The most mind-blowing concept in music (Harmonic Series)

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  • čas přidán 9. 06. 2024
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Komentáře • 6K

  • @synthesismusic2774
    @synthesismusic2774 Před 4 lety +2132

    "or you already knew about this, in which case, why are you watching" because you're Andrew Huang

    • @andrewhuang
      @andrewhuang  Před 4 lety +365

      🥰🥰🥰

    • @MattKaaihue
      @MattKaaihue Před 4 lety +18

      Exactly... Lol

    • @thegoalistheplan3868
      @thegoalistheplan3868 Před 4 lety +11

      Synthesis Music absolutely relatable

    • @mdmajunge
      @mdmajunge Před 4 lety +5

      yes!

    • @LimeGreenTeknii
      @LimeGreenTeknii Před 4 lety +28

      What if I already knew about it, *and* I'm still impressed? I knew theoretically if you EQ'd away the harmonics, it'd sound the same, but I never thought to try it out. It felt different to hear it actually work.

  • @giuliozanetti800
    @giuliozanetti800 Před 4 lety +1254

    Other MIND-BLOWING facts:
    - The reason sometimes sounds start clipping after you EQ them subtracting harmonics (which seems absurd), is that the harmonics you removed were interacting with the others and they were actually lowering the peaks of the waveform!
    - Two waveforms may have the exact same harmonics with the the exact same intensity yet sound completely different, because the harmonics are phased differently (the sine waves do not "align" the same way), so with a bunch of harmonics you'll still be able to obtain infinite sounds!
    EDIT: I substituted the term "interfering", which was technically incorrect, with "interacting".
    EDIT 2: Editing the comment made me lose the Heart from Andrew 😭😭 what we do for science

    • @jyryhalonen4990
      @jyryhalonen4990 Před 4 lety +10

      Holy 🦆 I've wondered why that is thank you!

    • @scorinth
      @scorinth Před 4 lety +22

      I'm not sure that's *completely* true. It *is* true that adjusting the phase of the different harmonics would make a signal that looks really different on a scope...
      However, humans are *really* bad at hearing phase of different pitches in a sound. (I'm pretty sure it has to do with the way the cochlea breaks up sound into different frequencies, but I'm not a doctor). So if you have two signals which have the same frequencies but slid around in phase, they'll sound the same to a human.
      Then again, humans are really good at picking up different phases *between the two ears* so there might be some funky psychoacoustic stuff going on if you tried that. (Also, apparently there are some animals whose ears work differently so they might actually be able to directly hear phase.)

    • @NicosLeben
      @NicosLeben Před 4 lety +18

      And that's why the fourier transformation has to be calculated in the complex space. Every frequency also has a phase. But analyzers usually do not show them.

    • @erichughes3987
      @erichughes3987 Před 4 lety +31

      @@scorinth They will sound the same to a human, but when played together, it's not about the brain, its about the vibrations and the physics of the real world. The waves literally cancel each other out in the air and thus those frequencies are lost or reduced in amplitude.

    • @timdodson1813
      @timdodson1813 Před 4 lety +5

      They wouldn't technically harmonic if they were out of phase. The phases should line up with the fundamental.

  • @hiriaith
    @hiriaith Před rokem +108

    The coolest thing for me is that variations in harmonics is also how we pronounce different vowels. When we change the shape and position of the mouth and tongue, we create a different "instrument" that prioritises different harmonics. Basically different vowels are the result of filtering and boosting specific overtones.

    • @yobrethren
      @yobrethren Před 9 měsíci +4

      And my mouth talking ass still can't figure out how to EQ shit, i'll be damned
      That's pretty rad though

    • @kevinmurphy5878
      @kevinmurphy5878 Před 5 měsíci

      What the fuck

    • @ericmarchini9878
      @ericmarchini9878 Před 2 měsíci +1

      WHAT

  • @ashtheauthor
    @ashtheauthor Před 2 lety +232

    It’s wild to think that each note is essentially a chord on a micro level🤯

    • @lemonsys
      @lemonsys Před 4 měsíci +8

      Even crazier, because a sine wave is basically a rhythm, every chord is a basically a giant polyrhythm

    • @acousticrajeev
      @acousticrajeev Před 4 měsíci

      ​@@lemonsyswtf

  • @chaseingraham5864
    @chaseingraham5864 Před 4 lety +1123

    Fools out here buying 10k worth of gear while I'm creating the perfect tone by meticulously layering sin waves on top of eachother entirely for free

