These Musical Illusions will Make You Question Everything

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  • čas přidán 4. 06. 2024
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Komentáře • 3,8K

  • @ujicosnail
    @ujicosnail Před 2 lety +9643

    Them : we all heard up, not an illusion, next
    Me, who heard down : 💀

  • @linkthai1995
    @linkthai1995 Před 2 lety +5502

    Eddy: *with perfect pitch* "That was obvious"
    Brett: *sweating* "uhh.. yeah... obvious"

    • @deathbypigx3h
      @deathbypigx3h Před 2 lety +104

      I’m definite Brett on that one lol

    • @jacobthemaster66
      @jacobthemaster66 Před 2 lety +52

      It wasn’t obvious the second time either

    • @alinagranger6757
      @alinagranger6757 Před 2 lety +11

      Same... Obvious, Right???...

    • @sibbi-cw8yj
      @sibbi-cw8yj Před rokem

      Eddie from stranger things with a barrett m82

    • @Jz-vz8ky
      @Jz-vz8ky Před rokem +3

      @@jacobthemaster66 i don't get the illusion at all, they sound like nothing recognizable both times

  • @schleeeep
    @schleeeep Před 2 lety +895

    I think the reason for why Eddie doesn't hear what Brett hears is because (and I'm not sure if I remember correctly) but people with perfect pitch have more trouble distinguishing between notes of different octaves compared to people without perfect pitch because they focus more on the pitch itself (or pitch chroma). And that could also explain why Eddie had no difficulty with the "Mystery Melody" and Brett did because the different octaves didn't really affect what pitch Eddie could hear but it did for Brett. Man this is the smartest I've felt since the start of the year.

  • @nellefindlay
    @nellefindlay Před 2 lety +382

    That talking piano thing totally reminds me of how cochlear implants work. Basically I'm deaf and had electrodes implanted in my ear. I can only hear 22 distinct pitches and at first it sounded like a robot alien but after a while your brain adapts and you learn to hear it as speech. It's pretty cool. Basically there are thousands of people in the world who hear like the talking piano. Thanks for the subtitles BTW.

    • @ElliLavender
      @ElliLavender Před 2 lety +6

      cochlear implants are incredibly fascinating. If I may ask, have you always been deaf and if not, can you tell how close people talking sound to you now vs how they sound naturally?
      (I assume you get questions like this a lot, feel free to ignore if you don't wanna answer)

    • @hanthonyc
      @hanthonyc Před 2 lety +4

      I knew that cochlear implants helped pitch recognition, but I didn't realize it was that subconscious brain process that helps it work!
      My family friend's son has a cochlear implant, but as far as I remember, it mostly just helps him to lipread. The fact that you knew it sounded tinny at first- can I ask if that's because you weren't born (fully?) deaf? Would it make a difference as I'm assuming? Since I imagine you'd have to know what voices DO sound like, for your brain to fill the gaps.

    • @callme_peach8018
      @callme_peach8018 Před 2 lety

      @@hanthonyc I believe the word you are looking for is hearing impaired when you say not fully deaf as that is what I am, if not could you elaborate?

    • @nellefindlay
      @nellefindlay Před 2 lety +9

      @@ElliLavender Hi, I haven't always been deaf. It definitely takes some getting used to but now I sometimes still notice that things sound a bit robotic but because that's how I hear everything I just don't really notice it after a while. I actually have a lot of videos on my youtube channel about cochlear implants and I have a cochlear implant simulation if you're interested.
      I hope this answers your question.

    • @nellefindlay
      @nellefindlay Před 2 lety +10

      @@hanthonyc Hi, I lost my hearing as an adult so I do know what things are supposed to sound like so it's easier for me to describe the sound as opposed to someone who has never heard anything else.
      The results with cochlear implants vary a lot and I think most people with them still rely on lipreading for some things especially when there is background noise.
      I have lots of videos about it on my channel if you're interested.
      Nelle :)

  • @jade3519
    @jade3519 Před 2 lety +6946

    And yet, Eddy’s perfect pitch still shines through illusions

    • @sarabensouda7422
      @sarabensouda7422 Před 2 lety +3

      czcams.com/video/eCdfsEPbPDo/video.html👈👈👈🎹

    • @BlueMeeple
      @BlueMeeple Před 2 lety +204

      Actually, I remember reading that perfect pitch gang can have difficulties recognizing different octaves. That would explain the differences between Eddy and Brett here.

    • @ma3ahumma3ahum94
      @ma3ahumma3ahum94 Před 2 lety +2

      czcams.com/video/LG7g3AYPCrg/video.html

    • @vanivashisht7305
      @vanivashisht7305 Před 2 lety +29

      _flexes subtly_

    • @stonecoldpizza
      @stonecoldpizza Před 2 lety +20

      @@vanivashisht7305 *gets subtly flexed on

  • @PuffleBuns
    @PuffleBuns Před 2 lety +5576

    Today I learn that perfect pitch tends to ruin most musical illusions.

    • @jimmygennaro5693
      @jimmygennaro5693 Před 2 lety +178

      As someone with perfect pitch, I can verify that fact :)

    • @Raffael-Tausend
      @Raffael-Tausend Před 2 lety +69

      me without perfect pitch, i don't hear a few of them either

    • @stevechase8522
      @stevechase8522 Před 2 lety +28

      @@sofanofafalafel2890 Right, it's just another way to perceive sound. People with perfect tend to not be able to tell which pitch is higher than another.

    • @valebliz
      @valebliz Před 2 lety +5

      @@jimmygennaro5693 i know you have perfect pitch, cause you said it.

    • @youtubedeletedmyaccountlma2263
      @youtubedeletedmyaccountlma2263 Před 2 lety +4

      @@Raffael-Tausend I don't believe I have perfect pitch but almost none of them work on me X(

  • @BarEscm
    @BarEscm Před 2 lety +156

    I found he ilusion of the scrambled notes really interesting. I revealed to me that to people with perfect pitch melodies are a succesion of notes (that's why Eddy can identify them, even with the notes in different octaves), but to most people (with no perfect pitch) melodies are recognized by being a succesion of intervals between the notes. In my case, I had no idea what the melodies were until they played them in their normal pitch.
    On the other hand, I saw the dalmatian instantly...

    • @burgundy.v
      @burgundy.v Před rokem +1

      Same

    • @Cooki_Cat
      @Cooki_Cat Před 5 měsíci

      I feel like it would be easier for me if it was an actual instrument and not synth.

