How many octaves exist?
How many octaves exist the the human range of hearing?
Will the same note through all the octaves harmonize?
What is the maximum distinct notes that can be played in a chord?
harmony octave
add a comment |
How many octaves exist the the human range of hearing?
Will the same note through all the octaves harmonize?
What is the maximum distinct notes that can be played in a chord?
harmony octave
add a comment |
How many octaves exist the the human range of hearing?
Will the same note through all the octaves harmonize?
What is the maximum distinct notes that can be played in a chord?
harmony octave
How many octaves exist the the human range of hearing?
Will the same note through all the octaves harmonize?
What is the maximum distinct notes that can be played in a chord?
harmony octave
harmony octave
edited Dec 25 '18 at 2:57
Muze
asked Dec 24 '18 at 20:20
MuzeMuze
1429
1429
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add a comment |
3 Answers
3
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"How many octaves are there in the human range of hearing?"
From http://www.penguinproducer.com/Blog/2011/09/did-you-know-octave-frequency-facts/:
The human ear can hear a maximum of 10 octaves: 20-40Hz, 40-80 Hz,
80-160 Hz, 160-320 Hz, 320-640 Hz, 640 Hz to 1.28 KHz, 1.28-2.56 KHz,
2.56-5.12 KHz, 5.12-10.24 KHz, and 10.24 KHz up to the upper edge of the human ability to hear. The next octave would start at 20.48 KHz,
which is barely above the high threshold of human hearing.
"Will the same note through all the octaves harmonize?"
To an extent, but you have to be careful. The ear doesn't respond in the same way through the whole range, and typically, neither do instruments. For example, the notes at the bottom of the piano can sound very muddy when playing chords, due to note inharmonicity and the weak fundamentals of the instrument.
add a comment |
Yes, all octaves will harmonize since the wave forms are all complimentary. Human range o pitch perception is 20hz to 20,000hz, which gives about 10 octaves. Below 20hz you’re more likely to just hear them as rhythms. If you include those frequencies you can get about 4 more for a total of 14 octaves.
So with a chord containing 7 notes times 14 octaves a total of 98 notes can harmonize?
– Muze
Dec 24 '18 at 20:39
3
I think you need to revisit your understanding of “harmonize”. Also, if your chord has 7 notes and you want to spread it that far, you might as well use a cluster.
– jjmusicnotes
Dec 24 '18 at 20:41
Isn't that the reason a lot of speakers/headphones quote 20Hz-20kHz? Not a lot of point going further, from a listening point of view.
– Tim
Dec 25 '18 at 10:15
@Tim - human ears are only so sensitive. Too slow and we perceive it as rhythm. Too fast and we’re not sensitive enough to pick it up. Yes, some speakers boast going to 35k. Obviously we can’t hear this high, but by doing that it can help make frequency response more even across the upper spectrum of frequencies.
– jjmusicnotes
Dec 25 '18 at 18:37
add a comment |
Given that, basically, a pitch will sound an octave higher when its frequency is doubled, and so on, each C note for instance, will sound like any other C note in a different octave, and won't clash. 'Harmonise' may not be an apposite word.
The range of human voices is approximately 80Hz-255Hz with speech, and up to >2kHz singing, bearing in mind sibilants, harmonics etc. Human hearing, as already noted, is approx. 20Hz - 20kHz, but that varies between individuals. Youngsters range goes a fair bit higher.
The four questions posed here are different. 1 (header). As many as you want. 2. Approx 10 octaves. 3.Basically, yes. 4. There is no definitive answer.
add a comment |
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3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
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active
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"How many octaves are there in the human range of hearing?"
From http://www.penguinproducer.com/Blog/2011/09/did-you-know-octave-frequency-facts/:
The human ear can hear a maximum of 10 octaves: 20-40Hz, 40-80 Hz,
80-160 Hz, 160-320 Hz, 320-640 Hz, 640 Hz to 1.28 KHz, 1.28-2.56 KHz,
2.56-5.12 KHz, 5.12-10.24 KHz, and 10.24 KHz up to the upper edge of the human ability to hear. The next octave would start at 20.48 KHz,
which is barely above the high threshold of human hearing.