    • @andrewhuang
      @andrewhuang  Před 4 lety +267

      I laughed so hard

    • @Scyriate
      @Scyriate Před 4 lety +37

      This is so true tough, alot of newer producers always think you need expensive gear to make good music while really all you need is a computer and a headset.
      Sure, the expensive gear could theoreticaly help, but only if you know the fundamentals of how it actualy works aswell as how to use it in general.
      Expensive gear is not a nececity

    • @steveditore3165
      @steveditore3165 Před 4 lety +16

      Which also gets expensive time- and learning curve-wise. Wendy Carlos has a lot to say about additive synthesis. A LOT.

    • @cheesecake4lyfe196
      @cheesecake4lyfe196 Před 4 lety +27

      And then I put an 0TT on it

    • @KnzoVortex
      @KnzoVortex Před 4 lety +14

      @@Scyriate While this is true, making music only by overlapping sine waves manually would take a *ridiculously* long time.

  • @faithspencer3601
    @faithspencer3601 Před 3 lety +732

    Me as a child: "I'll never need math, I'm gonna be a musician."
    Math: "Get back here, you little sh*t"

    • @marek2031
      @marek2031 Před 3 lety +22

      it's physics ;)

    • @einprozent3738
      @einprozent3738 Před 3 lety +79

      @@marek2031 And math is the language of physics ;)

    • @KumaBones
      @KumaBones Před 3 lety +18

      @@einprozent3738 nice checkmate lol

    • @SternLX
      @SternLX Před 3 lety +6

      @@marek2031 Fun fact: I've never met a Physicist that didn't play some kind of stringed instrument.

    • @einprozent3738
      @einprozent3738 Před 3 lety +6

      @@CyclesAreSingularities I mean if you want to seperate such a complex subject like maths in "highschool" and "physics" maths go ahead but that still doesn't undermine the fact that physics can only be applied to the real world by the application of mathematics

  • @AarPlays
    @AarPlays Před rokem +41

    Honestly this was the first thing I wanted to figure out when learning music theory. Learning WHY things sound good together is so much more important to me than learning HOW to put things together.

  • @infn8loopmusic
    @infn8loopmusic Před rokem +24

    Most mind blowing thing that I learned recently in music is:
    Keys/Chords are only relevant to the most recent chord that you transitioned from. Think about that. That means chord number 3 can be totally bonkers from chord number 1 as long as chord 2 works to give you the feel you want when you transition from 1 to 2, and similarly works to give you the feel you want from chord 2 transition to 3. This is how great musicians use the circle of fifths to bounce around from literally wherever they are to wherever they want to be.

  • @kribophoric9560
    @kribophoric9560 Před 3 lety +849

    "All musicians are unconscious mathematicians" -Thelonius monk

    • @hannahboesen1647
      @hannahboesen1647 Před 3 lety +18

      But I hate math 😂

    • @the_kinslayer
      @the_kinslayer Před 3 lety +9

      @@hannahboesen1647 then I hate u

    • @the_kinslayer
      @the_kinslayer Před 3 lety +18

      Math haters = 🤢

    • @hannahboesen1647
      @hannahboesen1647 Před 3 lety +7

      I’ll change my statement, I don’t really like math lol

    • @meemee6197
      @meemee6197 Před 3 lety +7

      I was listening to Andrew and all I could think of was he's like a doctor but with music.

  • @maltalented
    @maltalented Před 4 lety +152

    4:39 "What the [sine wave] is a sine wave?"
    clever, Andrew, clever.

    • @menaceskitz27
      @menaceskitz27 Před 4 lety +3

      Maltalented Creator I didn’t notice lol

    • @khbgkh
      @khbgkh Před 4 lety +3

      Ge also starts by saying this is one of the most fundamental aspects of music

  • @sharpe3698
    @sharpe3698 Před rokem +44

    Just going down the music theory rabbit hole and was just unable to grock how the same pitch sounds different in different instruments and this finally cleared it up for me.

  • @TheRealJeffVader
    @TheRealJeffVader Před rokem +14

    Former opera singer, now digging into instrumental music and music production, from orchestral to the 80s synths of my childhood. This video utterly blew my mind, and was even news to my wife who has a Masters in music performance. GREAT video, clearly, concisely, and enjoyably explained. And you can't ask for more than that when it comes to education.

