EP3909024A2 - System and method for generating harmonious color sets from musical interval data - Google Patents
System and method for generating harmonious color sets from musical interval dataInfo
- Publication number
- EP3909024A2 EP3909024A2 EP20752093.3A EP20752093A EP3909024A2 EP 3909024 A2 EP3909024 A2 EP 3909024A2 EP 20752093 A EP20752093 A EP 20752093A EP 3909024 A2 EP3909024 A2 EP 3909024A2
- Authority
- EP
- European Patent Office
- Prior art keywords
- hue
- pitch
- music
- interval
- color
- Prior art date
- Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
- Pending
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Classifications
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- G06T11/001—Texturing; Colouring; Generation of texture or colour
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- G—PHYSICS
- G06—COMPUTING; CALCULATING OR COUNTING
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- G06T11/00—2D [Two Dimensional] image generation
- G06T11/20—Drawing from basic elements, e.g. lines or circles
- G06T11/206—Drawing of charts or graphs
-
- G—PHYSICS
- G10—MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS; ACOUSTICS
- G10H—ELECTROPHONIC MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS; INSTRUMENTS IN WHICH THE TONES ARE GENERATED BY ELECTROMECHANICAL MEANS OR ELECTRONIC GENERATORS, OR IN WHICH THE TONES ARE SYNTHESISED FROM A DATA STORE
- G10H1/00—Details of electrophonic musical instruments
- G10H1/0008—Associated control or indicating means
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- G10H—ELECTROPHONIC MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS; INSTRUMENTS IN WHICH THE TONES ARE GENERATED BY ELECTROMECHANICAL MEANS OR ELECTRONIC GENERATORS, OR IN WHICH THE TONES ARE SYNTHESISED FROM A DATA STORE
- G10H1/00—Details of electrophonic musical instruments
- G10H1/0033—Recording/reproducing or transmission of music for electrophonic musical instruments
- G10H1/0041—Recording/reproducing or transmission of music for electrophonic musical instruments in coded form
- G10H1/0058—Transmission between separate instruments or between individual components of a musical system
- G10H1/0066—Transmission between separate instruments or between individual components of a musical system using a MIDI interface
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- G10H—ELECTROPHONIC MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS; INSTRUMENTS IN WHICH THE TONES ARE GENERATED BY ELECTROMECHANICAL MEANS OR ELECTRONIC GENERATORS, OR IN WHICH THE TONES ARE SYNTHESISED FROM A DATA STORE
- G10H1/00—Details of electrophonic musical instruments
- G10H1/36—Accompaniment arrangements
- G10H1/38—Chord
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- G—PHYSICS
- G10—MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS; ACOUSTICS
- G10L—SPEECH ANALYSIS TECHNIQUES OR SPEECH SYNTHESIS; SPEECH RECOGNITION; SPEECH OR VOICE PROCESSING TECHNIQUES; SPEECH OR AUDIO CODING OR DECODING
- G10L21/00—Speech or voice signal processing techniques to produce another audible or non-audible signal, e.g. visual or tactile, in order to modify its quality or its intelligibility
- G10L21/06—Transformation of speech into a non-audible representation, e.g. speech visualisation or speech processing for tactile aids
- G10L21/10—Transforming into visible information
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H05—ELECTRIC TECHNIQUES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
- H05B—ELECTRIC HEATING; ELECTRIC LIGHT SOURCES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; CIRCUIT ARRANGEMENTS FOR ELECTRIC LIGHT SOURCES, IN GENERAL
- H05B45/00—Circuit arrangements for operating light-emitting diodes [LED]
- H05B45/20—Controlling the colour of the light
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H05—ELECTRIC TECHNIQUES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
- H05B—ELECTRIC HEATING; ELECTRIC LIGHT SOURCES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; CIRCUIT ARRANGEMENTS FOR ELECTRIC LIGHT SOURCES, IN GENERAL
- H05B47/00—Circuit arrangements for operating light sources in general, i.e. where the type of light source is not relevant
- H05B47/10—Controlling the light source
- H05B47/155—Coordinated control of two or more light sources
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H05—ELECTRIC TECHNIQUES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
- H05B—ELECTRIC HEATING; ELECTRIC LIGHT SOURCES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; CIRCUIT ARRANGEMENTS FOR ELECTRIC LIGHT SOURCES, IN GENERAL
- H05B47/00—Circuit arrangements for operating light sources in general, i.e. where the type of light source is not relevant
- H05B47/10—Controlling the light source
- H05B47/165—Controlling the light source following a pre-assigned programmed sequence; Logic control [LC]
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- G—PHYSICS
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- G10H—ELECTROPHONIC MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS; INSTRUMENTS IN WHICH THE TONES ARE GENERATED BY ELECTROMECHANICAL MEANS OR ELECTRONIC GENERATORS, OR IN WHICH THE TONES ARE SYNTHESISED FROM A DATA STORE
- G10H2210/00—Aspects or methods of musical processing having intrinsic musical character, i.e. involving musical theory or musical parameters or relying on musical knowledge, as applied in electrophonic musical tools or instruments
- G10H2210/031—Musical analysis, i.e. isolation, extraction or identification of musical elements or musical parameters from a raw acoustic signal or from an encoded audio signal
- G10H2210/066—Musical analysis, i.e. isolation, extraction or identification of musical elements or musical parameters from a raw acoustic signal or from an encoded audio signal for pitch analysis as part of wider processing for musical purposes, e.g. transcription, musical performance evaluation; Pitch recognition, e.g. in polyphonic sounds; Estimation or use of missing fundamental
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- G10H—ELECTROPHONIC MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS; INSTRUMENTS IN WHICH THE TONES ARE GENERATED BY ELECTROMECHANICAL MEANS OR ELECTRONIC GENERATORS, OR IN WHICH THE TONES ARE SYNTHESISED FROM A DATA STORE
- G10H2210/00—Aspects or methods of musical processing having intrinsic musical character, i.e. involving musical theory or musical parameters or relying on musical knowledge, as applied in electrophonic musical tools or instruments
- G10H2210/571—Chords; Chord sequences
- G10H2210/576—Chord progression
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- G—PHYSICS
- G10—MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS; ACOUSTICS
- G10H—ELECTROPHONIC MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS; INSTRUMENTS IN WHICH THE TONES ARE GENERATED BY ELECTROMECHANICAL MEANS OR ELECTRONIC GENERATORS, OR IN WHICH THE TONES ARE SYNTHESISED FROM A DATA STORE
- G10H2220/00—Input/output interfacing specifically adapted for electrophonic musical tools or instruments
- G10H2220/005—Non-interactive screen display of musical or status data
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- G10H2220/00—Input/output interfacing specifically adapted for electrophonic musical tools or instruments
- G10H2220/155—User input interfaces for electrophonic musical instruments
- G10H2220/405—Beam sensing or control, i.e. input interfaces involving substantially immaterial beams, radiation, or fields of any nature, used, e.g. as a switch as in a light barrier, or as a control device, e.g. using the theremin electric field sensing principle
- G10H2220/411—Light beams
Definitions
- the present invention relates generally to a computerized system and method for improved selection and generation of color sets (color series and color combinations) and aesthetic color effects, via the use of music relationship methods and data.
- Color sets may be selected for viewing simultaneously or in animated sequences. This process is important for a number of fields, including those that employ pigment chemistry for color output, those that employ colored lighting for color output, and those that employ both lighting and pigment chemistry, such as in storefronts and theme parks.
- effective selection of color sets is useful for marketing and entertainment purposes, such as for colored signage and colored product display uses, for architectural lighting, casino lighting, and entertainment and theatrical lighting.
- Effective selection of color sets for computer games, console games, and virtual media may increase appeal or create intrigue and thereby interest.
- Effective selection of color sets is also beneficial in music visualization and VeeJay performance tasks.
- Color set selection is also important in pigment-employing fields including the field of personal beautification (clothing selection, cosmetic color-related decision-making), the field of interior and exterior design, and the field of marketing (e.g. logo design, packaging).
- C is understood as the harmonic root of this pair of pitches, and the function of the G:C relationship includes an understanding of how it relates and connects to other relationships; in the relationship each of the two pitches has a distinct role.
- other pairs of pitches in the comfortably audible range
- the key color and complement are in a relative position with one another such that they can be considered interchangeable.
- pitches can have different functions (for e.g. root, third, fifth, seventh, color tones). The stronger functions influence the building of melody. Even independent of knowing a chord harmony source, the pitches of the melody can often be distinguished as being particular chord tones, or passing tones, or chromatic tones. Simple melodies like“Three Blind Mice” often exist within understood harmonic contexts that are fairly clear even without seeing what chords should accompany them.
- the present invention relates to systems and methods for generating colors sets based on principles of musical harmony and dissonance. Just as musical pitches may be combined in pleasing combinations and sequences, different color hues may be combined to create pleasant visual experiences akin to those experienced while listening to music.
- the music listening experience may be enhanced by presenting colors which take their visual harmonic cues from the music being performed.
- a system for generating color sets based on concepts of musical harmony includes an input device, a computer processing unit a computer memory and a color output device.
- the input device is adapted to receive pitch interval data.
- the computer processing unit is adapted to execute software instructions which are stored in the computer memory.
- the software instructions include a pitch analysis module for identifying pitches and pitch intervals within pitch interval data received by the input device.
- the software instructions further include a music-harmony -to-color-harmony module that executes at least one music-to-hue process that identifies one or more color sets based on one or more pitch intervals identified in the pitch interval data.
- a color output device which is adapted to generate one or more color objects having a hue belonging to a color set identified by the music to hue process.
- the music harmony to color harmony module defines a music to hue index that defines a spectrum-like tuned hue gradient that includes a plurality of discrete dominant-wavelength hue notes ordered by increasing wavelength.
- the hue gradient includes a relatively smaller plurality of interpolated hue notes which mix varying amounts of color from each end of the hue gradient.
- the interpolated hue notes provide a smooth color transition between each end of the hue gradient.
- Each hue note, both dominant wavelength and interpolated hue notes, is assigned a unique tuned hue interval variable and a unique tuned hue interval angle between 0° and 360° such that each hue note corresponds to a unique angular location around a tuned hue chromatic circle.
- the at least one music to hue process includes identifying a pitch interval received by the input device. Such pitch intervals generally include a bottom pitch and a top pitch.
- the music to hue process identifies an interval angle associated with the received interval.
- the music to hue process associates a first hue note with the bottom pitch to define a color key and identifies a second hue note separated from the first hue note by a tuned hue interval angular amount equal to the pitch interval angle associated with the received pitch interval.
- a method of generating a color set calls for generating a pitch index including a plurality of pitch classes. Each pitch class is separated by a predetermined frequency ratio, and all of the pitch classes together correspond to a musical octave. The method then calls for assigning a pitch angle to each pitch class such that the pitch classes represent unique locations around a single octave music chromatic circle.
- a first pitch class is designated as a pitch root. The pitch root is assigned a pitch angle of 0°.
- a hue index is also generated that includes a plurality of differently colored hue notes arranged in a tuned hue gradient.
- a hue angle is assigned to each hue note such that the hue notes represent equally spaced unique locations around a tuned hue chromatic circle.
- the inventive method then calls for designating a first hue note as a hue tonic and assigning a hue angle of 0° to that hue note.
- a first pitch is received the method calls for determining which pitch class the pitch belongs to.
- a first pitch interval angle is identified that is equal to an angular separation between the pitch classes of the first pitch and the pitch root.
- a second hue note is then identified which is separated from the hue tonic by a hue interval angle corresponding to the first pitch interval angle.
- a color set is generated that includes the first hue note and the second hue note.
- a method of generating harmonious color sets calls for creating a tuned music chromatic circle that represents a plurality of tuned pitch classes evenly distributed around the circumference of the tuned music chromatic circle; creating a first tuned hue chromatic circle co-centered with and having a diameter different from the diameter of the tuned music chromatic circle; and creating a second tuned hue chromatic circle substantially identical to and co-centered with the first tuned hue chromatic circle but having a diameter different from the first tuned-hue chromatic circle and the tuned music chromatic circle.
- the first and second tuned hue chromatic circles represent tuned hue gradients including a plurality of distinct hue notes evenly arrayed around the circumference of the tuned hue chromatic circles.
