Why Does Music Only Use 12 Different Notes?
Video Statistics and Information
Channel: David Bennett Piano
Views: 549,239
Rating: 4.9503279 out of 5
Keywords: 12tet, 19tet, 24tet, microtonal, music theory, why 12 notes?, western music, octave, interval, perfect fifth, just intonation, temperament, 12 tone, tuning, meantone, neutral third, melody, perfect 4th, 3:2, 2:1, major third, sharp, flat
Id: lvmzgVtZtUQ
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 17min 40sec (1060 seconds)
Published: Mon Jul 27 2020
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I love your videos, keep making them. The quality is very good.
The thumbnail with the one flat is killing me lol (But also leaving a comment to come back later)
A better question is why they have letters instead of numbers.
We are referring to the intervals with numbers so if the notes had numbers too then it would be super easy to add and subtract them.
What is A + 3? The question doesn't even make sense. What is 1 + 3 now the question makes sense.
Also if the notes were numbers it would resemble a clock. We are all used to dealing with the 12 hour clock. Two hours from 11:00 AM is 1:00 PM right?
Making notes letters makes music harder to understand, learn and teach. It's one of those things that we do because we have always done even though there are better ways of doing it.
Great video, well researched! I learned a lot about tone science. My only criticism of this video is the use of language like โpurest tonesโ which I think projects a western perspective as the default. Other cultures that have incorporated microtones (including those that have contributed significantly to American blues, jazz, and folk traditions) are the โotherโ in this frame. Iโm looking forward to seeing your video on โnon-westernโ music using microtonal harmonies, and would love to hear your thoughts on how those harmonies have been incorporated into what you see as northern/western styles.
This is a fantastic video.