  • @ADarkAndSpookyNight
    @ADarkAndSpookyNight Před rokem +37

    it's funny because i struggled so much with the auditory pitch ones, but I saw the dog before I saw anything else in the picture, like I could see a full image when they first showed it. I'm a visual artist and I don't really play any instruments, so I think that's really interesting.

    • @allinory
      @allinory Před rokem +1

      Same! I'm also an artist, and I see images in pretty much any abstract blotches of color (like clouds, bark of wood, carpets, you name it) and I saw the dog (well, I thought it was a puma at first) walking in a field with a tree, a whole picture, right away. And I thought, how can the guy say it's meaningless when there's so much to see, lol

    • @noone-gf5op
      @noone-gf5op Před 11 měsíci

      exactly me. visual artist and saw the dog in a split second. was having a good laugh at them struggling to see it somehow, especially after having a mightly difficult time hearing the melodies before😭

  • @capybaraa5206
    @capybaraa5206 Před 2 lety +981

    Eddy : hears ode to joy immediately in scrambled version
    Me : can't hear the melody in the scrambled version even after it showed the normal melody

  • @dushdj8947
    @dushdj8947 Před 2 lety +1555

    I remember I accidentally discovered the tritone paradox because me and my mom got into a discussion over what sound Duolingo made when you completed a lesson (she heard a sound that went high low, but I heard low high). When I played it through headphones I found that the second note has a high and a low note at the same time, and it seems to be mostly random whether your brain will prioritize the high note or the low note.

    • @juliaostowicz6501
      @juliaostowicz6501 Před 2 lety +36

      Whoa! I always thought it was down up? Will check next time. Cool!

    • @rsaettone
      @rsaettone Před 2 lety +16

      Sounds like you may be adopted if that little folk legend is true!

    • @pidge8747
      @pidge8747 Před 2 lety +7

      This happened with me and my brother with crab rave XD

    • @morganbloczy
      @morganbloczy Před 2 lety +10

      I heard both tho

    • @akinamurasaki736
      @akinamurasaki736 Před 2 lety +10

      I also hear it both ways

  • @JithinJacob333
    @JithinJacob333 Před 2 lety +68

    Fun fact: For those who don't know, the images in the first two 'illusions' are called a Mandelbrot set. Look it up. It's fascinating.

  • @Unlitedsoul
    @Unlitedsoul Před 2 lety +13

    2:55, the tempo never actually changes. It's simply playing repetitive, shorter notes/beats. You can hear that beat strikes are being removed every few cycles, and less is actually happening. When it seems to reset, it's simply skipping a measure to keep the previous momentum in your head, but returns to the longer rhythm and begins anew.

  • @franceskinskij
    @franceskinskij Před 2 lety +1750

    shepard tone sounds like someone is readying a massive attack forever

    • @yeaolon
      @yeaolon Před 2 lety +111

      *Gets ready to get ready for being ready*

    • @abigail40
      @abigail40 Před 2 lety +23

      It sounds like me having an existential crisis

    • @DemBigOlEyes
      @DemBigOlEyes Před 2 lety +23

      Shepard tone sounds like someone is readying a Mass Effect forever.
      I'm sorry.

    • @orangehaze74
      @orangehaze74 Před 2 lety +10

      Its like an episode in Dragonball when some is about to blow up a city in 10 minutes.

    • @yeaolon
      @yeaolon Před 2 lety +1

      @@orangehaze74 look it’s spongy

  • @yanlim18
    @yanlim18 Před 2 lety +917

    Alternate title: Editor-san is discovering new effects.

    • @yanlim18
      @yanlim18 Před 2 lety +16

      Thank you for the likes!I first time got so many likes!

    • @Dhanu_lol
      @Dhanu_lol Před 2 lety +3

      LMAOOOO

  • @dadmitri4259
    @dadmitri4259 Před 2 lety +27

    for the octave one, i have speakers instead of headphones, and there's a really weird effect if I turn my head.
    I think I figured it out.
    both speakers are flipping between two notes in an octave, but exactly 1/2 out of phase, so both notes are always being played at the same time, just alternating ears. you can test this by only listening to one speaker at a time.

    • @kiiturii
      @kiiturii Před rokem

      that's pretty close to what I figured while wearing headphones, the tones are played in both ears and the clicking sound you can hear is what's switching, making the illusion

  • @shadowcadence378
    @shadowcadence378 Před rokem +19

    With the tritones one I can hear both ascending and descending simultaneously, like a chord progression where the left hand (if it was on piano) is going up and the right hand is going down. I'm pretty sure that's literally how the illusion is created. With the octaves illusion, it sounds like Brett describes if I play it on my phone speakers, but through headphones I hear an octave but rather than high and low notes alternating, they play simultaneously and the order of the notes switches sides. This is actually what you will hear if you only have 1 headphone in - alternating high and low notes, with the order of the notes switching depending on whether it's the left or right channel. So in conclusion, my brain is interpreting the information 100% literally, I am immune to illusions. Muhahahaha

  • @lls1980
    @lls1980 Před 2 lety +1412

    “you are going to hear something mysterious melody” *plays ode to joy*

    • @sarabensouda7422
      @sarabensouda7422 Před 2 lety

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    • @lls1980
      @lls1980 Před 2 lety +36

      @@sarabensouda7422 bruh stop scamming

    • @billyt8868
      @billyt8868 Před 2 lety +25

      that wasn’t the “mysterious” part… it’s supposed to be a familiar song. that’s quite literally the point.

    • @lls1980
      @lls1980 Před 2 lety

      @@billyt8868 ik

    • @lls1980
      @lls1980 Před 2 lety +2

      @@billyt8868 its a joke

  • @abigail40
    @abigail40 Před 2 lety +864

    “It keeps going higher”
    Me: if my grades could be like that it would be a dream come true

  • @RandoPassingBy
    @RandoPassingBy Před 2 lety +20

    11:41 I’m hearing both. Both going up and down. Basically you just go from an octave’s distance to two octaves’ distance. For example, going from G4, G5 to E4, E6.
    The first one, went from Bb to E natural, is a perfect 8th going to a perfect 15th (aka from one octave to a double octave), and as a Bb to E natural AND E natural going to Bb are both diminish 5th, which are same interval (aka distance), it would sound trippy for a lot of people.
    Guess it doesn’t work on a perfect pitch like me >:D

  • @rockgoose
    @rockgoose Před rokem +7

    On the one with the Bluetooth headphones I had just one ear bud on and it sounded like a solid tone. It didn't change pitch, but when I added the other one it started to change pitch. Magic

  • @diyakannan07
    @diyakannan07 Před 2 lety +745

    The people who disliked this were the ones who went crazy listening to the Shepard tone

    • @sarabensouda7422
      @sarabensouda7422 Před 2 lety

      czcams.com/video/eCdfsEPbPDo/video.html..