- the inventive method calls for specifying a music root note on the tuned music chromatic circle and a particular hue note as a hue root note on the first and second tuned hue chromatic circles and aligning the hue tonic notes on the first and second tuned hue chromatic circles with the music root on the tuned music chromatic circle.
- Pitch interval data includes a first pitch belonging to a first pitch class and a second pitch belonging to a second pitch class. Analyzing the pitch interval data includes identifying the first and second pitch classes and identifying a first interval angle between them.
- the method calls for rotating the second tuned hue chromatic circle by an amount corresponding to the first interval angle and creating a color set that includes a first hue note from the first tuned hue chromatic circle and a second hue note in radial alignment with the first hue note from the second tuned hue chromatic circle.
- FIG. 1 illustrates a pitch chromatic circle
- FIG. 2 illustrates an exemplary system for generating color sets
- FIG. 3 illustrates an exemplary method for generating color sets
- FIG. 4 illustrates a 240-hue resolution Tuned Hue Chromatic Circle (THCC) along with an exemplary demarcation of the ranges within and outside of the dominant wavelength window (DWW);
- THCC Hue Chromatic Circle
- FIG. 5 illustrates central angles on the THCC, for depicting‘interval angle’ constructs;
- FIG. 6 illustrates a number of significant interval angles (forming color set pairs) relative to the hue tonic of Violet;
- FIG. 7 illustrates the significant interval angles that were shown in FIG 6, but with the THCC rotated, to illustrate that rotational offsets permit music-like transposition of significant color sets;
- FIG. 8 illustrates the necessary 3 criteria for functional correspondence between music and hue in graph form
- FIG. 9 illustrates the necessary 3 criteria for music-to-hue (m2h) functional correspondence in table form
- FIG. 10 illustrates relatively preferred hue perfect P5’s (perfect 5ths).
- FIG. 11 illustrates a 24-hue resolution THCC in which the tuned hue interval variables (THIVs) have been given English color names;
- FIG. 12 illustrates a basic 12 hue resolution THCC - a hue form visualization of the common musical Chromatic Scale from approximately 425nm Violet as an exemplary tonic from which we will block out a musical progression in hue note form;
- FIG. 13 illustrates Tines of constant hue’ relevant to selecting hue intervals to be determined by the m2h process if perimeter values on the CIE Chromaticity Diagram are economically (or for other practical reasons) unobtainable;
- FIG. 14 illustrates a hue interval nested chromatic circle (thiNC) interface
- FIG. 15 illustrates the color science key color-to-complementary color pairing versus the present invention’s employment of the“slight arc” away from the color science complement to achieve the hue P5 and hue P4 intervals;
- FIG. 16 illustrates examples of LED Strip Lights
- FIG. 17 is a diagram illustrating the various components used to“block out” the various color sets for the upcoming examples of FIGs 18-22; FIG.
- FOG. 18 illustrates blocking out the melody only as sent to one single 1-pixel-unit strip light.
- FIG. 19 illustrates blocking out the melody and bass, as sent to two 1 -pixel-unit strip lights
- FIG. 20 illustrates blocking out the melody and chord roots, as also sent to two 1- pixel-unit strip lights.
- FIG. 21 illustrates blocking out the melody, bass and chord roots, as sent to three 1 -pixel -unit strip lights.
- FIG. 22 illustrates blocking out melody, bass and chord roots as above, and shows the numbering of the hue intervals according to the 12-Res THCC;
- FIG. 23 illustrates hue tonality using the progression IV-V-I over a pedal of the tonic, showing a set of 6 of the 24 total hue tonics;
- FIG. 24 illustrates the correspondence between the Color Matching Function peaks shown below & the present invention’s preferred (linear) Hue Half Step (hue semitone) of approximately 21.7 nm;
- FIG. 25 illustrates ratios corresponding with the opponent channels said to be involved in the human visual system
- FIG. 26 illustrates the use of the Chromatic Circle as the base of a 3D Interval Helix GUI of the present invention
- FIG. 27 illustrates the interval helix, a means of visualizing and providing a graphical user interfacing for simultaneous interaction according to octave-reduced intervals and non-octave-reduced intervals;
- FIG. 28 illustrates a GUI comprising a Tuned Music Interval Helix and Tuned Hue Interval Cylinder that enables visualization of the universe of music and hue construct relationships, including transposition of their tonics, and visualization of the non-octave-reduced music interval voicings that will be used as input data when voicing hue notes on color object arrays, along with visualizing the octave-reduced intervals, and also a hue tonic handle;
- FIG. 29 illustrates m2h-cent-measurement-bins (m2hcmb’s) and interpolation basis points (IBP’s);
- FIG. 30 illustrates an example of m2hcmb's in a table (shown relative to their dominant wavelength values if they are within the DWW);
- FIG. 31 illustrates an exemplary default table with Prime Pitch Index (PPI) bins and Prime Hue Index (PHI) bins, both of which may have their intervals independently offset via independent Music Tonic Offset (MTO) and Hue Tonic Offset (HTO) interval offset variables;
- PPI Prime Pitch Index
- PHI Prime Hue Index
- MTO Music Tonic Offset
- HTO Hue Tonic Offset
- FIG. 32 is an exemplary demonstration, in angular form, of the looking up a music interval in the PPI, then adding the MTO & HTO to the negative central angle to derive the final tuned hue interval variables in the PHI;
- FIG. 33 is a block diagram of an exemplary method of a tuned hue variable value using octave-reduction
- FIG. 34 is a block diagram illustrating an exemplary method of using pitch bend and other pitch modifiers, as is useful when using music protocol data;
- FIG. 35 is a block diagram showing an advanced flow method according to an embodiment of the invention.
- FIG. 36 is a block diagram illustrating the configuration and use of an exemplary embodiment of the invention.
- FIG. 37 illustrates‘bass emphasis’ on the thiNC Interface
- FIG. 38 shows examples of miscellaneous random color objects in random positions
- FIG. 39 illustrates color objects along a path
- FIG. 40 illustrates‘sheet music voicing’, according to the invention, with hue notes shown along a path in a fixed (non-animated) image
- FIG. 41 illustrates basic use of dimensions to portray time and pitch
- FIG. 42 illustrates that time and pitch dimensions, as shown in FIG. 41, may be modified in viewer-predictable ways without removing the effects of musical correspondence;
- FIG. 43 illustrates a networked use of an embodiment of the invention
- FIG. 44 illustrates a method of mapping‘melodic interval proximity’ in music to color object‘spatial proximity’ along a path
- FIG. 45 illustrates a method of mapping music‘pitch height’ (measured from AMIB or another chosen pitch height origin) to spatial size
- FIG. 46 illustrates a method of mapping hue notes to existing color objects relative to their size
- FIG. 47 illustrates a method of mapping from a musical chord tone member pitch hierarchy position to spatial position along a path; [00064]
- FIG. 48 illustrates a mapping procedure wherein a two-octave-reduced chord tone height above the chord root is mapped to a spatial position along a path
- FIG. 49 illustrates a mapping procedure for mapping a music note event’s musical rhythmic interval position (and thus proximity in time or beat) to a spatial position along a path or its proximity to other hue notes along a path;
- FIG. 50 illustrates a 240-hue resolution thiNC interface displaying the result for a chord comprising a major triad chord
- FIG. 51 illustrates a 240-hue resolution thiNC interface displaying the result for a chord comprising a minor triad
- FIG. 52 illustrates a 240-hue resolution thiNC interface displaying the result for a chord comprising a major 7 th chord
- FIG. 53 illustrates a 240-hue resolution thiNC interface displaying the result for a chord comprising a dominant 9 th chord
- FIG. 54 illustrates a 240-hue resolution thiNC interface displaying the result for a chord comprising a Dominant 7 th chord with a tuned 3 rd and“barbershop” 7 th ;
- FIG. 55 is a block diagram of color-in color-out system according to an embodiment of the invention.
- FIG. 56 is a block diagram of a color-in music-out system according to an embodiment of the invention.
- an embodiment of a computerized system 100 and method 200 is disclosed for improved selection and generation of color sets and color harmony effects via use of music relationship methods and data.
- the music-to-hue process (m2h process) is assumed calibrated so that by definition the hue intervals determined by the m2h process should satisfy the disclosed necessary 3 criteria for functional correspondence (see below).
- the m2h process is configured to, upon receipt of a set of music intervals, determine a functionally corresponding set of hue intervals in the form of thiv’s, and output these via the at least one-color output device adapter on said at least one-color output device as sets of analog colors.
- music protocol data in the present disclosure we refer to data representing music in a non-analog or in more-than-analog way, where music intervals are distinguished in the data; Examples of such data include music protocol hardware interface data and music protocol sequence data (e.g. MIDI or OSC data or similar).
- the failure may also partly be because, along with that requirement of intensity, Orange in typical 3-color primary systems is itself neither an additive or subtractive direct primary - and the requirement to mix two primaries significantly (each of which have some impurity) may decrease the vibrancy of a target color.
- Orange has an advantage in additive 3-primary use since it is often achieved by full intensities of Red and Green. One must reduce Green to achieve Orange, decreasing intensity and thus decreasing the appearance of vibrancy at the same time).
- hue tonalities featuring such problematic colors are less effectively demonstrated, and to demonstrate them most effectively will require the more vibrant hues not always obtained on typical workplace display screens.
- hues will be most appropriate when those that relate to music intervals occurring on downbeats are displayed in the most vibrant state available.
- DWW Dominant Wavelength Window
- FIG. 1 illustrates some of the important concepts of music theory that will be utilized in the present invention and its disclosure that we feel should be explicitly defined to avoid misinterpretation. Most essentially this figure delineates basic interval construct use. Such interval construct use will be further disclosed with reference to the musical Chromatic Circle and the THCC.
- the modem piano as a typical Western musical instrument.
- Musical notes on the modern piano repeat at a rate of every 12 piano keys, and these repeating notes sound similar to, and can substitute for, one another.
- a handy way of showing this repeating music note relationship is the musical Chromatic Circle.
- the musical Chromatic Circle is a geometrical space showing relationships between the 12 pitch classes making up the familiar chromatic scale (ordering them around the circle at -30° [as central angles] each as they progress upwards by semitone).
- interval construct can be a simple two-pitch interval or it may comprise more than two pitches. If the interval construct is a chord then the interval bottom can be its chord root. If the interval construct is a piece of music, this interval bottom can be the music tonic. If the interval construct is unknown, as with some embodiments of the present invention, then the interval construct is generic, having an arbitrary music interval bottom, aka AMIB) (I.e. the starting pitch that is the bottom of the interval construct is selected as the starting point on the circle.
- AMIB arbitrary music interval bottom
- the other octave-reduced members of the interval construct are located on the circle as ray points at various degrees from the interval bottom, and neighboring ray points have negative central angles between them as well. Since by convention the musical Chromatic Circle pitches travel upward clockwise, and by convention clockwise central angles on a circle are described as being negative, central angles for intervals within the single octave of the musical Chromatic Circle will be from -0 to -360 degrees of that starting point. These are referred to herein as‘interval angles’)
- the incoming music-interval- comprised data may at a given time comprise a single music chord, and the hue data being processed at a given time may comprise a single hue chord.
- the terms music root and hue root may sometimes be more appropriate, but the intended meaning of‘central member of a set of intervals’ will be the same.
- the second circle will represent hue intervals (comprised of vibrant analog colors).
- THCC Tuned Hue Chromatic Circle
- the THCC forms a tuned hue gradient that is designed to approximately functionally correspond to a one-octave continuum of generic music intervals.
- this a hue octave (figuratively only; not implying that the range is an actual octave).
- some less common variations of the method may alter the THCC slightly, relative to successive octaves of musical pitch (not akin to stretching musical octaves, but to slightly distinguish different octaves of the same pitch) nonetheless the gist of the conception remains the same, in that the THCC approximately corresponds to musical octaves.
- the suggested accuracy of the THCC is at least to within 1/24 of the THCC.
- a special series of 24 hue names is given in FIG. 10 that can help one understand this requirement. As an example yellow is at 577 nm, while yellow orange is at 588 nm. If the hue interval called for included yellow, and yellow orange were substituted for it, the intended result would be less likely.
- the tuned hue gradient being visualized in analog form in the THCC represents a measured ordering of hue intervals.