"Will the same note through all the octaves harmonize?"
To an extent, but you have to be careful. The ear doesn't respond in the same way through the whole range, and typically, neither do instruments. For example, the notes at the bottom of the piano can sound very muddy when playing chords, due to note inharmonicity and the weak fundamentals of the instrument.
add a comment |
"How many octaves are there in the human range of hearing?"
From http://www.penguinproducer.com/Blog/2011/09/did-you-know-octave-frequency-facts/:
The human ear can hear a maximum of 10 octaves: 20-40Hz, 40-80 Hz,
80-160 Hz, 160-320 Hz, 320-640 Hz, 640 Hz to 1.28 KHz, 1.28-2.56 KHz,
2.56-5.12 KHz, 5.12-10.24 KHz, and 10.24 KHz up to the upper edge of the human ability to hear. The next octave would start at 20.48 KHz,
which is barely above the high threshold of human hearing.
"Will the same note through all the octaves harmonize?"
To an extent, but you have to be careful. The ear doesn't respond in the same way through the whole range, and typically, neither do instruments. For example, the notes at the bottom of the piano can sound very muddy when playing chords, due to note inharmonicity and the weak fundamentals of the instrument.
add a comment |
"How many octaves are there in the human range of hearing?"
From http://www.penguinproducer.com/Blog/2011/09/did-you-know-octave-frequency-facts/:
The human ear can hear a maximum of 10 octaves: 20-40Hz, 40-80 Hz,
80-160 Hz, 160-320 Hz, 320-640 Hz, 640 Hz to 1.28 KHz, 1.28-2.56 KHz,
2.56-5.12 KHz, 5.12-10.24 KHz, and 10.24 KHz up to the upper edge of the human ability to hear. The next octave would start at 20.48 KHz,
which is barely above the high threshold of human hearing.
"Will the same note through all the octaves harmonize?"
To an extent, but you have to be careful. The ear doesn't respond in the same way through the whole range, and typically, neither do instruments. For example, the notes at the bottom of the piano can sound very muddy when playing chords, due to note inharmonicity and the weak fundamentals of the instrument.
"How many octaves are there in the human range of hearing?"
From http://www.penguinproducer.com/Blog/2011/09/did-you-know-octave-frequency-facts/:
The human ear can hear a maximum of 10 octaves: 20-40Hz, 40-80 Hz,
80-160 Hz, 160-320 Hz, 320-640 Hz, 640 Hz to 1.28 KHz, 1.28-2.56 KHz,
2.56-5.12 KHz, 5.12-10.24 KHz, and 10.24 KHz up to the upper edge of the human ability to hear. The next octave would start at 20.48 KHz,
which is barely above the high threshold of human hearing.
"Will the same note through all the octaves harmonize?"
To an extent, but you have to be careful. The ear doesn't respond in the same way through the whole range, and typically, neither do instruments. For example, the notes at the bottom of the piano can sound very muddy when playing chords, due to note inharmonicity and the weak fundamentals of the instrument.
answered Dec 24 '18 at 20:47
topo mortotopo morto
27.1k246109
27.1k246109
add a comment |
add a comment |
Yes, all octaves will harmonize since the wave forms are all complimentary. Human range o pitch perception is 20hz to 20,000hz, which gives about 10 octaves. Below 20hz you’re more likely to just hear them as rhythms. If you include those frequencies you can get about 4 more for a total of 14 octaves.
So with a chord containing 7 notes times 14 octaves a total of 98 notes can harmonize?
– Muze
Dec 24 '18 at 20:39
3
I think you need to revisit your understanding of “harmonize”. Also, if your chord has 7 notes and you want to spread it that far, you might as well use a cluster.
– jjmusicnotes
Dec 24 '18 at 20:41
Isn't that the reason a lot of speakers/headphones quote 20Hz-20kHz? Not a lot of point going further, from a listening point of view.
