- Lipps-Meyer law
The Lipps-Meyer law, named for
Max F. Meyer (1873-1967), hypothesizes that the closure ofmelodic interval s is determined by "whether or not the end tone of the interval can be represented by the number two or a power of two," in the frequency ratio between notes.Thus the interval order matters — a
perfect fifth , for instance (C,G), ordered, 2:3, gives an "effect of indicated continuation", while , 3:2, gives an "effect of finality." This is a measure of
interval strength or stability and finality. Notice that it is similar to the more common measure of interval strength, which is determined by its approximation to a lower, stronger, or higher, weaker, position in the harmonic series.ource
*Meyer, M.F. (1929). "The Musician' Arithmetic", "The University of Missouri Studies", January.
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.