- it represents the tuned hue gradient producible by the thiv’s of a m2h process as analog output if their hues were produced in series (but with the important feature being that the thiv’s exist in mathematically predictable positions).
- the THCC represents the tuned hues of the m2h process, which provides a hue tuning.
- the hue tuning offers a parallel effect to what would happen if one a) played a succession of intervals on a tuned musical instrument; wherein the purpose is to provide a similar ability to that of being able to easily trigger musically desirable values on a tuned musical instrument.
- a display screen is made available to visualize the THCC as an interface to select and view hue intervals.
- Types of thiv’s (or types of an m2h process based on them) can be formulated according to the nature of the color output device being used to produce the analog color.
- each thiv defines a mechanical setting for obtaining the intended hue, such as an orientation for a multicolored lens, or a set of digital lighting protocol controller values (such as a set of DMX color mixture controller values).
- each thiv stores an electronic state that results in the intended hue.
- each thiv defines a color mixture value (e.g. an RGB or CMYK pixel value).
- each thiv is a variable value quantifying the hue-component portion of a complete color value, for example such as exists in a hue- component-comprised color space (such as the spaces HSB, HSV, HSL, and more accurate modern spaces of color science where applicable).
- a hue- component-comprised color space such as the spaces HSB, HSV, HSL, and more accurate modern spaces of color science where applicable.
- each thiv is a variable value quantifying the hue-component portion of a complete color value, which is to be approximated after procedurally including texture components, or texture and lighting components, for cases where the target color object is a texture-based color object (an color object that is generated using texture methods, that permits control of a significant portion of the object’s hue property.)
- the target color object can be color-adjusted by direct adjustment.
- the target color object can have its appearance color-adjusted through a test/evaluate process run on a set of pixels so as to approximate a target hue - for instance if a target color object was comprised of a glass or metal texture, to reach a target hue the procedure would require computing the scene lighting onto the glass/metal texture for multiple iterations in order to arrive within a hue range deemed a passable approximation of the thiv hue.
- the DWW-portion of the colors of an m2h process can be formed by the developer according to prescribed dominant wavelength spans between the thiv’s.
- Dominant wavelength values within the Dominant Wavelength Window (DWW) can define approximately 39/48ths of this more precisely tuned THCC.
- Thiv’s for the non-DWW-related remaining approximately 9/48ths of the THCC may then be interpolated from the ends of this resulting range of DWW thiv’s to smoothly connect them and add in the non-DWW color range, as illustrated in FIG. 3 (further described below), roughly maintaining the smoothness of the hue gradient.
- the THCC appears as a vi si bl e-spectru -like hue gradient.
- FIG. 4 shows a 240-Res THCC (representing 240 thiv’s in a 240-Res m2h index, thus having 240“color chips” on the THCC). While the musical Chromatic Circle, as was stated above, is for visualizing the measurement of music intervals, the THCC is for visualizing the measurement of hue intervals; and the relationship of the two circles, being offset-able around a common center, is for visualizing the offset-able functional correspondence between those intervals of the musical pitch and visual color domains.
- the musical Chromatic Circle spans a series of 12 chromatic pitch classes and then wraps (moving up to the next octave if completing the clockwise circle, and moving down to the next octave if completing the counter-clockwise circle.)
- a“wrap around” i.e. using modulus
- the modulus value being the resolution of the m2h index thiv’s. This can easily be visualized by continuing on around the THCC (one wrap around per octave).
- the m2h index and THCC may be used in a resolution comprised of as few as 12 hues (A 12-Res m2h index and a 12-Res THCC), but this is not extremely useful.
- the nuances of music that exist in the finer pitch variations than semitones add a great deal of impact to our musical experience.
- the approximate minimum resolution that should be employed to achieve functional correspondence with musical vibrato, pitch bend, and also tuning variations is about 240-Res (Humans are said to be able to distinguish about 200-400 hues but these are not distributed in any equal way so actually higher resolutions are preferred). In terms of
- the music-interval-comprised-data receiving device would be a hardware device that provides music interval source data. In another embodiment the music- interval-comprised-data receiving device would be a software device that provides music interval source data. In one embodiment the source data received is stamped to indicate multiple music interval source tracks. In one embodiment the source data is stamped to indicate multiple music interval source channels.
- the music interval feeding process finalizes the music-interval- comprised data for entry into the m2h index. In one embodiment the m2h index is constructed so as to look up octave reduced music intervals, and finalization includes octave-reduction of the music intervals prior to feeding them into the m2h index.
- finalization by the music interval feeding process also includes creation of one or more of the following: time stamps, track stamps, channel stamps, and layer stamps. In one embodiment finalization by the music interval feeding process also includes routing per one or more of the following: time stamps, track stamps, channel stamps, and layer stamps. And in one embodiment, additionally, the music-harmony-to-color-harmony software module includes a distribution process module that will distribute the hue notes obtained from the music intervals, per one or more of their time stamps, track stamps, channel stamps, and layer stamps, onto particular color object arrays, and, in accordance with the time/channel/track information, onto particular color objects within said color object arrays. See FIG’s 44-56.
- the music interval feeding process may of course receive intervals that are already time stamped, or already marked relative to their independent input source tracks and channels. But finalization may add additional information to such stamping, or re-configure it in some way, in either case for providing enhanced flexibility or quality.
- music protocol data e.g. MIDI
- MIDI MTC values can be utilized as usual.
- MIDI files there may be multiple tracks in a file (MIDI File type 1), and this information can be utilized, or the track information can be derived from the MIDI channels (MIDI File type 2).
- the music-interval-comprised data being digitized audio
- it will normally be received via multi-channel digital audio cards, with the digitized music from these channels being processed separately for pitch detection and placed in separate locations or with it being stamped according to source channels.
- the information as to time stamps, track stamps, and channel stamps can be utilized.
- the music interval feeding process may allow user configuration to direct such varied input to the specific color object arrays, according to specific mapping methods (see FIG's 37-49).
- This can be implemented in a more developed music-harmony -to-color-harmony software module that includes a routing GUI for the user. This can be done by providing, for each track or channel, a default and user editable 1) mapping method and 2) at least one-color object array as the target for the mapping.
- color can be characterized as having multiple properties. For example color can be algorithmically divided into the properties of Hue, Saturation, and
- a mapping method can therefore be assigned to a track or channel whereby one of the properties“bubbles up” to take precedence over some designated higher layer; while the other color properties from that channel maintain their assigned priority.
- One example of using this has been called a“twinkle layer” mapping method. This method utilizes a rhythm pattern in the music, or percussion elements in the music; but simply“lightens up" the existing color of an affected color output device pixel.
- a system can have a basic setup that includes a basic music-interval-comprised- data receiving device. More advanced systems can include music-interval-comprised-data receiving devices attached to music interval generating or processing devices. There are many creative music theory processes of music generation and re-composition. Improvisation generators can be used that weigh a group of weighted pattern segments and pleasingly fabricate a resulting music interval output. Chord substitution, harmonization, and re-harmonization can also be used on existing music intervals. These are all well understood and can be accomplished via simple mathematics, and/or simple lookup tables. For example, one can take a group of intervals in one scale (for e.g.
- the music interval feeding process may be configured so as to accommodate the receipt and coordination of such varieties of possible material. Such configuration may be made to accommodate and appropriately route material indicating (e.g. by inclusion of a "stamp” in the data) that it is sourced from a variety of track types, and/or indicating that it is from a variety of channels, and/or indicating that should be processed onto specific layers.
- material indicating e.g. by inclusion of a "stamp” in the data
- any other octave-based tuning may also be visualized, as a deviation from 12-ET tuning.
- octave-reduced intervals of the other octave-based tunings can be measured relative to the cent positions of this 12-ET musical Chromatic Circle.
- dynamic tonality may be utilized, for instance to enable the use of pure thirds only within portions of a given musical progression where it is deemed appropriate.
- Sorted musical pitches and intervals being received within music-interval- comprised data may be visualized as ray end points and central angles (that we will call‘interval angles’) on the musical Chromatic Circle. These will be deemed to functionally correspond (largely) with angle rays (hue note rays) and interval angles (hue interval angles) formed on the THCC. It is significant that the functional correspondence between the interval angles of the musical Chromatic Circle and the interval angles of the THCC is NOT determined by the orientation of one circle with the other. The THCC can be rotated in relation to the musical Chromatic Circle (and vice versa), causing a new orientation between the two circles, but the hue semitones and hue cents will be deemed to continue to function.
- An interval construct is any set, of whatever size or span range, of member intervals.
- An interval construct is designated from a specified point either on the THCC (or Interval Helix which is described later) or in the m2h index. This specified point is known herein as the‘interval bottom’.
- a music interval construct may have a significant“interval bottom”, such as a momentary or lasting tonal center (music tonic), musical chord root, or musical arpeggio root. These are all significant locations in pitch space.
- a hue interval construct may have a similarly significant interval bottom location (such as the hue tonic, hue chord root, or hue arpeggio root).
- music interval constructs may be specific or generic. With generic intervals the placement into actual pitch space or hue space is a separate step from the initial selection or creation of the interval construct.
- stored hue interval constructs are specific.
- stored hue interval constructs are generic (e.g. ii-V-I, figured bass, or by complete hue interval relationships with no specific hue info, but only with any necessary rhythmic relationships.
- Generic hue interval constructs may be manipulated in generic form (as by adding additional intervals to chords or melody, or applying chord substitution or re-harmonization principles). These generic constructs may then later be flexibly applied in specific analog color form as needed for a particular purpose.
- the tuned hue gradient of the THCC as shown in FIG. 3 will be approximately determining the remaining correspondences between pitch and hue.
- interval angle constructs relative to the THCC first shown in FIG. 3 will be capable of representing the correspondences reached between music interval constructs and hue interval constructs in the form of thiv relationships as measured in the m2h index (e.g. by sorting according to virtual bins). So FIG. 4 illustrates the use of interval angles in the THCC to define the points of interval constructs.
- FIG. 5 illustrates various m2h interval constructs, in angle values on the THCC, listed per music interval cent values, and given in generic pitch ratios where appropriate. These are all shown (for purpose of example only) per the hue tonic of 425 nm Violet.
- FIG. 5 is based on FIG. 3, which was produced using a 240-Res THCC (a THCC in a resolution of 240 hues), in a circle of 360°.
- FIG. 5 is an example of how hue intervals are computed, using the THCC to illustrate the way that such indexing and computation works in the m2h index.
- each successive 240th of the circle will comprises a hue interval span of 5 hue cents (equivalent with the same span of musical cents).
- Each negative degree (-1°) comprises a hue interval span of 3.333... hue cents (equivalent with the same span of musical cents).
- the hue resolution can be finer than 240-Res or less fine.
- FIG. 5 calculates intervals using negative angles, from approximately 425nm Violet.
- FIG. 5 shows approximate angles for a series of hue intervals from this interval bottom. The angles were arrived at by traveling clockwise.
- FIG. 6 illustrates the introduction of a rotational offset of the THCC from FIG. 5, that does not change the interval construct angles shown in the illustrations.
- Offset of a set of thiv’s in the m2h index is an operation that is here represented graphically (the graphics of which can be used in a GUI), by offset between the musical Chromatic Circle and the THCC. Such offset is similar to musical transposition (not to be confused with mathematical transposition). It doesn’t alter the meaning of music interval constructs.
- Such offset in terms of color
- This m2h functional correspondence (accessed via the m2h index) is transposable the way music intervals are transposable.
- the present method permits the transposing of a hue chord to a different hue chord root. And it permits the transposing of a hue sequence to a different hue tonic. Additionally it permits the use of chord substitution and re-harmonization practices. It permits any such music theory operation given that the music interval functions are known.
- FIG. 8 is in graph form and FIG. 9 is in table form).
- Hue intervals of the present invention are indexed in the m2h index in relation to music intervals so that:
- FIG. 10 is an illustration of preferred hue P5’s, and relative degree of
- hue P5’s in the THCC both according to present research. Its first use is for choosing thiv’s for the portion of the THCC approximately outside the DWW. Its second use is in the general design of typical embodiments where the color output device is chosen by weighing between costs and ideal vibrancy. FIG. 10 is provided as a resource for weighing between these two factors, because it will (per present research) indicate relative acceptability. When interval constructs become more intricate (as in jazz, or pieces including at least several instances of non-relative-key modulation) then understandably the use of colors of very high vibrancy and use of the more preferred hue intervals become more necessary. As shown in FIG.