    • @carcasapistacho
      @carcasapistacho Před 2 lety +5

      I disliked it, because they didn't provide sources from where they got the illusions

    • @sophiarosales7159
      @sophiarosales7159 Před 2 lety +11

      @@carcasapistacho google is free

    • @fryderyk.chopin
      @fryderyk.chopin Před 2 lety +7

      @@carcasapistacho they told the names of the illusions..

    • @carcasapistacho
      @carcasapistacho Před 2 lety +5

      @@fryderyk.chopin y'all don't seem to comprehend that the problem is, the videos used to illustrate the illusions belong to someone else and need to be cited. What if that video was yours and you didn't get credit for it?

  • @oktamayosua9389
    @oktamayosua9389 Před 2 lety +817

    New Character Unlocked : Vanya the Behind Camera Guy

    • @windowcleaner3609
      @windowcleaner3609 Před 2 lety +5

      @@Piccolo_Beats ok?

    • @piperpotts1969
      @piperpotts1969 Před 2 lety +7

      Is Vanya Editor San? @TwoSetViolin ????

    • @thebluest_blue1145
      @thebluest_blue1145 Před 2 lety +21

      @@piperpotts1969 don't think so, Editor San is a girl and we heard her voice in the among us video

    • @ladym.7594
      @ladym.7594 Před 2 lety +8

      Guys I found Vanya. Dunno if it's the same Vanya but there was a Vanya guy in a much older video.

    • @JayJaymusic
      @JayJaymusic Před 2 lety +4

      @@ladym.7594 Vanya for me was always a female name, tho. I was caught in the illusion lol

  • @SuAva
    @SuAva Před 2 lety +12

    I’m left handed and heard the high pitch the ‘loudest’ on the upbeat in my left ear. Funny that Eddy’s perfect pitch is stronger than his brains tendencies as both pitches alternate equally in both ears and Eddy just literally hears it as it actually is 😂

  • @upplsuckimcool16
    @upplsuckimcool16 Před 2 lety +6

    I literally had all types of shit written about what I thought this alternating sound was, but then I finally did the smart thing and listend to the tones with only one ear phone at a time HAHAHAHAHA.
    it's EXACTLY THE SAME TONE IN EACH EAR but when you hear on both sides it sounds like the high pitch tone is only on the right side. And what's NUTS is that they are NOT alternating like I would have thought. If you paus the video and listen to the last tone on one ear phone, the next tone comes up on the next ear phone proving they are not alternating.... which makes this illusion even more freaky than I thought when i thought they were alternating.
    NOW THAT WAS AN AURAL ILLUSION NICE!!!!!

    • @organist1982
      @organist1982 Před 2 lety

      When the high tone sounds in one ear, the low tone sounds in the other ear at the same time and then they switch, so the high-low patterns are 180 degrees out-of-phase between the left and right.

  • @DonaldFromKingdomHearts
    @DonaldFromKingdomHearts Před 2 lety +1318

    One that I've noticed myself is that, when you're tapping a "melody" on something with your hand, the pitch actually only changes in your head. It's because your brain sets up an expectation

    • @reverseli
      @reverseli Před 2 lety +57

      That’s just a thing for everyone though? It’s like a game of charades. To the person acting it’s obvious, to the people guessing you’re trying to act out the 76th future president of capitalist Russia during the next nuclear war.

    • @DonaldFromKingdomHearts
      @DonaldFromKingdomHearts Před 2 lety +49

      @@reverseli yeah it's a thing that happens to everyone. But it's not just abt it being obvious, it's that you actually hear a shift in pitch when there is none

    • @sugarkats21
      @sugarkats21 Před 2 lety +30

      Exactly what I thought to myself after the last illusion. And the sounds-like-speaking effect works in a similar way. Not just with pianos but with anything that could slightly resemble speech, if you see subtitles along with it, then the words become pretty clear where there are no actual words. Good ol' brain filling in the gaps of knowledge.

    • @GremlinSciences
      @GremlinSciences Před 2 lety +14

      That depends. If you're only tapping in one spot and with constant force, the note won't actually change, but if you move the point of impact or change the force then it might, you can also change the angle you tap at. Many percussion instruments work on the same principles, you can produce higher pitches by hitting closer to the anchor/mounting point and lower by hitting further from it, you can also increase the pitch slightly by using a harder mallet or hitting harder.
      It is easier to just get a rhythm and match the tone in your head, but you definitely can actually tap out the melody properly so others can hear it too.

    • @scribblecloud
      @scribblecloud Před 2 lety +1

      YESS thats exactly what i thought always too

  • @justary_9790
    @justary_9790 Před 2 lety +384

    *_”We’re built different™”_*
    _-Twosetviolin, 2021._

    • @sarabensouda7422
      @sarabensouda7422 Před 2 lety

      czcams.com/video/eCdfsEPbPDo/video.html..

    • @katam6471
      @katam6471 Před 2 lety +6

      Need that on some merch.

    • @justary_9790
      @justary_9790 Před 2 lety

      @Sankalp Gupta done hahaha couldn’t find the symbol thing

  • @ABaumstumpf
    @ABaumstumpf Před 2 lety +8

    For the tritone-"paradox" - there are many harmonics there, it is neither going up nor down, just all different frequencies.
    As an analogy - if you first have all odd numbers and then switch to all even numbers - did you add 1 or subtract 1 from all of them?....

    • @organist1982
      @organist1982 Před 2 lety

      It would be more accurate/specific to say that there are many "octaves" rather than "harmonics," but I like your odd-even analogy!

