- Time scale (music)
In
music , a time scale is specification of divisions (scale) oftime orrhythm .Curtis Roads (2001, p.3-4) distinguishes nine time scales of music:
#Infinite: literallyinfinite , such as the length ofsine wave s in classicalFourier analysis ,
#Supra:month s,year s,decade s, and centuries; everything above the level of
#Macro: "overall musical architecture or form" or the level of the individual piece;minute s,hour s, or evenday s,
#Meso: "Divisions of form" including movements,section s, phrases;second s and minutes,
#Sound object (Schaeffer 1959, 1977): "a basic unit of musical structure" and a generalization of note (Xenakis' ministructural time scale); fraction of a second to several seconds,
#Micro: "sound particles" (seegranular synthesis ) down to the threshold of audible perception; thousands to millionths of seconds,
#Sample:sample (music) , measured as are samples in millionths of a second ormicrosecond s,
#Subsample: changes "too brief to properly recorded or perceived", billionths of a second,nanosecond , or less, and
#Infinitesimal: literally "infinitely brief" such asdelta function s.Music may, however, exist "outside" of time when structured through "principles whose defnitions does not imply a temporal order", including scales and many other
precompositional techniques, musical instruments, andaleatoric music . Examples such as sound installations in which the order of the sound is determined by, for example, a listeners movement through the system, are thus placed in time. (ibid, p.38)ource
*Roads, Curtis (2001). "Microsound". MIT. ISBN 0-262-18215-7.
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