  • @brianmessemer2973
    @brianmessemer2973 Před 3 lety +1685

    Andrew, I've been teaching music theory for years and have taught the harmonic series to some of my high school classes. Usually unsatisfactorily. Ive never seen it presented well in a reasonable timeframe. I used to use Leonard Bernstein's 1973 Harvard Lectures series clip of him demonstrating it on a piano. Charming if you love LB but terribly, grossly out of date for students today. This is the BEST video resource on the harmonic series I've ever come across BY FAR. Thank you so much.

    • @smkh2890
      @smkh2890 Před 3 lety +20

      " terribly, grossly out of date for students today." I really worry about that attitude. Someone just one generation older seems 'out of date', superannuated. As though a haircut or accent or costume alters what a person is saying!
      Trivial, superficial people. Not necessarily a generational thing, just whether one has a sense of history.

    • @brianmessemer2973
      @brianmessemer2973 Před 3 lety +67

      @@smkh2890 I understand your dismay, 100%. And I agree with your sentiment. I dearly love Bernstein and I have watched his entire Harvard lectures series numerous times. But Bernstein explaining something is long-form poetry. It could take 20 minutes to an hour for him to make the point. Bernstein is too brilliant and too aesthetically minded to simply give the bare facts of something - he will weave the point into a tapestry of interconnected concepts and supporting metaphors. But here’s the thing - I first found those lectures as an undergraduate music student and I devoured them on my own time. They aren’t well suited to be a supporting material for classroom teaching at all, and that’s what I need for my HS theory class. In the past, even when I showed my HS classes preselected 10-15 minute excerpts of his lectures, they didn’t quite get it. Look at Andrew’s style by comparison. Utterly different pacing, among many other things. Style is a language, and modern students speak the language of his style.

    • @smkh2890
      @smkh2890 Před 3 lety +7

      @@brianmessemer2973 of course you are right. I don’t want to repeat cliches about attention span because my own attention span is not what it used to be. But how many now listen to a piece of music 40 minutes long or more in one sitting? How many read 1000 page novels? Even full length albums are gone . people listen to one track and buy single tracks . the 70s ‘concept’ album with a story development over an hour or more, Tommy by the Who would be a good example, seems to have disappeared.

    • @smkh2890
      @smkh2890 Před 3 lety +2

      @@brianmessemer2973 as for teaching I taught English language mostly to students who are paying so they were attentive. I’ve also taught English literature at college level but I am not yet at the point where I dare to teach music. Anyway talking about style of teaching, Andrew is very very good . I think he is sponsored by Reverb, so he has resources. I did some electronics in the ‘60s so the components he showed in a bag were not a mystery!

    • @brianmessemer2973
      @brianmessemer2973 Před 3 lety +12

      @@smkh2890 yeah absolutely sir. Your points about music and literature are well taken. There certainly seems to be less time for, less emphasis on, and less cultural value/appreciation placed on the study of large works. Funny coincidence - I also taught English language in Japan for several years before teaching music back here in the US. Thank you for sharing your thoughts and background a bit - what a pleasant conversation with a likeminded individual. Cheers to us 🍻 and cheers to art, literature and music that takes time 🍻

  • @Krecikdwamiljony
    @Krecikdwamiljony Před 4 lety +154

    Part 2: Amount of overtones is important, but how their loudness changes over time and how the pitch wobbles is the other half of a timbre

    • @christiantaylor1495
      @christiantaylor1495 Před 4 lety

      With FM you get a really wobbli boi to the point a sine wave can sound like a walrus

    • @Krecikdwamiljony
      @Krecikdwamiljony Před 4 lety

      @@christiantaylor1495 ...I'm going to hunt for walruses now

    • @HORNGEN4
      @HORNGEN4 Před 4 lety

      Exactly why simply re-pitching even the nicest real-world instrument in a sampler sounds synthetic

    • @russellperson9412
      @russellperson9412 Před 4 lety

      @@HORNGEN4 On the topic of wobbles I have found a video with additive synthesis imitating a Leslie speaker on a organ czcams.com/video/NIe8H8D54IY/video.html

  • @iDunnoMan9000
    @iDunnoMan9000 Před 8 měsíci +14

    The way you visualized it on the guitar was brilliant. That edit made it so clear and easy to understand! 1:53

  • @cz2301
    @cz2301 Před rokem +13

    As an amateur musician and professional artist-designer, i see so many relations between sounds and colors, and visual and musical composition. Your explanation of chords and harmonic series makes me think of Impressionist paintings, of Monet and Renoir, and how our eyes naturally mix contiguous colors into one. And color afterimages as well, which is why when we fixate our eyes on a red dot and then look away, we see green, the complementary color of red - just like the harmonic series. Thanks for the amazing video!

