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E-grāmata: Helmholtz Legacy in Physiological Acoustics

  • Formāts: PDF+DRM
  • Sērija : Archimedes 39
  • Izdošanas datums: 12-Jun-2014
  • Izdevniecība: Springer International Publishing AG
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783319066028
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  • Formāts: PDF+DRM
  • Sērija : Archimedes 39
  • Izdošanas datums: 12-Jun-2014
  • Izdevniecība: Springer International Publishing AG
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783319066028

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This book explores the interactions between science and music in the late nineteenth- and early twentieth century. It examines and evaluates the work of Hermann von Helmholtz, Max Planck, Shohé Tanaka, and Adriaan Fokker, leading physicists and physiologists who were committed to understanding crucial aesthetic components of the art of music, including the standardization of pitch and the implementation of various types of intonations. With a mixture of physics, physiology, and aesthetics, author Erwin Hiebert addresses throughout the book how just intonation came to intersect with the history of keyboard instruments and exert an influence on the development of Western music. He begins with the work of Hermann von Helmholtz, a leading nineteenth-century physicist and physiologist who not only made important contributions in vision, optics, electrodynamics and thermodynamics, but also helped advanced the field of music theory as well. The author traces the Helmholtzian trends of thoughtthat become inherently more complex by reaching beyond the sciences to perform a bridge with aesthetics and the diverse ways in which the human mind interprets or is taught, in different cultures, to interpret and understand music. Next, the author explores the works of other key physicists and physiologists who were influenced by Helmholtz and added to his legacy. He examines Japanese music theory student Shohé Tanaka, who sought to design a harmonium that was not based on equal temperament but rather on just intonation. Dutch physicist Adriaan Daniel Fokker, who arranged for organs to be built based on 31-tones per octave, orchestrated concerts for these new instruments and even attempted to compose microtonal music, or music whose tonality is based on intervals smaller than the typical twelve semitones of Western music.

Recenzijas

It reflects the work of two decades during which he studied the intertwinings of science and music in the nineteenth and early twentieth century. the book presents them in the best possible way to facilitate further research. Readers will profit from the rich archival materials that have been translated into English and can easily be traced through the separate bibliographies that conclude each chapter. (Julia Kursell, Isis, Vol. 107 (3), September, 2016)

Part I Helmholtz
1 The Helmholtz Setting in the Johannes Muller Circle in Berlin
3(8)
References
10(1)
2 New Directions in Physiology in the Johannes Muller Circle in Berlin
11(10)
References
18(3)
3 From Physiology to Energy Conservation
21(6)
References
25(2)
4 Early Experience in Music-Making
27(6)
References
32(1)
5 Physiological Acoustics and Combination Tones
33(6)
References
38(1)
6 Physiological Causes of Musical Harmony
39(8)
Reference
45(2)
7 Sensations of Tone as the Physiological Basis for the Theory of Music
47(12)
References
56(3)
8 Just Intonation and the Harmonium
59(22)
References
77(4)
Part II Shone Tanaka, Just Intonation and the Enharmonium
9 Introduction
81(4)
References
84(1)
10 Encounter with the Helmholtz Group in Berlin
85(6)
References
89(2)
11 The Papendick Sammlung
91(4)
Reference
93(2)
12 The Enharmonium
95(4)
Reference
97(2)
13 Expert Opinions. Evaluating the Enharmonium
99(8)
References
106(1)
14 With Bruckner in Vienna
107(4)
References
110(1)
15 Encounters with Music Theorists in Japan
111(14)
References
122(3)
Part III Max Planck
16 Berlin: Capital of the New German Reich
125(6)
References
130(1)
17 From Thermodynamics to the Quantum of Action
131(10)
References
139(2)
18 Objective Laws as Stepping Stones to the Deity of Creation
141(54)
References
191(4)
Part IV Adriaan Fokker. Theoretical Physics and Just Intonation Keyboards
19 Fokker: Theoretical Physicist
195(12)
References
205(2)
20 Fokker and the Teyler Foundation
207(6)
References
211(2)
21 Fokker Music Theorist
213(6)
References
217(2)
22 Temperament and the Circle of Fifths
219(8)
References
226(1)
23 Arithmetic Reflections on Music
227(8)
References
234(1)
24 Just Intonation and the 12-tone System (1949)
235(6)
References
240(1)
25 Confronting Developments in Contemporary Music
241(10)
Reference
249(2)
26 Refinement of Pitch
251(2)
Reference
252(1)
27 Neue Musik mit 31 Tonen
253(8)
Reference
260(1)
Appendix: Willem Pijper and the Efflorescence of Dutch Music
261
References
269