  • @katybeth3129
    @katybeth3129 Před rokem +9

    I heard the tritone paradox going down XDD It was kind of hard to tell though tbh

  • @PowerfullPC
    @PowerfullPC Před 2 lety +1802

    Fun fact: the "Talking" Piano is a demonstration of the principles behind Fourier Analysis of a signal. Fourier Analysis involves breaking down a signal, such as vocals, into the constituent frequencies (if you've ever seen a spectrogram of audio, that's a visual representation of a Discrete Fourier Transform). In one phrasing, it moves the signal from the time domain to the frequency domain. In another, things like instruments and your voice don't play a pure tone like (ideally) a tuning fork. There are overtones and as you talk, your pitch changes both drastically and subtly. Fourier Analysis tells you all the mathematically pure tones that were present in a piece of audio.
    If you play the pure tones you get from a Fourier Transform over each other, you will reconstruct the original audio produced. This is helpful in various compression algorithms.
    Anyways, each key in a piano creates a specific tone, right? There are overtones, but the fundamental is the most strong frequency present. Thus, if you know the frequencies involved for a voice clip (using a Fourier Transform), you can attempt to reconstruct it using a piano to play the various constituent frequencies. Of course, a piano doesn't have the infinite range of frequencies to play with and things like phase can't be easily controlled, so it ends up being **off**. But, with the right prompting, your brain can fill in the gaps very easily. It's even possible to hear the encoded vocals without prompting, but it can be harder.
    (disclaimer: there are probably some inaccuracies in my explanation of Fourier Analysis)

    • @Checkmate1138
      @Checkmate1138 Před 2 lety +13

      Isn't this basically what Charles Cornell illustrated with his funny piano accompaniment to internet memes?

    • @PowerfullPC
      @PowerfullPC Před 2 lety +33

      @@Checkmate1138 I'd say that's close, but not quite. He more follows the main pitches of the cadence of what is being said or happening. This talking piano and Fourier Analysis are more about recreating the original audio waveform. Charles Cornell creates a musical interpretation that follows the events of the memes he's covering. If you took away the original audio underneath his videos, it'd be far more subtracted from the source than this is an example of. That's how I view it.
      Edit: another phrasing is, I think Cornell's works have more musical interpretation than straight recreation.

    • @arturzmienko6096
      @arturzmienko6096 Před 2 lety +6

      It deals with brain short and long term memory too that why on the internet you have something called " top images you can hear" for example we all seen so much coffin dance memes that when we see these guys we can almost hear in our minds Astronomia track

    • @lilibella8471
      @lilibella8471 Před 2 lety +1

      The talking piano reminded me of PAMA from Minecraft story mode if anyone knows what I’m talking about lmao

    • @aa-jh3gc
      @aa-jh3gc Před 2 lety +7

      Fourier analysis is the right one to explain this talking piano ilusion. While the piano has limited tones compared to our vocal cords, if we imagine a piano that has unlimited range of tones we can simulate everything we said correctly using that piano only based on the spectrogram.

  • @jesseavila258
    @jesseavila258 Před 2 lety +875

    *Rushes to grab headphones as to not disturb everyone at 6 in the morning*

  • @Gnurklesquimp
    @Gnurklesquimp Před 2 lety +4

    If you like the Shepard tone, Mario 64's infinite stair theme is an example where notes try to achieve this illusion, instead of just rising/falling pitches
    I didn't bother putting on headphones, but I also heard the flat in the same octave 11:07
    There's another one btw., combination tones: a psychoacoustic phenomenon where two simultaneous tones create a fake one in your ear/brain (Can't remember), iirc it's particularly strong or at least easiest to pick out with pure sine waves.

  • @DarthTwilight
    @DarthTwilight Před rokem +4

    With that octave illusion, I guess they were discluding people that are ambidextrous, because I also don't know where to put the high tone. It literally feels like it's in the middle of my head

  • @sahanachannel
    @sahanachannel Před 2 lety +633

    “Right handed people hear the high tone on the right, regardless of how headphones are,positioned.”
    Me who only used one side of the headphones: 😏

  • @ButterOps
    @ButterOps Před 2 lety +399

    People with perfect pitch have a hard time figuring out octaves, this explains why he had an easy time on the ode to joy one and couldn’t hear the low and high in the alternating one.

    • @sofanofafalafel2890
      @sofanofafalafel2890 Před 2 lety +12

      Have you seen Adam Neely's video about the downsides of perfect pitch

    • @youtubedeletedmyaccountlma2263
      @youtubedeletedmyaccountlma2263 Před 2 lety +8

      I don’t believe I have perfect pitch but I’m still having hard time figuring out the octaves =.=

    • @Ennello
      @Ennello Před 2 lety +22

      Truth is that both left and right are alternating between the low (L) and high (H) note, but in opposite ways, so it's:
      L: L - H - L - H - L
      R: H - L - H - L - H
      The left- and righthanded thing is a myth, really. You can be motorically dominant on one side, but equally auditorily developed on both sides.

    • @joelstephenson8017
      @joelstephenson8017 Před 2 lety +1

      I wander what they hear when they hear music over many octaves😮

    • @lamsect
      @lamsect Před 2 lety +1

      im far from having perfect pitch but i still thought that ode to joy and the other song was obvious

  • @bxyhxyh
    @bxyhxyh Před 2 lety +2

    Piano trick is like Churchil's speech. When you have subtitles, you can understand him perfectly. But without subtitles, it feels like gibberish.

  • @brennangum6236
    @brennangum6236 Před 2 lety +1

    The talking piano without subtitles I couldn't understand most of it but I could make out some words without help such as "protected.". That was crazy

  • @cevune-8652
    @cevune-8652 Před 2 lety +768

    "right handed people will hear the high tone to the right side"
    brett: "oh that's messed up"
    me: 'okay but it doesn't sound left to me, it just sounds like the sound is center...?'
    "left handed people won't have a consensus on which side the high tone is coming from"
    me: "oh that's messed up"

    • @joekrafft7125
      @joekrafft7125 Před 2 lety +36

      i’m right handed and i just heard one tone not two separate

    • @LOS18
      @LOS18 Před 2 lety +15

      I'm right handed, heard the lower tone on the right

    • @georgiadavies147
      @georgiadavies147 Před 2 lety +7

      I'm left handed and heard low tone on the right.

    • @hisnameshallbesqishyandhes9672
      @hisnameshallbesqishyandhes9672 Před 2 lety +8

      Yeah, I'm right handed and hear a loud high tone continuously on both ears and a comparatively silent low tone on and off on my right ear...

    • @rievenailo
      @rievenailo Před 2 lety +8

      I'm ambidextrous and I heard notes

  • @abigail40
    @abigail40 Před 2 lety +208

    “Illusions don’t save your intonation”
    -Brett 2021

  • @emilyrln
    @emilyrln Před 2 lety

    The mixed-up melodies and pictures threw me for a total loop lmao. Love the talking piano! It reminds me of the video where what you hear depends on the words on the screen even though the mouth movements are identical.

