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Perceptions of Musical Octaves Are Learned, Not Wired in the Brain

7 pointsby turadgover 5 years ago

2 comments

mtmailover 5 years ago
Link missing? I think it&#x27;s this article <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.quantamagazine.org&#x2F;perceptions-of-musical-octaves-are-learned-not-wired-in-the-brain-20191030&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.quantamagazine.org&#x2F;perceptions-of-musical-octave...</a>
zzo38computerover 5 years ago
I am aware that there are kind of music which are not based on normal octaves (e.g. Bohlen-Pierce).<p>Of course, the middle C and the one octave higher C are not the &quot;same note&quot;, although they do differ by an integer number of octaves, so in octave-based music they are related in this way which is the kind of music that it is. It is called &quot;same note&quot; because it is both called &quot;C&quot; due to being based on octave-based system (such as 12-TET), and the style of music which is based on it is such that many cases can be considered as a &quot;same note&quot;.<p>What I did not know is that octave-based music is uncommon in some places.