– Tim
Dec 25 '18 at 10:15
@Tim - human ears are only so sensitive. Too slow and we perceive it as rhythm. Too fast and we’re not sensitive enough to pick it up. Yes, some speakers boast going to 35k. Obviously we can’t hear this high, but by doing that it can help make frequency response more even across the upper spectrum of frequencies.
– jjmusicnotes
Dec 25 '18 at 18:37
add a comment |
Yes, all octaves will harmonize since the wave forms are all complimentary. Human range o pitch perception is 20hz to 20,000hz, which gives about 10 octaves. Below 20hz you’re more likely to just hear them as rhythms. If you include those frequencies you can get about 4 more for a total of 14 octaves.
So with a chord containing 7 notes times 14 octaves a total of 98 notes can harmonize?
– Muze
Dec 24 '18 at 20:39
3
I think you need to revisit your understanding of “harmonize”. Also, if your chord has 7 notes and you want to spread it that far, you might as well use a cluster.
– jjmusicnotes
Dec 24 '18 at 20:41
Isn't that the reason a lot of speakers/headphones quote 20Hz-20kHz? Not a lot of point going further, from a listening point of view.
– Tim
Dec 25 '18 at 10:15
@Tim - human ears are only so sensitive. Too slow and we perceive it as rhythm. Too fast and we’re not sensitive enough to pick it up. Yes, some speakers boast going to 35k. Obviously we can’t hear this high, but by doing that it can help make frequency response more even across the upper spectrum of frequencies.
– jjmusicnotes
Dec 25 '18 at 18:37
add a comment |
Yes, all octaves will harmonize since the wave forms are all complimentary. Human range o pitch perception is 20hz to 20,000hz, which gives about 10 octaves. Below 20hz you’re more likely to just hear them as rhythms. If you include those frequencies you can get about 4 more for a total of 14 octaves.
Yes, all octaves will harmonize since the wave forms are all complimentary. Human range o pitch perception is 20hz to 20,000hz, which gives about 10 octaves. Below 20hz you’re more likely to just hear them as rhythms. If you include those frequencies you can get about 4 more for a total of 14 octaves.
answered Dec 24 '18 at 20:36
jjmusicnotesjjmusicnotes
21.3k23194
21.3k23194
So with a chord containing 7 notes times 14 octaves a total of 98 notes can harmonize?
– Muze
Dec 24 '18 at 20:39
3
I think you need to revisit your understanding of “harmonize”. Also, if your chord has 7 notes and you want to spread it that far, you might as well use a cluster.
– jjmusicnotes
Dec 24 '18 at 20:41
Isn't that the reason a lot of speakers/headphones quote 20Hz-20kHz? Not a lot of point going further, from a listening point of view.
– Tim
Dec 25 '18 at 10:15
@Tim - human ears are only so sensitive. Too slow and we perceive it as rhythm. Too fast and we’re not sensitive enough to pick it up. Yes, some speakers boast going to 35k. Obviously we can’t hear this high, but by doing that it can help make frequency response more even across the upper spectrum of frequencies.
– jjmusicnotes
Dec 25 '18 at 18:37
add a comment |
So with a chord containing 7 notes times 14 octaves a total of 98 notes can harmonize?
– Muze
Dec 24 '18 at 20:39
3
I think you need to revisit your understanding of “harmonize”. Also, if your chord has 7 notes and you want to spread it that far, you might as well use a cluster.
– jjmusicnotes
Dec 24 '18 at 20:41
Isn't that the reason a lot of speakers/headphones quote 20Hz-20kHz? Not a lot of point going further, from a listening point of view.
– Tim
Dec 25 '18 at 10:15
@Tim - human ears are only so sensitive. Too slow and we perceive it as rhythm. Too fast and we’re not sensitive enough to pick it up. Yes, some speakers boast going to 35k. Obviously we can’t hear this high, but by doing that it can help make frequency response more even across the upper spectrum of frequencies.
– jjmusicnotes
Dec 25 '18 at 18:37
So with a chord containing 7 notes times 14 octaves a total of 98 notes can harmonize?
– Muze
Dec 24 '18 at 20:39
So with a chord containing 7 notes times 14 octaves a total of 98 notes can harmonize?