  • @frefly6774
    @frefly6774 Před 2 lety +4

    6:17
    “Barney was a dinosaur with pure imagination” and so on am I the only one who noticed that

  • @ethanotto5062
    @ethanotto5062 Před 2 lety +816

    That up or down tritone illusion is the same as the yanny/laurel illusion. There are notes going down and notes going up laid on top of each other. Also, the reason some of these didn't work on Eddy is because of his perfect pitch. His brain recognizes what the note is over what octave it's in, so he isn't thrown off as easily by jumping octaves. One more thing, I couldn't tell what the scrambled songs were before hearing the regular versions, but I immediately could see the picture of the dog. I guess my brain is more visual-based than audio-based.

    • @day9811
      @day9811 Před 2 lety +20

      I was going to say the same thing! I'm definitely more wired to analysing visual illusions rather than auditory. This is so cool

    • @ethanotto5062
      @ethanotto5062 Před 2 lety +1

      @@day9811 I love your profile pic btw

    • @edithhubner7097
      @edithhubner7097 Před 2 lety +16

      The first time I heard the up or down tritone it went up for me but the second time they played it it went down… what does that mean?? Am I……
      Built different?? Lol

    • @joelstephenson8017
      @joelstephenson8017 Před 2 lety +9

      I saw the dog in reverse, and assumed it was some kind of big cat that I'd see if the pic changed its angle😐

    • @joelstephenson8017
      @joelstephenson8017 Před 2 lety +1

      @@edithhubner7097 samme.

  • @abigail40
    @abigail40 Před 2 lety +270

    “The bluetooth doesn’t work”
    *Return of twoset boomers 2021*

  • @ilene_music
    @ilene_music Před 2 lety +2

    The mystery melodies was really crazy! I was able to get the second one by pausing after each note and singing the tone in the only octave comfortable to me hahaha

  • @DynamiteProd
    @DynamiteProd Před rokem +3

    The talking piano is like metal music. A lot of people can’t understand the growling but once you read the words you clearly can hear the them during the growling.

  • @abigail40
    @abigail40 Před 2 lety +406

    “Ode to joy”
    Me: **jaw drops before my brain processes everything**

    • @jrexx2841
      @jrexx2841 Před 2 lety +9

      @Hamza Mzali Seriously, why do you keep on self promoting your channel here on Twoset?

    • @leoslego5965
      @leoslego5965 Před 2 lety +4

      I wish Twoset would block them

    • @Kaneele_
      @Kaneele_ Před 2 lety +5

      @Hamza Mzali dude, you realize that no one's going to respect you right? It doesn't matter how many views you'll get or if your playing is any good, you'll still be known as "the guy who spams on twoset's videos."

  • @matthewreed8036
    @matthewreed8036 Před 2 lety +212

    Twoset: “this isn’t an illusion it goes up”
    Me: “… that definitely just went down”

    • @lonewaer
      @lonewaer Před 2 lety +12

      Yep, I could hear it both ways. I think it's got to do with the harmonics of the notes we hear, and how the initial note's harmonics are filtered. If I had to guess the note that's actually being played, I would guess it's none of the two that we hear, but the one 2 octaves lower than the higher of the two (or the one 1 octave and a fifth lower than the lowest of the two). And the two that we hear are respectively harmonics #4 and #5 of the fundamental.

    • @adhithirajesh9685
      @adhithirajesh9685 Před 2 lety

      Glad I’m not the only one lol

    • @ftumschk
      @ftumschk Před 2 lety +1

      Same here. Definitely down!

    • @evelynparker6200
      @evelynparker6200 Před 2 lety

      SAAAAME I WAS LIKE "WHAAAAAA"

    • @rome8180
      @rome8180 Před 2 lety +6

      Yep. It annoyed me that they assumed they heard it the "correct" way simply because they both heard it the same way. It's definitely a paradox. I was able to hear it both ways. There are clear harmonics or overtones.

  • @piperpotts1969
    @piperpotts1969 Před rokem +3

    What’s really trippy is that if you take one of your earphones out during the octaves you just hear a single note

  • @megalodongle
    @megalodongle Před 2 lety +2

    The shepard tone is multiple rising notes being played, but just as the highest note fades out, a new low note fades in. It won't get incredibly high-pitched, it's just continuously rising.

  • @alyssejazz
    @alyssejazz Před 2 lety +415

    Ehm... The paradox thing when they said it's not a paradox... Well it actually is, cause Brett and eddy heard the pitch going higher, but I heard it was going lower. So I do think it is a paradox

    • @CJ-rx5fi
      @CJ-rx5fi Před 2 lety +7

      Me too!

    • @rekal7775
      @rekal7775 Před 2 lety +5

      Yes, same here

    • @eldris37
      @eldris37 Před 2 lety +3

      yeah me too

    • @aleksinuutila2315
      @aleksinuutila2315 Před 2 lety +31

      I can hear both, depending on which Im anticipating to hear.
      The same goes for the relatively recent TSV video about Charlie Puth and his perfect pitch. He hummed a tone bending less than a semitone up, and Eddy hears him go from E to a lower C#. I can hear him go from E to slightly above E or from E to C# depending on what Im expecting to hear.

    • @alex_squeezebox
      @alex_squeezebox Před 2 lety +5

      I’m not entirely sure but I think the Tritone note was an octave so it could technically be both up and down depending on how you hear it

  • @ninjasheep8722
    @ninjasheep8722 Před 2 lety +637

    Day11 of asking Twoset for another charades video.

    • @sarabensouda7422
      @sarabensouda7422 Před 2 lety

      czcams.com/video/eCdfsEPbPDo/video.html..

    • @bluedanoob7494
      @bluedanoob7494 Před 2 lety +4

      @Ninjasheep would also love for this to happen again! But if they were, what criteria can you suggest?

    • @ninjasheep8722
      @ninjasheep8722 Před 2 lety +5

      @@bluedanoob7494 Honestly don't know, feel like they've already done all possible charades. Maybe they can just start from the beginning again xD

    • @auniramlee6406
      @auniramlee6406 Před 2 lety +3

      @@bluedanoob7494 maybe guess the different fast food chains?

    • @jankisi
      @jankisi Před 2 lety +8

      How about Landmarks but they must not play a piece that's from the country the landmark is in.
      Movies (they have done anime so why not)
      Classic childhood cartoons
      Prodigies (though they might just accidentally insult them)
      Centuries but they can't play pieces written during that century
      Decades, same restriction
      Shows/Movies/Dramas they have roasted in the past
      *Bubble tea brands*
      Famous conductors
      ...

