📄 Extracted Text (722 words)
To: jeffreyE n gmail.com]
Cc:
From: MARK TRAMO
Sent Fri 8/26/2016 2:42:14 PM
Subject Re:
Brilliant, Jeffrey! -
Did you save the output of the simultaneous recordings to an mp3 file? Would love to hear and
discuss! I wonder what it would sound like if we digitally edited the recordings so they were all in
the same key. It's now possible to do that without changing the duration of each frequency, the
bugaboo of trying to do that in the old days. (FYI - Sir George Martin, our Institute Board
member who passed away this year, managed to co-register recordings made in different keys into
one key on Strawberry Fields in 1966(!!!):
https://www.beatlesbible.com/songs/strawberry-fields-forever/2/
Following up on what you told me about a beautiful face indexing the mean of many faces, here's
a paper by Dale Purves and colleagues that suggest something similar for aesthetics in music:
ht tp://wwwjneurosci,org/content/23/18/7160.full.pdf+html
So sorry we have been out of phase this month in trying to follow up on this - might you be
available Sat (tomorrow) between 12N-3P NY time or Sunday between 11A-12M NY time?
Yours,
Mark
On Sun, Jul 10, 2016 at 5:47 AM, jeffrey E. <[email protected]> wrote:
today I conducted an experiment encouraged by Noam's wholly justified aggressive and
detailed directives to joscha.. joshcha focused on layers being developed in the brain . the
timing for the development of each layer being different per species .
I postulate that music might be a frosted window into that structure. symphonies begin with
their first " layer " a theme. in fact , there might be more than one theme in the first layer „
the second part of symphonic form is the complex development stage. where those themes
are inverted, deconstructed , reconstructed etc ,and the development stage takes the most
time . in the conclusion of the symphonic form the recapitulation of all that has come
before it forms a " phenenoma of the piece " a whole ,made up of its smaller concepts . As
opposed to listening to music to record which neuron is firing, as most musciolgists attempt .
I propose that the music may be the audible result of those neurons firing, made possible by
a select few who would attempt to notate those neuronal firings. Beethoven for example.
The experiment . I mashed all of the four symphonies together , playing recordings of the
3rd 5th 6th 7th all overlayed on each other, playing at the same time. - the way a brain
might develop. I expected an ordered noise but to the surprising contrary , IT WAS
AMAZING. . you can hear new "concepts " forming,
iI wonder whether in the mind of a blind child , the " music" would be created even without the
visual referencial. but created none the less. later when the visual can be tied to concepts ,
the anatomy may be hijacked to produce sounds . that somehow relate to the concepts. .
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I tried to mix music from different cultures- it didn't work. African does not work with western
europe,- chinese works with neither of the other two. but within the same cultural music (
the brain of the local species ) the mash ups arc beautiful.
I would note that computers engage in "parallel processing" only in order to take a hard
problem and break it into its component parts , working on each component separately„
here each problem Interacts and the their resolutions interact in remarkable ways.
please note
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Mark Jude Tramo, MD PhD
Dept of Neurology, David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA
Dept of Musicology, UCLA Herb Alpert School of Music
Director, The Institute for Music & Brain Science
Co-Director, University of California Multi-Campus Music Research Initiative (UC MERCI)
[email protected]
http://wwv. Brain \ I usic.org
http://merci.ucsd.cdu
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