- the m2h index prefferably be configured so that: the clockwise span between a hue from the indigo-lower-wavelength-blue region and a hue from the orange region corresponds with a music P5; and so that the clockwise span between a hue from the upper-wavelength-blue region and a hue from the orangish-red-warm-red region is indexed to correspond with a music P5; and so that the clockwise span between a hue from the cyan region and a hue from the cool-red- blush-red region is indexed to correspond with a music P5; and so that the clockwise span between a hue from the cool green region and a hue from the magenta region is indexed to correspond with a music P5; and so that the clockwise span between a hue from the warm green region and a hue from the purple-violet region is indexed to correspond with a music P5; and so that the clockwise span between a hue from the yellow-green
- FIG. 11 provides a 24-Res THCC in which the thiv’s have been given English color names, for cases where this may clarify the method for certain readers and users.
- a m2h index need not include thiv’s for every position in the THCC. It only must include enough thiv’s to represent the music intervals in the music data one wishes to the color output to correspond with.
- the m2h index may have thiv’s distributed throughout the complete range of the THCC, or more sparsely, only in the needed positions for a particular music tonic and hue tonic (as will be conceptually elucidated below).
- FIG. 12 illustrates a 12-Res THCC, representing a 12-Res m2h index with 12 thiv’s, for demonstration of some basic principles of the present invention as in FIG’s 16-21.
- Hue Intervals in the THCC operate according to modl2. (Most simply the THCC is considered one“hue octave” and equates with octave-reduced music intervals).
- thiv’s based on a 12-Res THCC one can find the hue interval (and functionally corresponding hues) for any octave reduced music interval in typical 12-pitch music. This may be done by simple addition and subtraction at the given resolution, and it may also be done starting with higher resolution angle values that locate functionally corresponding hues in a lower resolution THCC.
- When a computational result is less than zero on adds 12. When a computational result reaches 12 or more, one subtracts 12.
- Color objects are managed using software, such as in the form of arrays. They can be presented in animated combinations and series or static combinations or series, the latter being possible because a path along a static image can be followed by a viewer, providing the“time” aspect of musical experience in viewing the static image.
- Hue-interval-comprised data from the present method may even be substituted for music-interval-comprised data as input.
- hue note sets may be modified using known music-theory -based methods and algorithms with the results of such modifications being predicted according to music theory, although it would be completely unexpected. While it is certainly true that individual colors have a great impact on the perceived qualities of any color set, nevertheless the present method allows for selection of color sets that do, to an effective degree, functionally correspond to music interval constructs.
- Such music interval constructs include chord types and chord progressions, and melodic scale types, modes and progressions, including processes influencing the experience of tension and resolution.
- Such music relationships have inherent extensibility, and their effect is independent of the response caused by the individual pitches.
- FIG. 13 illustrates lines of constant hue, relevant in selecting hue intervals for the m2h index in cases where reduced colorfulness is necessary, such as for economic reasons.
- a basic m2h index one ideally uses the purest possible colors, nearest the perimeter of the CIE Chromaticity Diagram because these have the highest degree of vibrancy, Chroma, colorfulness and saturation.
- approaching this perimeter is not always possible for all color ranges on the THCC.
- the gamuts of color output devices using RGB or CMYK primaries typically have certain color ranges that are only capable of moderate Chroma, colorfulness and saturation.
- the hue intervals of the present method when described by values within the DWW, may be monochromatic wavelengths themselves (but this is usually impractical), or they may be hues with the highly saturated dominant wavelengths as specified. But they may also be hues that fall along lines of constant hue from these dominant wavelengths. This can be according to the Munsell system’s lines of constant Hue, or constant hue values derived using such methods as CIECAM02, CIELAB or CIELUV if appropriate. Of course colorimetry may also be used so as to properly factor in an embodiment’s intended viewing conditions to best achieve the intended hue intervals.
- a display screen is made available to view a graphical user interface (GUI) that provides nesting, and independent rotation around a common center, of multiple THCC’s so as to form color sets.
- GUI graphical user interface
- This GUI allows a user to audition color sets for particular purposes. It should also help us convey invention features, and the present invention’s methods of applying music theory to color harmony.
- FIG. 14 illustrates the thiNC interface. It is comprised of n concentrically nested THCC’s. Each of the concentrically nested THCC’s is independently rotatable by central angular offset, around a common center.
- the hue gradient of the THCC’s (that here comprise the thiNC interface) represents the tuned hue gradient produced by the thiv’s of the m2h index.
- the THCC’s are each in essence a rotatable THCC ring in a color set display mechanism.
- This color set display mechanism via producing relative rotation alignments of set of THCC rings, allows the embodiment user to choose and visualize color sets.
- the concentric THCC rings progressively get smaller from outermost to innermost (according to some arbitrary rate of progressive shrinking). In use typically the outermost, larger THCC ring represents the lowest non-octave-reduced pitch being visualized, and the successively smaller THCC rings represent successively higher non-octave-reduced pitches. The reason for this is explained later.
- the thiNC interface basically“visually voices” sets of colors and their progressions, and may do so according to the full resolution (Res) of Hue Tonics of the system, or according to a particular Hue Root or Hue Tonic, by way of introducing a cover over the top of it that covers all but one “hue spoke” (see below).
- a thiNC interface comprises n THCC rings (4 in the case of the drawing), each with n possible hue notes (same number of hue notes in every THCC ring, which is the resolution of the thiNC interface).
- each of the THCC rings is like an instance of a THCC as described above, except that it need not represent the full resolution of the m2h index. (Selection of a single specific hue note by human interface device (computer arrow keys/mouse/touchscreen) can be easier when that hue note is larger).
- hue spokes By rotating each ring so the color shapes on each come into angular alignment with one another, the colored shapes (serving as hue notes) can be aligned along straight lines called hue spokes, that can be seen in FIG. 14. The number of hue spokes equals the resolution of the thiNC interface.
- null rotation position In default orientation (called null rotation position) every hue note in each hue spoke will contain the same hue value, akin to a series of "unison" intervals (a series of n -0° angles of rotation). It is preferred that in null rotation position the spoke comprised of the Violet color shapes will be on a radius crossing the 6- o’clock position of the thiNC interface.
- the thiNC interface can represent musical interval constructs, such as chords, according to the amount of central angular rotation of each of the THCC rings clockwise.
- every spoke represents a voicing of the chord
- each THCC ring each provides one chord voice.
- One typically represents a series of intervals of an interval construct with the outermost hue note of the spoke representing the lowest pitch; with successively higher musical pitches being represented on successively smaller THCC rings.
- the thiNC interface can also represent a scale or mode; or an entire music progression.
- the central angular orientation of each THCC ring can represent one monophonic music sequencer track, with the smaller THCC rings tending to be used for tracks with higher pitches.
- each THCC ring is rotated from its -0° position (null rotation position) will be based on the current octave-reduced music interval above the interval bottom, broken into the resolution of the thiNC interface.
- each THCC ring would rotate -7.5° for each musical quarter semitone.
- each THCC ring would rotate -1.5° for every 5 musical cents.
- a 1200-Res thiNC interface would advance -.3° for every single musical cent; not that this would necessarily be practical.
- each hue spoke shows 1 of the n possible visual voicings of the hue intervals being visualized. Shown in FIG.
- Every hue spoke, from outside to inside, is voicing a color set comprised of the series 1) hue root 2) M3 3) P5 and 4) M7. This is a hue interval voicing of a “root position Hue Maj7”.
- each of the THCC rings serve up one voice of this musical interval construct.
- the series of hue spoke around the thiNC interface show the chord or interval construct transposed by an angle, and in a series of times, of the thiNC resolution central angle span and resolution number of divisions. (A 12-Res thiNC interface has 12 divisions, each with a central angle span of -30°. ) This can be functionally equivalent to a series of different hue chord roots or hue tonics.
- the series of hue spokes basically form a hue-spoke-comprised palette (expressing potential color set choices).
- a hue-spoke-comprised palette expressing potential color set choices.
- music theory from such palettes one can be logically audition and select voicings to build more intricate color sets such as chord progressions or music progressions.
- a single interval construct can be viewed on the thiNC; but a timed sequence of them can also be viewed on it.
- the thiNC interface is provides a useful GUI, meanwhile each hue spoke can very effectively conceptually represent what is to be sent, as a color set, to the set of color output device pixels (per the definition of pixel given below) comprising a color object array.
- the system can "visually voice” the hue intervals as hue notes on “color objects", along color object paths and within color object dimensions. This is accomplished using arrays. After deriving hue intervals using the m2h index, such use of arrays achieves further correlation with musical aesthetics.
- the hue note spatial presentation maintains a mathematical correlation to the non- octave-reduced and rhythmic properties of the music-interval-comprised data. These procedures are further illustrated in FIGs 37-48
- One method of using such a color object array would be: Sort a received set of pitches into pitch order (non-octave-reduced pitch order), converting each into an octave-reduced interval value, using the octave-reduced interval of the lowest pitch to define the thiv of the first element (color object) in the array, the octave-reduced interval of the second-lowest pitch to define the thiv of second element in the array, and so on, until the all the pitches define respective thiv’s, with any pitches exceeding the available array elements being“overflowed. There is more to this obviously that will be described later.
- the thiNC interface as for viewing in virtual form on a display screen, is best programmed through the use of vector graphics to create the colored shapes. It is useful for viewing a given hue chord simultaneously in all available hue transpositions (within the current THCC resolution). (By hue transposition is meant the corresponding concept to music transposition). These transpositions can be chord, scale or mode transpositions. Viewing them can equate to auditioning them. (For visual clarity, in order to view scales and modes there should be enough THCC rings so that both the outermost and innermost represent the interval of unison for that particular tonic).
- a sequence track plays the intervals of a chord progression on the thiNC, with the sequence storing the timing of changing angles of each of the THCC rings.
- a great multitude of color relationships are in flux, and with such a number of colors one would expect dissonance, but to the contrary, per our test subjects when harmonious musical material is used as input, it is perceived as aesthetic.
- Polytonal color harmony based on hue intervals is a very useful color harmony effect. This effect can be achieved not only using the thiNC interface, but by offset of tuned hue gradients so as to achieve the same patterns, in any geometries in which such tuned hue gradients can be generated.
- Sequences of polytonal color harmony as such, can be appropriate for RGB LED-covered casino exterior walls, and theme park and amusement park visuals, and for architectural adornment in cultural gatherings.
- the THCC rings each serve up one voice of a musical chord or progression in a given spoke.
- transitions on consecutive beat pulses between nearby pitches are described as having ‘smooth voice leading’ apparently because they are easy for the listener to follow.
- ‘smooth hue note voice leading’ is achieved when the location of the consecutive-pulse nearby-in-pitch intervals is on hue notes that are spatially proximate.
- This is one type of ‘temporal-to-spatiaf translation of aesthetics that we use in the present method. This type is essentially the translation of‘pitch transition smoothness' from the musical domain to the hue domain.
- the thiNC Interface provides a means to convey some features and methods of the present invention.
- each THCC ring is based on an octave-reduced music interval from the interval bottom that is being used in the computation.
- the interval construct could be a chord. This chord could be input with or without known duration.
- interval constructs were a known chord with a known chord root, then its interval bottom would be its chord root. If the interval construct were a music progression of known tonality, its interval bottom would be the music tonic. However, one could wish to input interval constructs that are chords of unknown roots; or musical progressions of unknown tonality. To allow for this, by default, until a chord root or tonal center is known, such incoming music intervals can be treated from an arbitrary music interval bottom (AMIB), for instance in terms of what are called ‘absolute cents' by the prior art. Using a default AMIB allows the widest, most flexible use of interval constructs in the system.
- AMIB arbitrary music interval bottom
- Music theory structural information on tonal center, scale, and chords can be determined by or provided to the system later.
- further structural information can be determined by, or provided to, the system later as well, either be for the purpose of permitting more analysis, or for permitting creative manipulations using music theory rules and procedures.
- This further structural information may include information about the rooting strength of the intervals making up chords and arpeggios (the relative stability of the intervals expressed by the pitches), and harmonic and melodic rules or weightings, etc.