  • @Krince
    @Krince Před 2 lety +1

    The paradox omfg, at first I heard it ascending then you asked someone now it sounds descending, but the notes are ascending according to my piano ahaha

  • @L_Aster
    @L_Aster Před 2 lety +2

    I couIdn't beIieve how they couId hear the scrambIed tunes so easiIy, but the second they showed the visuaI iIIusion as a painter I couId see what it was! It's so neat to see how deveIoped visuaI eyes and musicaI ears work with these iIIusions :)

  • @dharmamuthalagappan5157
    @dharmamuthalagappan5157 Před 2 lety +733

    As a mathematician and a musician, this is brilliant 😂😂 for those who don’t know, the first illusion was the Mandelbrot set

    • @EwanMarshall
      @EwanMarshall Před 2 lety +43

      this mathematician recognised that immediately :D

    • @stephensirait5146
      @stephensirait5146 Před 2 lety +27

      and the talking piano is some big brain application of discrete fourier transform lol

    • @HarvestRidgeHomestead
      @HarvestRidgeHomestead Před 2 lety +10

      I love the Mandelbrot set! So cool to explore! I’m not a mathematician though 😄

    • @lhemz2366
      @lhemz2366 Před 2 lety +13

      Aha. The Mandel-broccolli of Mathematicians brought about by the imaginary numbers (squareroot of negative one) that were so despised by many during their Algebra days.
      Fractals (like Mandelbrot and Julia sets) are so fun that I pursued graphic design instead of Digital Signal Processing. It is now used in textures of most of our favorite CG games and movies. And in forensics when decoding that blurred photo of criminal's faces and plate numbers.

    • @leroysanchino
      @leroysanchino Před 2 lety +3

      Calling yourself a mathematician is about the most cringe thing I’ve heard all week

  • @franzdevedeux5411
    @franzdevedeux5411 Před 2 lety +209

    "If I'm in a simulation, can't my simulation at least play in tune." that hurts

  • @misterdinner3648
    @misterdinner3648 Před 2 lety +3

    The thing with the alternating octaves eddy couldnt hear because he has perfect pitch. People with perfect pitch have a really hard time intuitively distinguishing between notes on different octaves.

  • @grekygrek
    @grekygrek Před 2 lety +1

    Eddy you and that damned perfect pitch lol. Brett totes felt bad when he couldnt figure out ode to joy lolol. Btw i relate with Brett cuz he seems to have a similar attitude as i do....and his glasses are very similar to mine not in style but in prescription. I feel your pain Brett.

  • @katquintero376
    @katquintero376 Před 2 lety +120

    11:55
    twoset: this isn’t a paradox
    me: but-but...it went down?!?!

    • @anticloxkwised
      @anticloxkwised Před 2 lety +3

      that's what i was thinking it went down for me and i was like "is there something wrong with me?"

    • @iatesoap9441
      @iatesoap9441 Před 2 lety +18

      @Emilia Ryba Yes but for me it did the opposite - first went up and second went down

    • @claytonr.young-music912
      @claytonr.young-music912 Před 2 lety +1

      They have spent so much time together; they speak similarly. Someone else could be different.

    • @ketsiabk777
      @ketsiabk777 Před 2 lety +1

      I mean, how could we hear it differently ? It’s basically two different notes, up or down is subjective, no ?

    • @mads10039
      @mads10039 Před rokem +1

      Samme I was doubting my existence for like five seconds

  • @sharpfang
    @sharpfang Před 2 lety +659

    The last one was in fact discovered accidentally - through an AI tasked with transcribing songs into MIDI, and given a vocal recording. The one in the video was rather poorly executed, but there are ones you can understand without subtitles. It's actually not all that "magical", it just sequences voice (vocal) into a myriad extremely short notes that when combined form the same waveform as the original. All digital audio works just the same, except you get like, 44,100 "notes" per second in typical MP3 audio. The less - the lower "sample rate" - the harder to understand the voice, and getting it low enough that a mechanical piano can play it back makes it nearly incomprehensible.

    • @ItsABOUTflamTIME
      @ItsABOUTflamTIME Před 2 lety +3

      digital audio is 44100 samples per second, very different from notes. If you could somehow play 44100 notes per second on a piano (actually, you can on a digital piano), you still wouldn't ever start to sound like a real person talking.

    • @DerekHise
      @DerekHise Před 2 lety +4

      @@ItsABOUTflamTIME You sure? The math is pretty robust.
      The principle is about adding frequencies to achieve other waveform patterns. Fourier series transforms allow you to model any wave shape to achieve any result, by adding and subtracting other waves constructively or destructively.
      czcams.com/video/ds0cmAV-Yek/video.html

    • @ItsABOUTflamTIME
      @ItsABOUTflamTIME Před 2 lety

      @@DerekHise Well, pianos don't play sine waves or PCM samples.

    • @DerekHise
      @DerekHise Před 2 lety +4

      @@ItsABOUTflamTIME Granted, but I'm not sure that means they can't still be used to approach arbitrary wave patterns.
      As a sanity check, It's my understanding that many synthesized pianos already construct their piano sounds _from_ sine waves, so unless I'm missing something, it stands to reason that those piano notes could be deconstructed those back into sine waves through destructive interference.

    • @ItsABOUTflamTIME
      @ItsABOUTflamTIME Před 2 lety

      @@DerekHise Every sound is constructed of sound waves. Getting back to sine waves means that you need some combination of samples such that every part cancels except for a sine wave. I don't think that's guaranteed to exist (and it's definitely impossible on a real piano, since we don't have that kind of granular control over the sound of a particular note.)

  • @charliecarrot
    @charliecarrot Před 2 lety

    I heard the tritone paradox one as going down, like a "uh-oh" buzzer sound when a gameshow contestant gets a question wrong.

  • @saranshkumar1744
    @saranshkumar1744 Před 2 lety +1

    9:24 I hear the high tone in my left ear and the low tone in my right. I am mostly right-handed.

  • @karthikmitta4134
    @karthikmitta4134 Před 2 lety +55

    OMG I got bubble tea yesterday for the first time, and when I asked them for 'half sugar less ice' I pushed my glasses up and felt like a frickin anime character lol

  • @yeaolon
    @yeaolon Před 2 lety +171

    I could be practicing 24 hours but really it’s an illusion I’m bending the fabric of time and practicing 40

    • @yeaolon
      @yeaolon Před 2 lety +11

      @Hamza Mzali will you shut up

    • @violinfanatickamraz1403
      @violinfanatickamraz1403 Před 2 lety +5

      @Hamza Mzali quit spamming with this and your other accounts!

    • @newyearsday7304
      @newyearsday7304 Před 2 lety +1

      I'm on a boat travelling west from the international date line, aroudn the world to the other side of the international date line. There we go. 40 hours.

