Originally posted by Serial_Apologist
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such as ........ Spelling , in the same way that in language one can spell things rong
and also (something I frequently have arguments with students about) some notes which are given the same key on the piano are actually different
so B# isn't the same note as C even though on the piano they share the same key
if one stops thinking that ALL music follows the "rules" of harmonic western art music then one realises that some things are much more complicated (and others more simple)
We have a convention that we call some different sounds by the same note letter name so that Middle C is a C as well as the other C's on a keyboard or other instrument , which is useful as having 128 different names would make it hard to remember which was which.
BUT (and this is something that I often think is missed in much conventional music education and learning) they are obviously NOT the same note at all or even the same sound BUT rather have a relationship which is to do with harmonic language. One hears this evidently with compound intervals , intervals which might in conventional ways be considered "discords" are nothing of the sort (even by the norms of relatively mainstream music) when played as compound intervals ...... and even by different timbres..... and so on
There is a big difference sometimes between notating something as "playable" and notating it "correctly" in terms of its harmonic function ........
There are also some interesting things about major and minor 5ths which we have "lost" in this book http://www.amazon.co.uk/How-Equal-Te.../dp/0393334201......
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