- the THCC rings (each of the voices) will typically be defined from only one interval bottom.
- the AMIB is an improvement. Using the AMIB as a default provides a consistent interval bottom for all interval constructs, and provides a fallback position if the user changes their mind as to the tonic (or chord root); the data remains referenced to the original AMIB.
- To provide a convention for this disclosure we have selected for absolute cent zero the approximate frequency 8.199445678 hertz (represented as C-l, i.e. C "octave minus 1”). Again, this is merely a convention to allow multiple systems to communicate.
- the intervals in the monophonic music sequencer track, for each THCC ring, will be some octave-reduced central angle span from the AMIB to the interval. It may also be possible to denote this interval as the sum of an octave-reduced central angle span from the AMIB to a current tonic (if known), plus the octave-reduced central angle span from the tonic to the interval.
- this interval may also be possible to denote this interval as the octave-reduced central angle span from the AMIB to a current tonic (if known) plus the octave-reduced central angle span from the tonic to a current chord root (if known), plus the octave-reduced central angle span from the current chord root to the interval.
- the polytonal color sets that can be generated from feeding in musical chords and progressions in this way function as hue spoke-comprised palettes.
- Each hue spoke shows one possible example of the interval construct (if the interval construct is a chord, each spoke represents the chord from one particular potential hue root; if the interval construct is a progression, viewing the progression along one spoke only, [covering all but one spoke with a graphical cover] shows the progression from one particular potential hue tonic).
- the user can audition hue chords and progressions, and choose which hue chord root or hue tonic to use. And a user can create new color set relationships by auditioning music-theory- prescribed chord substitutions or variations for the progression on the hue spokes.
- Display of the polytonal color sets can be performed as color harmony effect of the present invention as well, such as on LED lights on a casino wall.
- an improvement of the GUI will be to provide a“cover” (preferably black) that can be turned on or off by the user (e.g. made visible or invisible as a vector graphic element) that completely covers all the rings except for in a single sliced-out section, that reveals a single hue spoke (or perhaps a small hue spoke range if the resolution of the thiNC is high enough).
- a“cover” preferably black
- the visible hue spoke revealed by the sliced-out section may be along a vertical radius (crossing the 6-o’clock or 12-o’clock position of the thiNC interface -with the sliced-out section being vertical).
- This stationary THCC ring can then be considered to represent a special melody color object array (in which the color objects making up the array are based on a form of temporal-to-spatial translation in which relative cent or semitone interval increments are translated into relative spatial position increments according to some viewer-recognizable defining geometry, for instance along a line formed of a series of color output device pixels (per the definition of pixel given below) for viewing hue notes.
- a special melody color object array in which the color objects making up the array are based on a form of temporal-to-spatial translation in which relative cent or semitone interval increments are translated into relative spatial position increments according to some viewer-recognizable defining geometry, for instance along a line formed of a series of color output device pixels (per the definition of pixel given below) for viewing hue notes.
- FIG. 15 illustrates the color science key color-to-complementary color pairing versus the present invention’s employment of the“slight arc” away from the color science complement, to achieve the hue P5 at -210° and the hue P4 at -180° from the‘key color’ (hue chord root or hue tonic) as the most significant hue intervals of the present invention. Why does this, along with other comparisons between music theory and color, even matter, since color is definitely not music? In the prior art of color harmony a key color and its complement can be swapped on the color wheel.
- diminished intervals are essential to Dominant chords, diminished chords and dim7 chords add interest, aid in harmonic movement and help enable modulation in literally countless jazz tunes, and min7b5 chords and min6 chords are key to allowing melodic and harmonic minor cadences and minor jazz sounds.
- Lydian-based melody lines that harmoniously emphasize the diminished interval have become popular in modem rock and fusion.
- numerous popular tunes and film soundtracks use progressions dependent on augmented chords, including Stairway to Heaven by Led Zeppelin, Baby Hold On!
- FIG. 16 shows some examples of LED Strip Lights.
- RGB LED strip lights are an example of a color output device.
- pixel For purposes of our description we will use the term“pixel” to refer to the embodiment, or the theoretical construct, of manipulation of relative power of a set of color-mixture components, such as Red, Green, and Blue (it will be intensity value variables of primary components possibly along with spot color components). For example herein therefore,
- pixel can describe an RGB LED color output device employing just a single iteration of this construct (the construct being the software variation of color mixture components) to achieve a single color from the perspective of a viewer. (Often in such cases, especially with respect to the present invention, a blending means such as a diffusion filter can be used to avoid a viewer seeing the individual color mixture components).
- a pixel can be a local bundle of LEDs of any configuration. But it also can be a group of such RGB LED light“pixels” that is simultaneously sent the same set of color mixture component values. In this case we call this group a“pixel unit” (since effectively the group only receives one color at a time, just like pixel on a computer display screen).
- the pixel group can be any size, consisting of any number of LEDs.
- a color output device may be comprised of n number of (independent) pixels and therefore serve as n number of color objects. Nonetheless pixels and pixel units are two of the more simple constructs that serve as color objects.
- a similar construct exists in the virtual sense, such as when an entire vector graphic object is of uniform color, and is known by its current set of pixel locations. This might be called a virtual pixel unit.
- a virtual color object can be more sophisticated than this, involving texturing effects.
- a color object“instrument” is a construct that can employ manipulation of real or apparent (virtual) spatial location of color objects. We will now give extremely simple cases so that the method is properly construed in its most general light.
- FIG. 17-22 we will now describe and illustrate examples of working with such track types, including tracks containing melody, bass, and chords (with their chord roots detected as described above.) (In some embodiments a plurality of hue notes for each musical chord would be utilized. For simplicity we do not do so here, simply using the bass note, or the chord root, or both, to harmonize with the melody. This allows us to convey the use of the invention for embodiments using simple RGB LED strip lights as the color output device/s.). In the case of our example each of these track types are shown as resulting in a sequence of hue intervals being displayed over time on an RGB LED strip light set.
- Each RGB LED strip light receives, as a set of RGB components, only a single color at a time (i.e. each serve as one-pixel unit according to our definition above). (Many strip lights allow the independent addressing of each RGB LED or bundle of same, but this is unnecessary here.)
- FIG. 17 is a diagram illustrating the various components used to“block out” the various color sets for the upcoming examples.
- FIG’s 18-22 vary as to the number of channels, from one channel to 3 channels.
- the music-interval-comprised data for a channel (as notes of certain durations, along with note rests) for these examples could be entered directly from a lead sheet as octave-reduced values from 0-11. In this process dynamics/velocity info is not mandatory.
- FIG. 18-22 represent sequences that can be produced on one or more RGB LED strip light color object/s, this would provide aesthetic appeal, attract attention and would be effective as storefront advertising, such as if placed around the outside window of a newly opened shop.
- the music-interval-comprised data used as input for FIGs 17-21 is from an 8-bar pop music chorus section from Don't Let The Sun Go Down On Me by Elton John and Bemie Taupin, (copyright held by Hal Leonard Corporation, permission sought for this reference).
- FIG. 18 illustrates blocking out only the melody as sent to one single 1 -pixel -unit strip light.
- FIG. 19 illustrates blocking out the melody and bass, as sent to two 1 -pixel-unit strip lights.
- FIG. 20 illustrates blocking out the melody and chord roots, as also sent to two 1- pixel-unit strip lights.
- the hue notes of melodic lines have an aesthetical flow in relation to their chord roots. This mimics what happens in musical progressions, comprised of melodic and harmonic elements. Most melodies have a“harmony” built into them as the result of the intervals comprising them. There is a sustained influence of intervals over time, whether the intervals themselves are sustained or not. Hence a musical composer can interplay the“color notes” against the chord tones, and the chord tones against the chord root. And there can be anticipation and delayed resolution. The observation that hue notes share this effect is fundamental to the usefulness of the invention.
- FIG. 21 illustrates blocking out the melody, bass and chord roots, as sent to three 1 -pixel -unit strip lights.
- FIG. 22 illustrates blocking out melody, bass and chord roots as above, and shows the numbering of the hue intervals according to the 12-Res THCC. (We left out numbering on the previous figure so the color in that illustration would represent more simply and clearly the intended hue note sequence.) Hue Tonality Of Iv-V-I
- An interval construct may already have a known music tonic, or not. And this interval construct will often be auditioned, by transposition, into a variety of hue keys (with different hue tonics) until the most suitable one is found. So it makes sense to store intervals such that music tonics can be adjusted to best depict the proper Westem-music-theory- determined tonality of the construct itself, and ALSO according to the chosen suitable hue transposition that arrives at the most desired color set, relative to the determined music tonic (this is what we call herein the hue tonic).
- the hue tonic is usually chosen with regard to aesthetic effect. Or it may be set to a desired key color in a logo or stage backdrop.
- hue tonics are also occasionally made to arrive at desired particular hues (or their shades and tints).
- experimentation to arrive at these desirable conditions includes a combination of transposition, chord substitution and reharmonization, until the most desirable color set is achieved. Note that while in Western music quite a good percentage of cases are fairly explicit, there may sometimes be ambiguous conditions with respect to what the current tonal center is. And less than absolute tonal situations will affect user decision-making. For instance a real or perceived momentary change in tonality may be a good time to introduce a hue key change. The improvements in FIG. 22 will be extrapolated below.
- FIG. 23 illustrates hue tonality using 6 example hue tonics using the progression IV-V-I over a pedal of the tonic, each showing a set of 6 of the 24 total hue tonics.
- the hue tonics equidistantly progress through the THCC, in essence dividing it into 12 positions.
- the color of (1) the box of thickened lines around the progression (acting as a pedal tone) is defined by the interval of the tonic.
- the other rectangles are defined in hue according to their associated music intervals.
- FIG. 24 illustrates the perhaps coincidental correspondence between the Color
- FIG. 25 shows ratios discovered during research into the invention, corresponding with the opponent channels said to be involved in the human visual system. It is not known whether these ratios are in some way involved or meaningful with regard to the present invention. Color harmony, to the present invention, may be considered to involve a visible- spectrum-like hue gradient. These ratios of the opponent mechanism were noticed to
- FIG. 32 is based on a graph appearing in the book Computer Generated Color, by Richard Jackson, showing opponent channel signals by way of electrode recordings from opponent ganglion cells.
- the book did not indicate a specific source for its graph (human physiology, primate physiology) so unfortunately, we do not have sufficient information to fully speculate but we include this information for completeness.
- FIG. 26 illustrates the use of the Chromatic Circle as the base of a 3D Interval Helix GUI of the present invention.
- FIG. 27 illustrates the interval helix.
- the interval helix of the present invention is a 3D helix structure associated especially with music intervals, in which increase in vertical height is associated with decrease in musical wavelength & increase in musical frequency.
- Relationships between music intervals and correlated hue intervals may be represented as positions in 3D on the interval helix.
- the interval helix is a useful visualization means because it simultaneously represents octave-reduced and non-octave-reduced intervals.
- AMIB arbitrary music interval bottom
- a music tonic and a hue tonic can both exist for the interval data.
- the m2h index is configured to look up hue intervals that have functional correspondence with the received music intervals being looked up. Octave-reduction is typically performed on the music intervals in the system prior to routing them to the m2h index, to put them into a form consistent with the one-hue-octave dimension of the THCC tuned hue gradient.
- the received music intervals are put into a form comprised of both the octave-reduced and non-octave-reduced values, from the AMIB.
- This convention is equivalent to MIDI music sequencers that reference MIDI Note Numbers by the pitch name and a number indicating the octave of the pitch.
- Non-octave-reduced intervals are important in the present invention.
- FIG. 28 illustrates a GUI form (comprising a Tuned Music Interval Helix and Tuned Hue Interval Cylinder) that enables visualization of the universe of music and hue construct relationships, including transposition of their tonics and viewing the non-octave- reduced music interval voicings that input when voicing hue notes on color object arrays.
- the two circles of the musical Chromatic Circle and the THCC have been extruded upward in relation to the multiple octaves of music, forming a Tuned Music Interval Helix (TMIH) and a Tuned Hue Interval Cylinder (THIC).
- TMIH Tuned Music Interval Helix
- THIC Tuned Hue Interval Cylinder
- Head on the TMIH may be used to determine other variables besides hue if desired, including size of color objects, brightness, lightness, Chroma, texturing (e.g. reflectivity or opacity) and so on.