    • @Riverdeepnwide
      @Riverdeepnwide Před rokem +6

      Comments like this are why I look into the comment section.
      Thank you CZ 👍🏻

    • @oolfur
      @oolfur Před rokem +1

      Do you have synesthesia?

  • @robscallon
    @robscallon Před 4 lety +1960

    7:45 I HAVE NEVER CONSIDERED THAT. That makes SO MUCH SENSE

    • @boazcohen7992
      @boazcohen7992 Před 4 lety +16

      Rob!! That's actualy realy cool.

    • @kylemorrison6162
      @kylemorrison6162 Před 4 lety +16

      Hello scob rallon, how are you doing this fine afternoon?

    • @russellszabadosaka5-pindin849
      @russellszabadosaka5-pindin849 Před 4 lety +11

      @Rob Scallon I watched this despite learning the harmonic series years ago because I knew he would come up with *something* I didn’t know. That same part was new to me and makes total sense.

    • @nestedward809
      @nestedward809 Před 4 lety +3

      It’s the first of October

    • @PrabinPoudel13
      @PrabinPoudel13 Před 4 lety +1

      Yeah

  • @TomMilleyMusic
    @TomMilleyMusic Před 4 lety +238

    You'll often still hear overtones with a sine wave actually, because you're hearing them through speakers which have their own ways of vibrating and their own resonant peaks and you're also hearing the room. I think it's more in theory that they don't have overtones, because in the real world I'm not sure how you'd listen to it without engaging overtones from something, even if just from your own ear canal.

    • @loocheenah
      @loocheenah Před 4 lety +15

      maybe feed them directly into the brain somehow hehe

    • @sean_2719
      @sean_2719 Před 4 lety +14

      overtones are all around us
      we cant escape them
      not sure if that puts me in awe of the universe and its sheer beauty or puts me in fear of it

    • @artoan
      @artoan Před 4 lety +6

      Maybe the closest possibility is a tuning fork on ones forehead..?

    • @SyncA81
      @SyncA81 Před 4 lety +7

      Then you don't hear a sine wave. Once the tone is colored by your amp, speaker, cable, W/E it's no longer a pure sine. It has gotten harmonics injected in the wave. So in a way you're right that it can only exist in theory. But with decently tuned and chosen gear you can approximate that sine wave to a point where the overtones you speak of have no real world influence on what we're hearing.

    • @Nawer_Rapter
      @Nawer_Rapter Před 4 lety +4

      I was just thinking of that
      The limitations of the world are amazingly weird

  • @jakekennedy8292
    @jakekennedy8292 Před 2 lety +4

    Andrew my man, you are king. I’m a sound therapy practitioner, and your understanding of sound that you pull into your creation and producing is exactly what the world needs. When we look at everything in creation, EVERYTHING IS VIBRATION. Sound and music, using the laws of resonance is going to be HUGE in the near future for emotional and physical healing. (The physical body is a reflection of the emotional state, the more our nervous system is in a coherent state, the body functions in a homeostatic state.) the better we feel emotionally, the better our bodies function. Love all that you do!!!!!

  • @alecrechtiene558
    @alecrechtiene558 Před rokem +5

    Comparing those 2 major thirds is mind blowing. The fact that the one that we’re used to is “wrong.” But when we hear the just intonation version, it sounds a bit more subdued and calmed, and of course darker. It actually sounds less dissonant once you hear it more.

  • @benjaminbarley4813
    @benjaminbarley4813 Před 4 lety +172

    Literally just finished harmonics in physics 😂😂 this is really helpful for that actually, cheers!

    • @ethanyoung4629
      @ethanyoung4629 Před 4 lety +5

      Same but Andrew does it cooler

    • @benjaminbarley4813
      @benjaminbarley4813 Před 4 lety +1

      @@ethanyoung4629 yeh😂😂, my physics teacher could never be as cool as Andrew😂😂

    • @denglish5
      @denglish5 Před 4 lety +6

      If you haven't studied quantum yet you're in for a fantastic surprise when you get to the harmonic oscillator. Wave theory is ubiquitous throughout all of physics!

