Pythagoras was a Greek mathematician who had several inventions. Pythagoras created the Pythagorean scale, a music scale that was commonly used throughout Greece.
The pentatnic scale is the oldest scale used by humans. It has appeared in folk music from around the world in songs that are hundreds, sometimes thousands of years old. It is thought that ancient Greek and Roman music used the pentatonic scale. It was not "invented" by one person.
Many European philosophers will call him the father of philosophy. Many scientists will call him the father of science. To musicians, nonetheless, Pythagoras is the father of music. According to Johnston, it was a much told story that one day the young Pythagoras was passing a blacksmith's shop and his ear was caught by the regular intervals of sounds from the anvil. When he discovered that the hammers were of different weights, it occurred to him that the intervals might be related to those weights. Pythagoras was correct. Pythagorean philosophy maintained that all things are numbers. Based on the belief that numbers were the building blocks of everything, Pythagoras began linking numbers and music. Revolutionizing music, Pythagoras' findings generated theorems and standards for musical scales, relationships, instruments, and creative formation. Musical scales became defined, and taught. Instrument makers began a precision approach to device construction. Composers developed new attitudes of composition that encompassed a foundation of numeric value in addition to melody. All three approaches were based on Pythagorean philosophy. Thus, Pythagoras' relationship between numbers and music had a profound influence on future musical education, instrumentation, and composition. The intrinsic discovery made by Pythagoras was the potential order to the chaos of music. Pythagoras began subdividing different intervals and pitches into distinct notes. Mathematically he divided intervals into wholes, thirds, and halves. "Four distinct musical ratios were discovered: the tone, its fourth, its fifth, and its octave." (Johnston, 1989). From these ratios the Pythagorean scale was introduced. This scale revolutionized music. Pythagorean relationships of ratios held true for any initial pitch. This discovery, in turn, reformed musical education. "With the standardization of music, musical creativity could be recorded, taught, and reproduced." (Rowell, 1983). Modern day finger exercises, such as the Hanons, are neither based on melody or creativity. They are simply based on the Pythagorean scale, and are executed from various initial pitches. Creating a foundation for musical representation, works became recordable. From the Pythagorean scale and simple mathematical calculations, different scales or modes were developed. "The Dorian, Lydian, Locrian, and Ecclesiastical modes were all developed from the foundation of Pythagoras." (Johnston, 1989). "The basic foundations of musical education are based on the various modes of scalar relationships." (Ferrara, 1991). Pythagoras' discoveries created a starting point for structured music. From this, diverse educational schemes were created upon basic themes. Pythagoras and his mathematics created the foundation for musical education as it is now known.
He invented it in Uppsala, Sweden, in 1942.
Anders Celsius, a Swedish astronomer, created his temperature scale in 1742.
The dominant scale/chord in music is that built on the 5th scale degree of the key. In C major, the dominant is G.
1) his most famous and used therom in math the Pythagoras therom @ @ C^2 = A^2 +B^2 @ @ The discovery of the modern octave scale used in music
The pentatnic scale is the oldest scale used by humans. It has appeared in folk music from around the world in songs that are hundreds, sometimes thousands of years old. It is thought that ancient Greek and Roman music used the pentatonic scale. It was not "invented" by one person.
The pentatonic scale is used in many traditional music styles, but its origins can be traced back to various cultures around the world. Some of the earliest known uses of the pentatonic scale come from ancient Chinese and Greek music.
In the west: Pythagoras discovered that simple ratios between frequencies sound consonant and developed the equal temperament scale thousands of years ago. For many years this scale was abandoned for church and folk scales, but in the 15/1600s composers adopted the scale and it is still in use. There were strict rules. These rules have relaxed allowing composers to write more expressive music, until in the early 20th century , Schoenberg broke away from Pythagoras' system completely. Since then, composers have been trying to develop new systems.
he made the scale of hardness...
Many European philosophers will call him the father of philosophy. Many scientists will call him the father of science. To musicians, nonetheless, Pythagoras is the father of music. According to Johnston, it was a much told story that one day the young Pythagoras was passing a blacksmith's shop and his ear was caught by the regular intervals of sounds from the anvil. When he discovered that the hammers were of different weights, it occurred to him that the intervals might be related to those weights. Pythagoras was correct. Pythagorean philosophy maintained that all things are numbers. Based on the belief that numbers were the building blocks of everything, Pythagoras began linking numbers and music. Revolutionizing music, Pythagoras' findings generated theorems and standards for musical scales, relationships, instruments, and creative formation. Musical scales became defined, and taught. Instrument makers began a precision approach to device construction. Composers developed new attitudes of composition that encompassed a foundation of numeric value in addition to melody. All three approaches were based on Pythagorean philosophy. Thus, Pythagoras' relationship between numbers and music had a profound influence on future musical education, instrumentation, and composition. The intrinsic discovery made by Pythagoras was the potential order to the chaos of music. Pythagoras began subdividing different intervals and pitches into distinct notes. Mathematically he divided intervals into wholes, thirds, and halves. "Four distinct musical ratios were discovered: the tone, its fourth, its fifth, and its octave." (Johnston, 1989). From these ratios the Pythagorean scale was introduced. This scale revolutionized music. Pythagorean relationships of ratios held true for any initial pitch. This discovery, in turn, reformed musical education. "With the standardization of music, musical creativity could be recorded, taught, and reproduced." (Rowell, 1983). Modern day finger exercises, such as the Hanons, are neither based on melody or creativity. They are simply based on the Pythagorean scale, and are executed from various initial pitches. Creating a foundation for musical representation, works became recordable. From the Pythagorean scale and simple mathematical calculations, different scales or modes were developed. "The Dorian, Lydian, Locrian, and Ecclesiastical modes were all developed from the foundation of Pythagoras." (Johnston, 1989). "The basic foundations of musical education are based on the various modes of scalar relationships." (Ferrara, 1991). Pythagoras' discoveries created a starting point for structured music. From this, diverse educational schemes were created upon basic themes. Pythagoras and his mathematics created the foundation for musical education as it is now known.
The first musical scale was likely developed by the ancient Greeks, specifically by Pythagoras. Pythagoras discovered the mathematical relationships between vibrating strings that relate to musical intervals. This mathematical understanding paved the way for the development of musical scales.
portable weighing scale
Pentatonic scale in Greek means five tone scale.
The typical five-note scale that is still until today used in Asian music is called pentatonic (pente = five in greek).
he invented the Ritcher magnitude scale
The C major scale...