- No specific rotational orientation (around the vertical z-axis) between the TMIH and THIC is mandatory. Any orientation will work because it is the tuned hue gradient that is fundamental.
- FIG. 35, 410 illustrates the“music tonic arrow”.
- the music key arrow will be used as part of an explanation for more preferred Offset methods of the present invention.
- the m2h index lookup method doesn’t incorporate an Offset Variable, this alignment is an embodiment choice (fixed, non-adjustable to users). But music & hue intervals can both be musically transposed in the present method so normally at least basic offset capability is provided using an m2hOffVar. This permits auto & user-selection of different alignments, with values stored in sequences (written to memory or storage media). More optimally an embodiment will use 2 separate indices (a first for lookup of music intervals & a second for look-up of hue intervals) whose orientation may be incrementally offset, so the hue index may be re-calibrated in case of hardware fluctuations. It is yet more preferred to offer one Offset Variable to set a Music Tonic, & a separate 2nd Offset Variable to set a Hue Tonic. This will be elucidated below.
- a fixed, arbitrary orientation is chosen during embodiment design so that an arbitrary musical note is aligned with a functionally corresponding hue; this system has no capability for offset; it is non-adjustable to users.
- Violet is selected by the embodiment designer to be in fixed alignment with the music tonic of the source music data (as this alignment is likely to function well). This relationship is fixed and non-adjustable.
- the music interval span (the span‘up’ from the ‘arbitrary music interval bottom’ aka AMIB) is obtained it is octave-reduced (per the existing Res) to be within 1 octave up from the AMIB (for an example see FIG. 33), and then the single m2h Offset Variable is retrieved; it controls the amount of Offset to be added during look up of the thiv.
- This allows the creation of a new m2h alignment for responding to music tonics or selecting new hue tonics). This is basically no different than offsetting the rotation of the THCC from the musical Chromatic Circle (as a visual analogy).
- Offset functions, per octave-reduction become wrap around functions, or modulus functions of the existing Res. For instance in terms of angle they would be mod -360° functions (divisions smaller than a degree are possible of course).
- members of a subset of m2hcmb’s (which are equidistant to one another) that contain the thiv’s are made into specialty points called interpolation basis points (IBP’s).
- IBP interpolation basis points
- AMIB constant‘arbitrary music interval bottom’
- a convention for the AMIB is chosen of C-l, & MIDI Note
- AMIB AMIB that is especially suitable to MIDI input but may also be used with respect to audio input.
- the Pitch C is chosen as a preferred default music tonic because music in the key of C is common, and this music key has no sharps or flats, and as such it is more often simplest to work with.
- the Hue Violet is used as the default hue tonic.
- offsetting so as to compensate for a change in music tonic away from the default music tonic is made possible by a new Offset Var called the Music Tonic Offset (MTO), and offsetting so as to compensate for hue tonic a change in music tonic away from the default hue tonic is made possible by a second new Offset Var called the Hue Tonic Offset (HTO). While one could arrive at the same alignment with m2hOffVar, it is useful to have these two distinct functions because they apply differently, and should be able to be controlled separately, as well as stored separately in memory, in files & on media.
- MTO Music Tonic Offset
- HTO Hue Tonic Offset
- the MTO and HTO are utilized with a simple '2-step operation' (without dividing the m2h index bins (which have m2hcmb’s directly associated with thiv’s) into a set of two indices known as Prime Pitch Interval index (PPI) bins (compare m2hcmb’s) and Prime Hue Interval index (PHI) bins (compare thiv’s) as in the next
- PPI Prime Pitch Interval index
- PHI Prime Hue Interval index
- the music intervals and hue intervals are provided in the same m2h index (but necessarily there cannot be an independent resolution for music and hue).
- the system is instructed to find a music pitch interval, add the current MTO, then add the current HTO, and finally locate the m2hcmb# to find the tuned-hue-variable-value.
- the drawback is that an unnecessary high m2h index resolution is required; and it must be repeatedly used if musical pitch bend and vibrato and portamento functions are to be accurately tracked.
- the m2h index is split into the PPI bins and PHI bins. [000190] 10) (PPI bins and PHI bins referred to in this paragraph and in this present document are independent cent measurement bins for absolute music cents and absolute hue cents respectively, to treat them separately, rather than having an equal number of m2hcmb’s and thiv’s).
- the m2h index comprises 2 indices (or tables within it), comprising the music interval span‘index points’ (acting as an absolute-cent music interval map) and the hue interval span‘index points’ (acting as an absolute-cent hue interval map).
- the one-table m2h index was simply comprised of m2hcmb’s, containing the thiv’s. In this 2-table embodiment these are now called Prime Hue Interval bins (PHI bins). Among the PHI bins can be the subset of the Interpolation Basis Points (IBPs). Both are shown in FIG. 29. Meanwhile the music interval map is formed of music interval span index points, with values stored in what we will call Prime Pitch Interval bins (PPI bins). Notably in this embodiment the music Res need not be the same as, and is no longer necessarily tied to, the hue Res.
- the m2h Offset Variable which is MTO + HTO still shifts the orientation (similar to musical
- FIG. 29 which illustrates m2h-cent-measurement-bins (m2hcmb’s) and interpolation basis points (IBP’s). Shown in FIG. 29 are a 5-cent-per-bin resolution of m2hcmb’s, for storing one“hue octave” of thiv's (i.e. 240 bins, each corresponding to a span in music of 5 cents, in 12-ET. A span of 20 bins corresponds to the music interval span of one-half step, aka one semitone). Also shown are 48 Interpolation Basis Points (IBP’s) at every 5th m2hcmb, shown as short colored cylinders. If implemented, IBP’s can act as“Master
- the configuration of a m2h index is done by mathematically defining the bin frequency threshold demarcations using the AMIB frequency as the lower threshold of the first m2hcmb. From this one calculates n number of top threshold demarcations as the nth root of 2. For example if 240-Res is desired (a resolution of every 5 cents, i.e.
- 240 m2hcmb’s per hue octave then one multiplies the frequency of the arbitrary music interval bottom by the 240th root of 2 (which is approximately 1.00289228786937) to find and store the top of the first m2hcmb, and then multiplies the result (which also acts as the bottom of the 2nd m2hcmb) by the 240th root of 2, to find and store the top of the second m2hcmb, and continues until one has found and stored the top and bottom values of all 240 m2hcmb’s. Thiv’s are then associated with the m2hcmb's to form the m2h index.
- FIG. 30 illustrates an example of m2hcmb's. The figure includes their dominant wavelength values (if they are within the DWW).
- the m2h index is created in a resolution of 240 m2hcmb's, as shown in Figure 29 and Figure 30, with the hue tuning as according to the visible-spectrum-like- hue-gradient shown in FIG. 4, and in arbitrary alignment with incoming music intervals from the arbitrary music interval bottom (AMIB) of 8.199445678 hertz (C-l, i.e. C "octave minus 1").
- the frequency of 8.199445678 hertz [C-l] will retrieve or determine a hue of violet, the frequency that is a multiple of 1.05946(That from that; i.e.
- MIDI Note# C-l will retrieve or determine a hue of indigo; D-l will retrieve or determine a medium wavelength blue, and so on, and since every octave will be reduced down into this octave that ranges from C-l up to just under CO, since CO for these purposes will be considered the next octave up.
- the column with the header marked "m2hcmb #’s" contains a list of m2h cent measurement bin numbers. In each row, a frequency bottom is indicated in the column to the immediate right of the cell containing the bin #. Incoming music intervals are sorted into a particular bin when they are on or above the frequency bottom to the immediate right of that cell, but below the frequency bottom listed in the next row down.
- a frequency is detected in a set of incoming music-interval- comprised data events; that frequency is octave-reduced to a real number; and then a sort is performed to locate the m2hcmb# containing the span within which that real number is be found.
- the located m2hcmb# is the one that contains the thiv approximate for the interval being measured.
- m2hcmb's are shown with a lowest bin minimum amount (aka bottom) of 8.1757898 hertz, implying a lowest bin maximum amount of just under 8.199445679 hertz.
- the bins have been shown this way for simplicity, though in practice m2hcmb ranges are better configured with the targeted frequency being the center frequency of the bin (approximately 2.5 cents above its bottom in this case), rather than with their minimum relative to that target frequency. For instance, in FIG.
- toneality means that a particular pitch will“sound like home”, i.e. it will be the resolution of the other pitches forming the music intervals in the music-interval-comprised data.
- tonic is related to the term key, so a music tonic has its related music key, and a hue tonic has its related hue key.
- key signature is not the same, because a key signature is shared by all of the modes it contains. For instance C Major has the same key signature as A minor, but the pitch‘C’ is the music tonic of the former, while the pitch‘A’ is the music tonic of the latter.
- the m2hOffVar could be controlled in real time directly by the user.
- an m2hOffV ar could be controlled by placing m2hOffVar“change events” at multiple locations in a sequence.
- MTO and HTO may be controlled in real time directly by the user.
- MTO and HTO change events are placed in sequence locations to create desired changes.
- the purpose of assigning a music tonic to files is to allow for control based on the harmonic relationships comprised in the music-pitch-interval data, which in the most common music is easily determinable using music theory algorithms.
- hue intervals are much more defined by their particular colors (that greatly effect mood and energy) along with their color context (which is akin to, but even more essential to aesthetical decision-making than, a singer transposing a piece to fit within their range or purpose). Because each distinct hue has such unique physiological and psychological impact, selecting the hue tonic is unique and significant as a process. So choosing the hue tonic may be thought of as a primary function, and it may at times be the first function performed.
- the choice of a hue tonic is made possible by providing, for a user to view, a set of palettes in potential hue keys from which to make a momentary or permanent hue tonic selection.
- hue tonics are those that they derive strength from specific music-interval-comprised data that by its nature has a particular“home” position. So to create a “hue tonic” means, with respect to the specific music-interval-comprised data being operated on, to locate a particular hue to be in alignment with that“home” position within a particular set of music interval data. (And in that alignment other hues will serve important functions, such as when comprising a Dom7 type hue chord.) So, as was noted above, in one embodiment the music-interval-comprised data, or sections thereof, can be marked with pre-determined music tonic change events.
- angles causing their alignment are summed together to find the position in the m2h index from which the interval of an incoming musical pitch will be measured. The measurement of this interval will determine the thiv used to color the hue note, and this sum equals the m2hOffVar relative to the default music tonic of the Pitch C (which in non-octave-reduced form is the AMIB. Note that from this position in the preferred embodiment we form an absolute cents index of PPI bins based upon it. In the most preferred system embodiment we will utilize both the octave-reduced and non octave-reduced values based on absolute cents from the AMIB.
- the AMIB is also default- aligned with the default hue tonic of Violet, which can act as 'hue cent zero' upon which an absolute-cents-based index of PHI bins may be formed). While changing the music tonic by its nature affects the hue output, doing so must leave unchanged the system’s internally defined current HTO (which corresponds with the current hue tonic). And also while changing the hue tonic affects the alignment with musical pitch, doing so must not change the system’s internally defined current MTO (which corresponds with the current music tonic).
- An m2h index may comprise PPI and PHI bins (independent bins for music intervals and hue intervals). Although shown as a single table, PPI and PHI may be in separate but connected tables. On receipt of an incoming music interval, the MTO and HTO values are summed and the sum is octave-reduced, giving the number of PHI rows to move down from the row position of receipt in PPI. (PPI and PHI are m2hcmb’s for measurement of music cents and hue cents respectively).
- FIG. 35 3 items are shown, each of which share a common center.
- the TMIH in black, represents the non-octave-reduced musical pitch values and their potential hue voicing aspect, with the AMIB at the very bottom, at C-l (8.199445678 hertz).
- the sliced up green pie underneath the TMIH represents the music tonal/key space, which one can think of as being virtually rotatable around the vertical z-axis using the 410 music tonic arrow.
- the THIC is represented in the drawing by way of showing a top cylinder THCC and a bottom cylinder THCC connected by a pair of lines representing the surface of the cylinder.
- hue tonic handle in black, with which to vertically rotate the THIC around the vertical z-axis as well.
- 425 nm Violet at the hue tonic handle, would line up with the Tonal Center, indicated by the green music tonic arrow, which would be in alignment with the Pitch“C”.