    • @user-uw2nr5rk6y
      @user-uw2nr5rk6y Před 2 lety

      @Hamza Mzali I reported spam

  • @soulofartorias9928
    @soulofartorias9928 Před 2 lety

    i definitely heard down on the tritone paradox and it made me smile since they both heard up :')

  • @KitsuyuutsuR
    @KitsuyuutsuR Před 2 lety

    You want really freaky, there’s a video on CZcams, 10 hours of falling Shepard’s tone and fractals. I love that sound… it gives you the feeling that you’re falling down. Really trippy stuff.

  • @kyliewada7415
    @kyliewada7415 Před 2 lety +51

    Them: "1,2,3,4....1,2,3,4" over and over
    Me: Eddy and Brett's have started a Twoset cult chant

  • @KuroKisakiCovers
    @KuroKisakiCovers Před 2 lety +129

    Imagine your piano talking to you when you didn't practice 40 hours a day.

    • @haydenmercado2909
      @haydenmercado2909 Před 2 lety +2

      come here and ram ur fingers into my buttons, viroucously press on my pedals, and when ur done u can close me and get a final slam

  • @Goggalor1990
    @Goggalor1990 Před 2 lety

    Yes! I use Shepard tones extensively in some of my game compositions. Fun stuff!

  • @zekepowers
    @zekepowers Před rokem

    Great video. Got here looking up Shepard Tone. Subscribed

  • @savvysounds6063
    @savvysounds6063 Před 2 lety +200

    No one:
    Eddy: I’m just built different 🤪

  • @lukeschroeder4688
    @lukeschroeder4688 Před 2 lety +425

    Brett and Eddy: Australians
    Me: YANKEE DOODLE, YANKEE DOODLE!!!

  • @viddork
    @viddork Před 2 lety +2

    The best musical illusion you will ever (think you) hear is the opening theme from Tchaikovsky's 6th Symphony, 4th movement. It's a descending minor scale of 5 notes, followed by a 6th that rises one tone from the 5th note, presumably played by the first violins. Meanwhile, the same pattern, at an interval for harmony, is presumably played by the 2nd violins. This is all illusion. In fact, if you look at the score, the first and second violins are alternating between the main and harmony notes with each note played. So, instead of playing the melody (F#-E-D-C#-B-C#), the firsts are actually playing B-E-G#-C#-E#-C#. I have no idea why Tchaikovsky did this (because he could?), But I defy anyone to hear what's actually being played.

  • @PteropusAlecto
    @PteropusAlecto Před 2 lety +2

    The shepherd tone, if it is how you described it, is a lot like how an accordion with standard bass works. When you press a bass button, the note sounds in multiple octaves, and usually the octaves start on different notes, so when you play a major scale over and over it sounds like you keep going up when in reality your ear just starts tracking a lower octave at some point without you realizing it.

  • @cypherbrittainnethegodofsl4988

    Drummers : *Blas beats so fast that it create afterimages*

    • @yeaolon
      @yeaolon Před 2 lety +13

      Beats so fast that the beats create a pitch of their own

    • @ckchang-wg2lw
      @ckchang-wg2lw Před 2 lety +16

      @Hamza Mzali SHUT UP.

    • @xandraxandra1437
      @xandraxandra1437 Před 2 lety +3

      @@ckchang-wg2lw Report him. It's the only way to get rid of boots. CZcams must be aware of them.

    • @user-uw2nr5rk6y
      @user-uw2nr5rk6y Před 2 lety

      @@xandraxandra1437 +

  • @abigail40
    @abigail40 Před 2 lety +193

    “Forced to listen to that 24/7”
    Me: **flashbacks to learning about sound torture in prison**

    • @mariaanmo
      @mariaanmo Před 2 lety +7

      Either you went to prison and learned about sound torture there or you learned about the sound tortures used in prisons lmao

    • @abigail40
      @abigail40 Před 2 lety

      @@mariaanmo HAHA yes I did think about my phrasing but y’all get it so doesn’t matter XDDD

    • @user-uw2nr5rk6y
      @user-uw2nr5rk6y Před 2 lety +2

      @Hamza Mzali I reported spam

    • @user-rg8et4nq5m
      @user-rg8et4nq5m Před 2 lety +3

      @Hamza Mzali Yes

  • @Kxngcreates
    @Kxngcreates Před 2 lety

    Literally try just watch y’all videos to chill and the first thing i hear is “practice”😭😭😂

  • @maryvallettakeith6146
    @maryvallettakeith6146 Před 2 lety

    Nice use of fractals and the Mandelbrot set.

  • @musickeeper8744
    @musickeeper8744 Před 2 lety +147

    The first time they played the tritone sound, I heard it go up. The second time they played the tritone sound I heard it go down. TRIPPY

  • @darrenphoon5333
    @darrenphoon5333 Před 2 lety +1034

    Ordinary people: Freaking out over Shepard tone
    Mathematical me: Huh, never knew the Mandelbrot set was related to music

  • @genericsidecharacter8915
    @genericsidecharacter8915 Před 2 lety +1

    For the tritone one, I heard up down for the first one, but down up for the second one

  • @That1Knife
    @That1Knife Před 2 lety +1

    What the heck for that paradox illusion I heard down first and then up, like what??? And it was very clear.

  • @AzKaii
    @AzKaii Před 2 lety +69

    Not gonna lie, Editor-san completely nailed this again.

  • @BJCMXY
    @BJCMXY Před 2 lety +292

    For the piano... It was actually something I could hear regardless of the subtitles...but I also have an inordinately large amount of practice in deciphering what people are saying despite the interference... So...that may be why I could actually hear words...after all...I can do vocal recognition on identical siblings... And that requires an extremely fine level of capacity to detect patterns.

    • @ruslbicycle6006
      @ruslbicycle6006 Před 2 lety +8

      Why do you do do vocal recognition on identical siblings? What does that mean? Sounds interesting.

    • @susfungus
      @susfungus Před 2 lety +6

      @@ruslbicycle6006 i think they have siblings that sound very close to same and they have to identify them from each other

    • @karlboud88
      @karlboud88 Před 2 lety +8

      I was able to guess a couple words, despite the sentences being really weird. possible not impossible

    • @john_titor1
      @john_titor1 Před 2 lety +6

      It sounded extremely clear (as in, i could identify nearly every word without reading) to me. Im not anything special either, no music or speech background.

    • @pentachronic
      @pentachronic Před 2 lety +7

      If yuo listen to Scottish people talk in a pub when they're drunk, the piano thing is easy!!

