
materials, including lists of notes or their equivalent. ble to that which digital synthesis has had.
I think that the chief challenge of the computer lies in another
direction, that of new sounds and their use. In the past, many composers
have responded to the challenge of creating new tone colors. Harry Partch
New Technology and Computer Music
invented both a new scale and an entire orchestra of new instruments to The computer offers a wide range of sounds, along with the means for
play his music, but Partch's instruments were difficult to build and are not controlling them very accurately. The challenge is how to master a con-
commercially available. In their search for new timbres, some composers stantly changing medium of unlimited acoustic potential, and how to find
have evoked strange sounds from conventional instruments. Perhaps the aesthetic reasons for realizing these new capabilities.
strangest was the sound of a violin burning on a New York stage, an event In the early days of computer music, composers encountered a num-
staged by Lamont Young and Charlotte Moorman. ber of problems. There were no instruments available. Composers had to
Two early-twentieth-century analog instruments, the T heremin and create their own instruments as computer software. And they had to play
the Ondes Martenot, were recognized as unique musical resources by a them; no performers were available either. The composer had to supply all
number of composers who wrote idiomatically for them. We have noted input through a typewriterlike keyboard. All these factors proved awkward
that electronic analog (as opposed to digital) synthesizers appeared in the in performances. Once a composition was completed, who wanted to sir in
mid-twentieth century. They played an appreciable role in music through an auditorium and listen to music coming from loudspeakers? An audience
the 1960s. Robert Moog's analog synthesizers had a distinct musical im- could not even be sure when to clap unless the composition gave a clue, or
pact, for example, through Walter Carlos' Switched On Bach. unless the house lights came up. Was there an alternative to the concert?
Electronics was an essential part of musique concrete of Pierre Only a few commercial recordings were made, and none had a wide
Schaeffer and others at the Studio d'Essai of the French radio system. distribution.
Analog synthesis was pursued in the West German radio studios at Co- Some of the troubles with concerts were overcome in various ways.
logne by Karlheinz Stockhausen and others. One solution was to couple recorded sounds with projected images, as in
Analog electronics tended to be expensive and not to stay in adjust- Andy Moorer's Lions Are Growing, a setting of a poem by Richard Brauti-
10 THE SCIENCE OF MUSICAL SOUND Sound, Music, and Computers 11
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Figure 1-8 A working computer score for Andy Moorer's Lions are Growing.
Figure 1-9 Max Mathews and his Radio Baton. Among other things, the
Radio Baton enables the performer to beat out the rhythm, loudness, and
sound balance of a piece whose notation is stored in computer memory.
12 THE SCIENCE OF MUSICAL SOUND Sound, Music, and Computers 13
strokes a surface with one or more drumsticks. The velocity of striking can Many talented young composers use computers and digital synthesis
control loudness; the position can control timbre in one direction and hardware as experimental tools to study the intricacies of musical sounds.
pitch in another. The successive pitches and durations can also be stored in Some will produce digitally synthesized music. Others will compose music
the computer. Rate of striking or position of stroking can control tempo, for conventional instruments. All will be influenced, all will learn many
and position of striking or stroking can change sound quality and instru- new and useful things. And so, I hope, will the reader of this book.
mental balance. In this way the Radio Baton brings the performer into the
realm of computer-generated sound, but the skills required are perhaps Although this book discusses computers and the digital analysis and syn-
nearer to those of a conductor than of a traditional percussionist. A thesis of musical sounds, it is really about the well-known aspects of all
number of similar devices have appeared. aspects of musical sounds, about pitch, scales, consonance, harmony, and
Today, digital synthesis of sound is used by composers all over the timbre, and about some less-known aspects of perception. We can't have a
world, in universities, in conservatories, in computer-music institutions, useful understanding of musical sounds without considering these aspects.
and in commercial music. The MIT press publishes a quarterly Computer We will starr with periodicity, pitch, and waves.
Music journal. The worldwide Computer Music Association holds an
annual International Computer Music Conference, as well as other meet-
ings, and issues a publication called ARRAY. There are commercial publi-
cations, including Keyboard and Electronic Musician. When I look back
over more than thirty years to the time when Max Mathews generated the
first computer music piece in 1957 I am struck by obstacles overcome and
progress made.
Figure 1-10 The Yamaha SY99, a late model digital keyboard. The earlier
Yamaha DX7, which reached the market in 1983, was the first completely
digital keyboard synthesizer, and the first such synthesizer that sold at an
affordable price (around $2,000). Early "digital" keyboard devices sold for
about ten times this price. The success of the DX7 was due partly to japanese
persistence and ingenuity, partly to the use of special integrated circuit chips,
and partly to the usc of fm (frequency modulation) synthesis, an invention of
John Chowning. Now discontinued, the DX7 was a landmark that ushered in
a new era. (Photo courtesy of Yamaha Corp. of America)
Periodicity, Pitch, and Waves 15
"concert pitch" is that the A above middle C sounds at 440 vibrations each
second. More on pitch can be found on pages 36-37.
Sounds that have a definite, unambiguous pitch are called periodic,
because something happens over and over again at a constant rate. Galileo
found by accident that he could produce a sound having definite pitch by
Periodicity, Pitch, attd Waves scraping a brass plate with a sharp iron chisel. The tiny parallel and
equidistant ridges left on the brass were a permanent witness to the
vibrations of the screeching chisel that had engraved them. An old book on
musical acoustics relates that Galileo also produced a pitched sound by
rubbing a knife rapidly around the edge of a milled coin. You can try this
by scratching the edge of a quarter with your fingernail. The sound
produced as your nail encounters the ridges around the edge of the coin
does have some pitch. The faster you scratch the coin, the higher the pitch.
The siren provides a clear illustration of the periodicity related to
A !though wind instruments have been known for nearly five
musical pitch. The very siren that Varese used in Ionisation stood in his
New York studio. When I turned the crank faster, the pitch of the sound
thousand years, and harps for almost as long, sounds of a definite pitch are that the siren produced rose. Why was this? In order to understand, we
not necessary to music. The earliest musical instruments that archeologists must examine the mechanism of the siren, which was invested by Charles
have found in Egypt are clappers. Perhaps song accompanied their rhyth-
mic bear, but rhe music may have been largely rhythmical. A knowledge- p
able friend of mine tells me that, in very primitive music, the chief interval
used is the fifth (seven semitones), though sometimes an indefinite musical
third (four semitones) is also used.
Rhythm by itself can make music. In our time, Carlos Chavez com-
posed a toccata for percussion alone. A siren is heard in Edgard Van!se's
Ionisation, but that fine work achieves its effect chiefly by rhythm and
timbre (sound quality).