- FIG. 28 the -0° position (which in FIG. 26 is at 6-o’clock) is shown slightly off to the right, to add perspective, a ploy that was also used in FIG. 27, that simply allowed the Note values of the TMIH to be easier to represent.
- FIG. 30 and FIG. 31, without any offsets applied convey this state, where an incoming Pitch C (interval of unison from AMIB) will produce an output of a hue of Violet with a dominant wavelength of 425nm, and an incoming pitch of C# (interval of minor second) will produce an output of a hue of indigo with a dominant wavelength of 446.7nm, etc.
- an incoming Pitch C interval of unison from AMIB
- an incoming pitch of C# internalval of minor second
- the hue tonic handle is at default position (-0°) and we move it 30° this means that the pitch C will now produce a hue of indigo with a dominant wavelength of 446.7nm, C# will produce a hue of medium blue with a dominant wavelength of 468.4nm etc. (E.g. there is a shift of -30° around the THCC in the alignment between all incoming pitches and all hues. We can consider it HTO -30°) Conversely if the music tonic arrow is at its default position (-0°) we move it 30° (to the pitch B), and this means that the THIC moves 30° as well; because the purpose of changing the music tonic is to cause the new music tonic to align with the existing hue tonic.
- the interval of the incoming pitch above the AMIB is what is being measured, so of course it is what the m2hOffVar, or MTO and HTO are added to find the Hue Angle and derive the thiv (and thus the hue).
- MTO and HTO are added to find the Hue Angle and derive the thiv (and thus the hue).
- a default hue tonic of Violet a default music tonic of the Pitch C, and with the Pitch C (C-l) as the AMIB.
- Step 1 of an algorithm for finding the thiv below is to maintain a current m2hOffVar. (This is described in terms of angle because it is simplest manner for us to describe it. Since there will only be negative angles in the algorithm described below (which is simply based on our Western conventions), these negative angles may of course first all be converted to positive angles to make the below procedure even more simple.)
- Step 1 is performed upon a change in either the current MTO or the current HTO. This step consists of adding together the values for the MTO and HTO; then subtracting -360 from the sum repeatedly until it is greater than -360 (e.g. in a very high resolution this could be -359.99); the result will be the current m2hOffVar.
- Step 2 is performed during receipt of music-interval-comprised data, to octave-reduce the pitches in each incoming current pitch set; then for each pitch add the current value of the m2hOffV ar, then subtract -360 from this sum until it is greater than -360; this provides a hue angle representing a cent value for that pitch.
- This is done for each of the current incoming pitches in the incoming current pitch set to maintain the current color of each hue note while the pitches sustain.
- Different incoming pitch types require different algorithms for tracking the incoming pitches, detecting when they stop sustaining, tracking vibrato or pitch bend that is occurring for that particular pitch, etc. This is done in accordance with the prior art.
- m2hOffVar is available as a function along with the functions of MTO and HTO.
- changing the m2hOffVar on a pitch-to-hue basis may be done, in case the user forgets or doesn’t understand what music tonic and hue tonic is in the system at the time.
- a user is provided with a hue selection interface; Then, if the user has been playing the Pitch F and seeing Greenish-Yellow, but wants to see a different and somewhat remote hue when playing that pitch - such as Purple-Indigo.
- the user can store the Pitch F (the pitch to which the user wishes to create the new m2h association), and then touch the position of that desired hue Purple-Indigo hue on that hue selection interface, so that the system will compute the difference between the hue currently corresponding with F, and the desired Purple-Indigo hue.
- the computed difference will be added to the HTO, and the MTO will remain the same, and the new HTO and MTO will be added together to obtain the new m2hOffV ar.
- FIG. 31 illustrates an exemplary default table with PPI bins and PHI bins (both of which may have their intervals independently offset from the other as a control method by the system or user via the independent interval offset variables of the MTO and HTO).
- FIG. 32 is an exemplary demonstration (in angle form) of the looking up of a music interval in the PPI, then adding the MTO & HTO to the negative central angle to derive the final thiv in the PHI; 700 indicates that this figure also illustrates the use of dual tonic offsets in the look up of a music interval in the m2h index; 703 indicates that the PHI bin immediately to the left of 6 o’clock position equals the thiv of the default hue tonic (Violet 425nm).
- 705 shows a music interval (an octave-reduced 12-ET P5 above the arbitrary music interval bottom) being fed into the m2h index by the music interval feeding process; 710 shows a PPI containing 240 PPI bins; 715 illustrates use of the PPI to locate the position (within the resolution of PPI) for the received octave-reduced 12-ET P5; 720 shows the -210° span/negative central angle resulting from the received music interval of an octave-reduced 12-ET Perfect Fifth (P5) (This will depend on the resolution and the nature of the audio or music protocol file.) 723 represents the current music tonic, The Pitch Class of“B”, .2 semitones flat (such as for an inexactly tuned band, as is common previous decades); 725 shows a -36° MTO being added to said initial span / negative central angle; 730 shows the
- the total offset is always available, not just to the system, but also to the user, along with the two Offset variable values.
- 740 illustrates the span / negative central angle resulting from a Hue Tonic Offset (HTO) Variable Value of -24°
- 745 shows that the final span / negative central angle being looked up (sum of -24°, -36° and -210°) finds a thiv in PHI (-270°)
- 750 illustrates a Prime Hue Interval index (aka PHI) containing 240 PHI bins.
- HTO Hue Tonic Offset
- FIG. 33 is an exemplary illustration of using octave-reduction.
- FIG. 34 is an exemplary illustration of using pitch bend and other pitch modifiers, as is useful when using music protocol data.
- FIG. 35 shows an advanced flow of the present invention.
- Music-Event- Data is fed into the system in channels and tracks.
- these are time-stamped and parsed, per input sources such as per channel and per track, into classes, types, and subtypes. Any music intervals found in the Music-Event-Data are parsed as relative to the AMIB, and then octave reduced, and the octave value appended (which equals 1+ the number of times the Current Frequency in FIG. 33 must be divided by 2 to yield a value that is less than 2*).
- octave range in this example we are using 240 bins representing 5 musical cents each, and we are appending a value indicating the total number of octaves that this music-pitch-interval contains, for future use (equivalent to designation of a MIDI Note # as pitch + octave (e.g. C2, G5, F#7, etc.). Both octave-reduced and non-octave-reduced intervals from the arbitrary music interval bottom are useful, so it is ideal to store interval data in a format from which both octave-reduced and non-octave-reduced intervals are immediately obtainable.
- the octave-reduced value is located in PPI; in 580 the MTO is obtained from 590, in 600 the HTO is obtained from 610; and in 620 the PPI interval, MTO and HTO are all summed, yielding the thiv/s.
- MTO and HTO are all summed, yielding the thiv/s.
- optionally hue notes are assigned onto color object arrays per any automatically determined classes, types, & sub-types; which automatically assign/re-assign
- the system may use user determined array assignment, per channels/tracks/layers, & map hue notes onto color objects on color object arrays using the chosen methods of mapping, as per channel/track/layer mapping methods (as saved in channel/track/layer mapping indexes, shown in 650, 660, and 670).
- Color object arrays are made up of some polyphony of array elements.
- a helpful method of determining distribution of the hue notes of musical chords and melodies into such array elements is to use triggering methods. These can be used in real time, as is the case of“trigger mode” within Spectrasonics’ Omnisphere.
- Ableton Live refers to a related method that we will call‘clip launching’ . In the case of 'trigger mode' in Omnisphere, this is used in real time and affects notes being played into the MIDI stream. It depends on the internal clock pulse (MTC in this case), which continuously defines tempo and temporal beat locations.
- To use‘trigger mode’ a user sets a‘triggering pulse’, such as 8th note, quarter note, or bar. Say that a user selects a selected pulse, such as one 8th note. Between pulses the notes are“bucketed”; they are then sounded when the‘triggering pulse' (for e.g. 8th note) is reached (thus the next 8th note becomes the 'activating pulse'). This allows non-musicians and keyboard players to more easily create music, by freeing them from the concern of being“off the beat”. This use of Omnisphere trigger mode also permits the present invention to wait and‘finalize’ the distribution of the hue notes of hue chords on the ‘activating pulse’.
- a‘triggering pulse’ such as 8th note, quarter note, or bar.
- The‘triggering pulse’ for either 'trigger mode' or 'clip launching' could be anything useful, including 16th, 8th, quarter note, half note, and whole notes, etc. In the case of 'clip launching’ the‘triggering pulse’ could also be, two- whole notes, four whole notes, 8 whole notes etc.
- Clip launching is a bit like launching “Lighting Chase Sequences” that subsequently follow MTC (which can be adjusted in real time by knob or by performing repetitive hits on a MIDI instrument); but when combined with the method known in Omnisphere as 'trigger mode', it will permit emotive performances by lighting performers whose rhythmic capabilities are limited.
- The‘activating pulse’ provides a good rhythmic time when the ordering of chord notes according to pitch height can occur (benefiting from good voice leading of existing music compositions is aided by maintaining significant correspondence between pitch height of the compositions and‘hue note display location’ on the color objects). The selection of shorter‘triggering pulse’ settings can be made as the performer’s rhythmic precision becomes greater.
- the “bucketed” hue notes are‘finalized 1 into pitch order up to the polyphony of available array elements of a chosen array (pitches exceeding the polyphony of available array elements may simply be‘overflowed’), the number of remaining pitches is divided by the number of available array elements. If there is a remainder percentage this is divided in half and approximately this portion of color objects is used as a buffer at the front and end of the color object array. In this very rough method the hue notes are kept in pitch order and are distributed into successive array positions roughly in the middle of the series of array elements. This does avoid the case of hue chords‘seeming to clump' on one side or the other of the color object array.
- a more sophisticated,‘proportion-based' method of distributing bucketed notes is used, of 1) obtaining bucketed notes within the pre-established pitch range and polyphony limit, and 2) determining the proportional pitch height within that pre-established pitch range for every pitch in the bucket. Then, when the next occurrence of the selected pulse occurs the hue notes are distributed on the color object array so as to approximate that music pitch proportionality (rounding up or down to whole numbers [whole numbers represent the array elements] as necessary).
- the intent of this method is to more closely approximate the music’s voice leading. (Voice leading in this particular context does not actually refer to“voices” as separated by channel or track. Rather it refers to apparent voices.
- a visual correspondence to this“apparent voice leading” is achieved by distributing hue notes in a similar proportionality to their distribution vertically on a music staff (very compact forms of this method can be used in which only a hint of the proportionality still exists, but it is nonetheless often helpful for the visual correspondence.)
- the prior art s method of “latching” notes is used to latch hue notes (as in Omnisphere "latch mode").
- FIG. 36 illustrates the configuration and use of an exemplary system.
- step 810 are defined the functional correspondences between music and hue intervals (typically with hues based on the incoming octave-reduced intervals).
- step 820 is defined the correspondences between input sources and color object arrays, which will typically define a filtering of the incoming non-octave-reduced intervals (as per track, channel, pitch filter, etc.), thus defining what will be received by the separate color object arrays (aka“visual voicing arrays”.
- step 830 is determined the temporal- spatial-voicing mapping, meaning the mapping of the incoming non-octave-reduced intervals within their“visual voice arrays" (as determined from step 820), e.g.
- step 840 is defined the visual-harmony performance mapping, which can call up preset variations of steps 810, 810, and 810.
- step 840 can involve modulating the position and rate of flow of the virtually modifiable color objects (e.g. onscreen) and virtually modifiable color object arrays (e.g. onscreen). For use of the exemplary system, in 850 music- interval-comprised-data is obtained.
- music intervals are obtained from said music- interval-comprised data, and hue intervals are obtained from them.
- the system obtains 'hue note part’ (i.e. chord, solo, bass, etc.) mappings to arrays, and based on non-octave-reduced interval relationships (depending on mapping methods being employed on that array) obtains the hue note mapping within each array.
- 'hue note part i.e. chord, solo, bass, etc.
- non-octave-reduced interval relationships depending on mapping methods being employed on that array
- step 880 visual output is generated.
- FIG. 37 illustrates‘bass emphasis’ on the thiNC Interface.
- the resolution of the concentric THCC’s is reduced to 24 to allow greater increase in hue note size from the inner to the outer THCC rings, which in the present invention can correlate with greater difference of pitch between the available THCC“voices”.
