wideright
New member
- Aug 7, 2008
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OK, that was pretty darn hilarious!! :lol: :lol:metallicalex777 said:wideright said:Fixed it for ya :lol: I was browsing a geek site for coders looking for a javascript and someone was expounding on art theory and design, and somehow worked this into their dialogue. Thought it made for an interesting conversation. Hopefully no one gets hurt in the process :shock: :lol:metallicalex777 said:I suck at math, but from a musician standpoint I hope to assist this equation. In theory almost every "riff/melody" has already been used, but it depends on the tempo, attack, sound (piano/guitar/flute/trumpet/etc.) that makes it different. Remember there are only 7 notes to choose from with 5 of them having a flat or a sharp so there isn't much to work with.
That is my "long" answer to make me sound smart:lol: Where did you read this at Dave??
You're answer I would think has to be taking into some consideration for sure in regard to tempo, rythym, sound, etc. But in terms of just using actual notes and allowing repeated notes, is it really possible that all possibe combinations have been used in some musical form?
Man my eyes are lazy now...I see Da** and automatically thinks its Dan::facepalm:: :lol: That is definitely a great discussion topic. I would have to guess by assuming there has got to be at least 1 set of 15 note melodies that have not been used...although I'm sure there is some college out there that has used some sort of program to "create" every melody known to "math" and has already produced it. If not, then I think a few of us should start :lol: Did you see the South Park "Brown Note" episode? Would hate to run into that one...
http://sjl.funnyordie.com/videos/6efd2f26e7