  • @JadedArtworks
    @JadedArtworks Před 2 lety +1

    7:30 I just need to say that this is absolutely wild I draw for a living so when I saw that picture of a dog I immediately said that’s a dog well they struggled to see what was in the image but I could not pick up on any of the songs they were hearing in the auditory illusions

  • @antifreeze421
    @antifreeze421 Před 2 lety

    The trippy thing about the tri-tone one is that the first time I heard it as going up, but when they played it again, I heard it going down, and then I replayed it and now I only hear it as going down.

  • @chiangweytan5937
    @chiangweytan5937 Před 2 lety +138

    Having perfect pitch is kinda cheating for the scrambled illusion. He could just intellectually notarize the notes in his head and unscramble it. Not like the rest of us who have to rely on instinct

    • @sj4iy
      @sj4iy Před 2 lety +5

      Yeah, I had no trouble with hearing anything else, but I didn't get the mystery melody at all. I know Ode to Joy well and I don't hear it. Funnily enough, I saw the picture right away with no issue.

  • @AGKyran
    @AGKyran Před 2 lety +197

    Me, seeing the dog in the first second.
    "Surely, we're build different."
    I was inable to reckonize the melodies earlier with notes put in the wrong order.

  • @ego.solvent
    @ego.solvent Před 10 měsíci

    The left right thing tripped me out. I'm left handed and I was like 'nah, I hear in both, not one side' Didn't expect that

  • @jamesheinz6325
    @jamesheinz6325 Před 2 lety

    loved the shepard tones and those kinda things. the headphones needed for the low high pitch thing was weird. i listened without headphones and could hear the octave like sounds alternating but when i put them on, i only heard one pitch sound also. was really weird

  • @chrischen465
    @chrischen465 Před 2 lety +39

    Twoset: It’s going up
    Me,hearing down: UHHHHH… I’m pretty sure there IS a paradox….

  • @justary_9790
    @justary_9790 Před 2 lety +49

    The matching outfits is always so wholesome 🥺

  • @nigerundayo
    @nigerundayo Před 5 měsíci

    this is so funny!! you see i have perfect pitch as well and i thought it is just G in quaver pulsing, i thought the question will be about if the rhythm is even or dotted. and Eddy's reaction is my exact reaction

  • @mingmerci6103
    @mingmerci6103 Před 2 lety

    Today we are watching sound illusions, minds already blown by that statement lmfao that first one legit gave me anxiety and palpatations

  • @cyrissiryc5126
    @cyrissiryc5126 Před 2 lety +33

    Tritone paradox works. I first heard the tone going down, but when TwoSet said the tone went up, I listened to it again. You can hear two tones actually if you listen to it carefully, one going up and going down, which is why some people hear differently 😊
    Great vid though! Very iNteReStIng!!!

    • @sarabensouda7422
      @sarabensouda7422 Před 2 lety

      czcams.com/video/eCdfsEPbPDo/video.html..

    • @allinory
      @allinory Před rokem

      I definitely cannot understand how it can be heard as down...

  • @netanyasullivan1889
    @netanyasullivan1889 Před 2 lety +120

    The last one is the ability of your brain to fill in the missing pieces with whatever is fed to it through your different senses. That's why without the subtitles it makes no sense but once you read the subtitles, you can hear the "piano talking". To me it just shows the crazy things the brain can do just to make things make sense.

    • @nazianafis
      @nazianafis Před 2 lety +8

      Yes! Another crazy thing your brain did was it made you praise brains!
      Brains really be some next-level sentient organs. 🧠🕶

    • @adhithirajesh9685
      @adhithirajesh9685 Před 2 lety +1

      It went up for me lol

    • @VelkanAngels
      @VelkanAngels Před 2 lety +1

      @@nazianafis - Brains are so full of themselves xD. The human brain is the most complex thing we know of... according to the human brain, lol.

    • @breannab6708
      @breannab6708 Před 2 lety +4

      @Netanya Sullivan Exactly right, it shows the power of the human mind to fill in missing information. I was surprised by Brett's and Eddie's dismissive reaction once they couldn't hear the words without looking at the subtitles. Of course a piano can't perfectly imitate a human voice, you can't make one sound exactly like the other without losing the characteristics of one of the instruments involved (in this case, the voice), so considering that, what we see is still pretty amazing..
      Just like with any instrument, when a human speaks or sings, there are overtones and undertones that not only contribute to the pitch you hear, but also to many other qualities of the sound (tone and timbre, for example). For anyone who wants to know how this "illusion" may have been pulled off, the creators involved probably took a high-quality audio clip of a speech, used a Fast Fourier transformation to analyze the frequencies (over/undertones) involved in each syllable, converted each syllable frequency component into its corresponding musical note, and then gave the info to a machine that can play any combination of notes on the piano. If you know what all of those over/undertones are and how loud they are compared to each other, and you have a device that can reproduce those exact frequencies at their exact relative volume, you can imitate any sound in the world.
      Flute Gang represent (~ ̄▽ ̄)~

    • @RadenWA
      @RadenWA Před 2 lety

      @@nazianafis what about people whose brain made them hurt...their own brain?

  • @Alice_Fumo
    @Alice_Fumo Před 2 lety +14

    So, I have a theory for how the piano playing word things is done and it's actually "simple".
    First off, the words would be recorded normally, then it would be run through spectral analysis and partitioned into 88 steps. Then based on how loud each of the frequencies, nuances, overtones at a specific sub-second interval of the recording is, the piano plays those with their relative loudnesses in stroke velocity.
    I mean, it could probably be achieved through different means, but I'm pretty sure the basic principle is correct.

  • @anyalundberg2174
    @anyalundberg2174 Před rokem

    On the Tritone paradox, I heard it go up the first time but every time I listened to it after that, it went down

  • @DumblyDorr
    @DumblyDorr Před 2 lety +144

    For the "talking piano" - seeing the words certainly helps - but the sounds are pretty much actually there. It's just a Fourier transformation of the speech recording (i.e. finding the amplitudes of different frequencies in the overall sample over time) mapped onto the (relatively coarsely gained) notes on a piano. Amazing stuff.

  • @zauber4325
    @zauber4325 Před 2 lety +27

    Twosetviolin: plays *Risset Rhythm.*
    Anxiety: *R I S E*

  • @Mrnobody-os8gc
    @Mrnobody-os8gc Před 2 lety

    I saw this when I was listening to shepherds town and I get goose bumps every time I think about it

  • @eilzmo
    @eilzmo Před 2 lety

    11:57 big paradox, I hear it going down and had to rewind like 8 times to make sure and play the notes I heard out loud on a keyboard to make sure I wasn’t losing it.