Today I'm celebrating the music of Mozart!
One of the most amusing things I learned about Mozart and his link to mathematics is his musical composition dice game. Mozart composed a minuet in which many variations were created using dice. For each of the sixteen bars of the minuet, Mozart wrote two choices for the eighth and sixteenth bars of the composition and eleven choices for each of the other bars. The performer was instructed to select randomly the choices for each bar using the dice. Using this approach, a composition with a huge variety of variations was created. Can you guess how many? It is actually 1,518,999,334,332,964 variations. If it took about a half a minute to play each, it would take more than 1,400,000,000 years to play all the variations.
As posted on YouTube by petroleumfx
References:
http://www3.cs.utwente.nl/~zsofi/mozart/index.html
http://www.math.niu.edu/~rusin/uses-math/music/
http://www.americanscientist.org/template/AssetDetail/assetid/24551
NPR Music's Mathematics of Mozart's Music at http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5175371
Image credit: BBC Cambridgeshire
2 comments:
Hi there, me! I don't think you desire to pursue a double major is all that odd. I was a musician while I was studying geological engineering, a very math oriented subject. If you can do it, you should. Don't know if you'll ever see this post or not, but for other readers here is what one instructor of older students has to say - math and music are simply different intelligences (read some Howard Gardner) and some folks are strong in both and some aren't. They are not mutually incompatible but not the close relationship that others have said. This article is about Mozart. Now I'm not Mozart and chances are you aren't either! Does that mean you can't play? Nope. Most can to some degree.
There is certainly a great deal to learn about this topic.
I love all the points you've made.
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