– Muze
Dec 24 '18 at 20:39
3
3
I think you need to revisit your understanding of “harmonize”. Also, if your chord has 7 notes and you want to spread it that far, you might as well use a cluster.
– jjmusicnotes
Dec 24 '18 at 20:41
I think you need to revisit your understanding of “harmonize”. Also, if your chord has 7 notes and you want to spread it that far, you might as well use a cluster.
– jjmusicnotes
Dec 24 '18 at 20:41
Isn't that the reason a lot of speakers/headphones quote 20Hz-20kHz? Not a lot of point going further, from a listening point of view.
– Tim
Dec 25 '18 at 10:15
Isn't that the reason a lot of speakers/headphones quote 20Hz-20kHz? Not a lot of point going further, from a listening point of view.
– Tim
Dec 25 '18 at 10:15
@Tim - human ears are only so sensitive. Too slow and we perceive it as rhythm. Too fast and we’re not sensitive enough to pick it up. Yes, some speakers boast going to 35k. Obviously we can’t hear this high, but by doing that it can help make frequency response more even across the upper spectrum of frequencies.
– jjmusicnotes
Dec 25 '18 at 18:37
@Tim - human ears are only so sensitive. Too slow and we perceive it as rhythm. Too fast and we’re not sensitive enough to pick it up. Yes, some speakers boast going to 35k. Obviously we can’t hear this high, but by doing that it can help make frequency response more even across the upper spectrum of frequencies.
– jjmusicnotes
Dec 25 '18 at 18:37
add a comment |
Given that, basically, a pitch will sound an octave higher when its frequency is doubled, and so on, each C note for instance, will sound like any other C note in a different octave, and won't clash. 'Harmonise' may not be an apposite word.
The range of human voices is approximately 80Hz-255Hz with speech, and up to >2kHz singing, bearing in mind sibilants, harmonics etc. Human hearing, as already noted, is approx. 20Hz - 20kHz, but that varies between individuals. Youngsters range goes a fair bit higher.
The four questions posed here are different. 1 (header). As many as you want. 2. Approx 10 octaves. 3.Basically, yes. 4. There is no definitive answer.
add a comment |
Given that, basically, a pitch will sound an octave higher when its frequency is doubled, and so on, each C note for instance, will sound like any other C note in a different octave, and won't clash. 'Harmonise' may not be an apposite word.
The range of human voices is approximately 80Hz-255Hz with speech, and up to >2kHz singing, bearing in mind sibilants, harmonics etc. Human hearing, as already noted, is approx. 20Hz - 20kHz, but that varies between individuals. Youngsters range goes a fair bit higher.
The four questions posed here are different. 1 (header). As many as you want. 2. Approx 10 octaves. 3.Basically, yes. 4. There is no definitive answer.
add a comment |
Given that, basically, a pitch will sound an octave higher when its frequency is doubled, and so on, each C note for instance, will sound like any other C note in a different octave, and won't clash. 'Harmonise' may not be an apposite word.
The range of human voices is approximately 80Hz-255Hz with speech, and up to >2kHz singing, bearing in mind sibilants, harmonics etc. Human hearing, as already noted, is approx. 20Hz - 20kHz, but that varies between individuals. Youngsters range goes a fair bit higher.
The four questions posed here are different. 1 (header). As many as you want. 2. Approx 10 octaves. 3.Basically, yes. 4. There is no definitive answer.
Given that, basically, a pitch will sound an octave higher when its frequency is doubled, and so on, each C note for instance, will sound like any other C note in a different octave, and won't clash. 'Harmonise' may not be an apposite word.
The range of human voices is approximately 80Hz-255Hz with speech, and up to >2kHz singing, bearing in mind sibilants, harmonics etc. Human hearing, as already noted, is approx. 20Hz - 20kHz, but that varies between individuals. Youngsters range goes a fair bit higher.
The four questions posed here are different. 1 (header). As many as you want. 2. Approx 10 octaves. 3.Basically, yes. 4. There is no definitive answer.
answered Dec 25 '18 at 10:48
TimTim
104k10107264
104k10107264
add a comment |
add a comment |
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