But do you believe in Wolfram's "Scientific Foundations" concerning his new music:
http://tones.wolfram.com/about/how.html
http://tones.wolfram.com/about/how.html
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@MarkOfTheStoat said:
...But in my view the really great composers are the ones who go the furthest in both directions - the utterly astract and the familiar concrete - and somehow manage to span the distance between leading one into the other, without loosing too much on the way.
[:D]
@William said:
Yes, I believe that. It is very interesting and probably brilliant, but I don't do it because I suppose I already have my own automata somewhere inside my brain. Seriously, I'm not trying to be funny or a smart-ass, I can't understand that stuff in relation to music which to put it bluntly I just do without thinking.
@hermitage59 said:
If by using random as a genre you imply no repetition, then that's actually, factually, mathematically impossible. Even with 38 microtones, or 3,600,000 molecular tones, the repetition must come. so you need something to backup this statement of random.
It is not that simple. There is a mapping from a picture to music and there is no guarantee that the consistency will be preserved. Then there are extras: e.g. Wolframtones has 300 scales.. After that feature any science based on cell automates will blow up!@dpcon said:
Here's an interesting quote from the site:
Each composition in a sense tells in music the story of some system in the computational universe. And because the system follows a definite consistent rule, the compositions inevitably have a certain internal consistency--which is probably what makes them so effective as music.
This is the same principle found in most composition as with Mahler's cells: as long as there is a consistancy it will be percieved on some level by the listener..
@lgrohn said:
But do you believe in Wolfram's "Scientific Foundations" concerning his new music:
http://tones.wolfram.com/about/how.html
Has anyone read this book:@rgames said:
Interesting but not new. As long as there have been mathematicians there have been attempts to create music from a mathematical basis. s
@jbm said:
. Actually, I would argue that the whole nature/nurture thing makes it extremely difficult to systematize musical composition, since the human brain can, quite easily, behave in essentially contradictory ways.