- FIG. 38 shows examples of miscellaneous random color objects in random positions.
- FIG. 39 illustrates color objects along a path.
- FIG. 40 illustrates basic use of dimensions, by the method, to portray time and pitch in fixed (non-animated) images.
- FIG. 41 illustrates‘sheet music voicing’, with hue notes shown along a path in a fixed (non-animated) image.
- the dimension of time flows from left to right, along each grand staff, while the dimension of pitch is vertical (in repeating swaths in a range from below to above each successive grand staff).
- FIG. 42 illustrates that time and pitch dimensions, as were exemplified in FIG. 47, may be modified in viewer-predictable manners without removing the effect of musical correspondence.
- FIG. 43 provides an exemplary illustration of network use.
- the client pc processor 900 is connected by bus to the client pc Read Only Memory (ROM) 905; 910 shows the client pc RAM; a hard drive 915 and a DVD ROM 920 are connected to the client pc i/o adapter 925;
- the client pc network adapter 930 is connected to the server machine 1020, via a LAN 935; a number of additional clients are shown at 1025, individually shown at 1030, 1035, 1040, 1045, 1050 and 1055.
- a standard set of mouse/pc/USB adapters 940 connect a mouse 945 and pc keyboard 950; at 955 is shown a color output device adapter (#1) (being the pc display adapter). From the pc display adapter 955 a display adapter cable 960 connects a display device 965.
- a color output device adapter (#2) 970 being a DMX adapter, is shown connected by a DMX cable to a bank of DMX-controlled RGB LED lights 980, comprised of 3 color object array paths (arbitrarily colored purple, green, and blue here).
- the speaker output of an audio interface 985 connects to a speaker 990 via a speaker output cable, while an electric guitar 995 and microphone 1000 connect to the input of the audio interface 985 to provide data for pitch detection by a pitch detection processor software module;
- a MIDI keyboard 1010 is
- MIDI interface 1015 to provide music protocol data (in the form of MIDI).
- the USB adapter at 940 can also receive OSC (open sound control) data, and some MIDI instruments provide MIDI-via-USB drivers that allow for MIDI interfacing via the USB adapter at 940 as well.
- OSC open sound control
- MIDI instruments provide MIDI-via-USB drivers that allow for MIDI interfacing via the USB adapter at 940 as well.
- An example of use of the method over a network is the case of an interactive multiplayer online game in which control is obtained, via game play, over virtual club audio, Veejay fx, and lighting, such as for a set of virtual club rooms, via designated user MIDI keyboard, guitar and microphone input, using music interval constructs licensed to the game for modification of generated audio as well as visuals.
- smooth hue note voice leading is achieved when the location of the consecutive-pulse-&-nearby-in-pitch intervals is on hue notes that are in similar relative ‘spatial distance’ positions to their loosely-approximate relative‘interval distance' (or, less often, ‘pitch distance’) positions.
- approximate translation is made from the proximity between the music intervals obtained by the music-interval-comprised- data receiving device and the proximity of color objects as distributed in the color object array.
- FIG. 44 illustrates the method of mapping‘melodic interval proximity’ in music to color object‘spatial proximity along a path’.
- relatively lower pitches generate relatively larger color objects.
- FIG. 45 illustrates mapping music‘pitch height’ (measured from AMIB or another chosen pitch height origin) to spatial size.
- spatial size of the hue notes is influenced by the attribute of pitch height of the received music intervals.
- the color objects can be sprites whose size is generated, or arrays of lights whose size is pre-existing.
- the color object size can be adjusted for a particular hue note based upon its source music note pitch height.
- the determination of which color object the hue note is displayed upon is what is influenced.
- FIG. 46 illustrates hue note mapping to existing color objects relative to their size property.
- spatial extant of pre-existing color objects is used to determine which hue note is displayed on them, with hue notes from music notes of higher pitch height being determined to display on color objects of smaller spatial extant, and vice versa.
- FIG. 47 illustrates mapping from musical chord tone member pitch hierarchy position to spatial position along a path.
- spatial position along a path of a color object array is determined by musical chord tone member pitch hierarchy position.
- other algorithms can be chosen from to determine which portion of the color object path the hue notes are mapped to - for e.g. hue notes could be aligned to one end of the path, centered, or distributed with spacing.
- hue note sequence follows to music note sequence - which captures the voice leading, and aids in pleasing predictability if visualizing the source music intervals as audible music.
- FIG. 48 illustrates the mapping procedure for music chord tones, wherein two- octave-reduced chord tone height above the chord root is mapped to spatial position along a path.
- 2-octave-reduction uses stacked thirds chord theory in which the ninth, eleventh, and thirteenth are mapped to the second octave, etc., regardless of the existing chord inversion or voicing).
- This is in essence as a method for converting the output from the mapping procedure shown in FIG. 47 into a root position visual voicing - which can be used to strengthen the harmonic pull, such as for emphasis, at appropriate times in a hue sequence.
- an inversion of a musical chord is reduced into 2- octave format, and the sequence of chord tones of this format, from low to high, are mapped to spatial position along a path in a color object array.
- E4, C5, G5, D6 (An inversion of a C Major add 9 chord) is 2-octave-reduced and becomes C, E, G, D (C, E, and G are in the first octave of the 2-octave-reduced chord, and D [the ninth of the chord] is in the 2nd octave). Therefore the hue notes for the series C, E, G, D are mapped (often in unbroken series, but occasionally so as to follow some weighting algorithm that best maintains the music note’s voice leading) to color objects along a path in a color object array.
- FIG. 49 illustrates the mapping of the music note event’s relative musical rhythmic interval position (and thus proximity in time or beat) to relative spatial position along a path, or to proximity (relative closeness) to other hue notes along a path (e.g. as quantized per milliseconds; or e.g. as quantized per the current estimated tempo, such as per triplet 64ths of the current estimated tempo). Positions and proximities can be recyclable, such as by detecting repeating accents, using a circular path, etc.
- the music note event’s relative musical rhythmic interval position is mapped to relative spatial position along a path.
- the music note event's rhythmic closeness determines the hue note’s spatial closeness.
- FIGs. 50-54 comprise 240-Res thiNC interface examples of a variety of hue chords of different chord categories such as major (FIG. 50); minor (FIG. 51); major 7 th (FIG. 52); dominant 9 th (FIG.53); and a dominant 7 th with a tuned 3 rd and barbershop 7 th (FIG.54). altered dominant, and fourths chords, along with a few examples of chords with hue intervals tuned in more purity than exists in 12-ET, including‘barbershop chord' hue chord examples.
- the system is a color-in color-out system.
- FIG. 55 shows an exemplary color-in color-out system, which is comparable to FIG. 1 except that the input is a hue-interval-comprised-data receiving device, which can be a digital camera or colorimetry device (such as a spectrophotometer or colorimeter), with this device's output analyzed relative to PHF
- the data is processed into histogram data that represent hue peaks in PHI, and their intensity (and if desired along with perceived purity based on an appropriate representative viewer position). Then this combination of peaks and intensity (and if desired also purity) may be interpreted as if it were music interval and amplitude (and if desired also purity) information.
- the m2h index may be thought of in reverse, with hue being the input and musical intervals being the output.
- the color output device can output the color intervals in text via screen or printer, or in light by way of a lighting device or display screen, or in pigment, by way of a printer, etc.
- certain yellow and green tones can be disadvantageous as skin tones in personal appearance. And wearing these in makeup or clothing, or wearing certain other hue intervals (particularly a P5 away but also a hue Major or hue minor 3rd away) may emphasize these to others that see this person, making this person appear pale.
- the software can warn a person not to wear a specific blue hue interval that is a P5 from those yellow or yellow-green tones one wishes to avoid, and instead suggest wearing another blue hue interval that instead theoretically may “bring out” (e.g. by being itself a P5 away from them) other hues in the skin tone that suggest health (e.g. warmer or more ruddy hues).
- the system is a color-in music-out system.
- FIG. 56 shows an exemplary color-in music-out system, which is comparable to FIG. 1 except that the input is a hue-interval-comprised-data receiving device, which can be a digital camera or colorimetry device (such as a spectrophotometer or colorimeter), with this device’s output analyzed relative to PHI.
- the data is processed into histogram data that represent hue peaks in PHI, and their intensity (and if desired along with perceived purity based on an appropriate representative viewer position). Then this combination of peaks and intensity (and if desired also purity) may be interpreted as if it were music interval and amplitude (and if desired also purity) information.
- the m2h index may be thought of in reverse, with hue being the input and musical intervals being the output.
- the music output device can output the resulting music intervals in text or music notation via screen or printer, or in audio by way of a series of music reproduction device (using music protocol, e.g. MIDI, or synthesized MIDI to audio) producing a sound file or a music output event on speakers.
- music protocol e.g. MIDI, or synthesized MIDI to audio
- music-interval-like hue intervals as are derived by the present method, may be stored and re-used.
- such music-interval-like hue interval data can have music-like transposition methods applied to it.
- music-interval-like hue interval data may include a music tonic and a hue tonic, as well as hue chord roots.
- hue chord roots may simply be the same as their source music chord roots, however because a music tonic and a hue tonic are different constructs, the subject of designated music tonics within the music-interval-like hue data requires clarification. So we must point out that the meaning of“music tonic” is“the tonic that exists for a set of music intervals or music-interval-like hue intervals by reason of music theory”.
- a weighting process could examine the octave-reduced intervals as if each one were the chord root in turn, and see which interval construct was most strengthening or least defeating of that particular root. If a weighting algorithm is constructed properly the pitches“C” and“A” should inevitably come out higher in the weighting that the other intervals, and a“tie breaker” approach is recommended if the rooting strengths of“C” and "A" are precisely equal. So that if there is a“tie” between these two pitches then the lower of the two pitches, in its non-octave-reduced form, will be chosen as the strongest root [the potential root with the most pull]). See the example rooting strength evaluation method below for a slightly fuller example.
- the present invention makes such determined or weighted music tonics and such determined or weighted chord roots applicable to color harmony theory.
- the root of the I chord will be the music tonic.
- this progression can be musically transposed so that this music tonic can be any pitch.
- this music tonic when made into music-interval-like hue intervals, this music tonic can be any hue - but this root of the I chord remains the music tonic.
- the hue chosen (by system or user) is what is meant by the term‘hue tonic'.
- the ‘music tonic' remains the generic music-interval-like hue interval structure tonic, with its certain intervallic relationship to the other generic hue intervals; so the music-interval-like hue intervals may include both a designated music tonic and a hue tonic. (Of course it may include neither).
- chord tones are looked up for their interval weights in CRWI, and their weights are cumulated into a total, find the test root with the highest total test root weight. If there is a tie between multiple test roots, take the test root that is the chord tone that is lowest in terms of its non-octave-reduced pitch, and add 10, making it the strongest root.
- the music-interval-like hue interval data as per the m2h index, is incorporated into DVS (Digital Vinyl System) data and media, allowing a light show sequence, one that corresponds to the intervals received by the music-interval-comprised-data receiving device, to be played and controlled via a DVS turntable.
- DVS Digital Vinyl System
- This light show (that corresponds to the music intervals received by the music-interval-comprised-data receiving device as a source music sequence) can be displayed on a color output device while synchronized to playback of its source music sequence; or it can be synchronized to music output that has been creatively manipulated from the source music sequence (and as long as it maintains a fair amount of correspondence with that source music sequence it may remain desirable as a light show product).
- the tempo of both the light show sequence and the source music sequence can be altered while synchronized to one another.
- the tempo shifting (which will normally shift musical pitch) can be allowed to shift hue in the corresponding manner; or not.
- the hue intervals or the music intervals may be transposed without transposing the other.
- transposition simply involves moving the set of intervals up or down in pitch. If the source music sequence is being output as an audio file then transposing the intervals is accomplished by algorithmically shifting the notes up or down by stretching or shrinking the duration, but this basic manipulation by stretching or shrinking changes both duration and pitch. Duration and pitch can be altered independently using more advanced algorithms such as those by zplane’s Elastique, and Serato.
- the music-interval-like hue interval data is chemically printed or formulated into a circular lens that can be rotated on a turntable platter (like a record player platter) to affect at least one fibre optic light strand, as the color output device (as to serve for lighting on a Christmas tree).
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