    • @benjaminbarley4813
      @benjaminbarley4813 Před 4 lety +1

      @@denglish5 we just started quantum, I finished the photoelectric effect yesterday and my head still hurts😂

  • @noesunyoutuber7680
    @noesunyoutuber7680 Před 4 lety +148

    Fun fact: this is also why your voice sounds different to you than to everyone else. The sine waves making up your voice travel differently because when you hear your own voice, they're passing through both the air and the bones of your head to your ears. Low frequencies carry better through physical contact than the air. If you experiment a bit with EQ, you can make your voice on recording sound closer to how it sounds to you speaking.

    • @perrinsilveira6759
      @perrinsilveira6759 Před 4 lety +8

      It took me a while to find it but like a year or so ago I found a really good paper on this and how to reproduce the voice you hear aka about what eq you need to get it. Sadly I didn't save the link and haven't been able to find it since.

    • @yakmartin5429
      @yakmartin5429 Před 4 lety +4

      Cover your ears with your hands, fingers pointing up, then fold your hands forward, keep the sides of your hands tight to your head, shielding your ears from what comes from front. Tadaa, your sound!
      🧸💕🦠🔨

    • @Stiddo
      @Stiddo Před 4 lety +5

      Perrin Silveira I studied a bit of this and have a few papers written up on my old hard drive, super interesting topic

    • @adityaramesh1764
      @adityaramesh1764 Před 4 lety +2

      @@Stiddo Can you put it on a google drive and send the link, please? I'd love to read up about this. Seems like it could be a very creative way to make use of vocals. I've been having some trouble with vocals so experimenting and finding the best way to do it seems smart to me.

    • @apollospyrol7168
      @apollospyrol7168 Před 4 lety

      @@Stiddo bro i need this whats your email?

  • @jesseskander
    @jesseskander Před rokem +9

    Wow. 🤯 indeed! Your explanation, complementary visuals / audio, and obvious enthusiasm for the material all add up to an incredible video.
    Also, hearing the harmonic series gives me chills and a general sense of something very mystical, yet incredibly familiar. Awesome

  • @Maxiamaru
    @Maxiamaru Před 7 měsíci +2

    Years later, I watch this video once a year and STILL it blows my mind

  • @imarioiv
    @imarioiv Před 4 lety +308

    "It's why tuning that b string is so annoying" I feel that.

    • @marlonksasman
      @marlonksasman Před 4 lety +7

      Yes man! I need to like this twice 😅

    • @ArminDressler
      @ArminDressler Před 3 lety +3

      Yeah, I always noticed that I can only tune this string using a chord, unlike all other strings that I can tune separately. I only did not know why. Great video, thanks for sharing the knowledge! (yes, I did know everything except this out-of-tune-equal-division-stuff).

    • @DoctorJezz
      @DoctorJezz Před 3 lety

      Totally - makes more sense now (as a keyboard player who occasionally tunes a guitar and feels ... weird on that string)!

    • @chrismatthews3800
      @chrismatthews3800 Před 3 lety +7

      This is truly the First time I’ve heard someone else say that tuning the B string is AWFUL!!!
      I’ve been saying this for Years, and people think I’m nuts!!!
      I’ll have to try tuning the string in a chord...that’s a great idea.
      I use a tuner and either adjust it by ear, or I just suck it up
      I’m actually a drummer for 40 years that is self-taught guitar.....so I’m not very good...but bro....that B string kills me!!! 😂😂😂

    • @scottd.1700
      @scottd.1700 Před 3 lety +1

      If you can get the harmonic pluck just right you can gently touch (not press) just above the B string on the 5th fret and the G string on the 4th fret. When you tune the B string with the G string this way and you don't hear any beading it should be in tune, at least with itself. I didn't learn this until I had been playing for 5 years. Worst 5 years of my life. B is now my favorite string.

  • @remibuckybaeb
    @remibuckybaeb Před 3 lety +246

    I've had this explained several times but your pacing and visuals are extremely helpful

  • @davidmoon3776
    @davidmoon3776 Před rokem +3

    You definitely blew my mind. Ive heard about this before and watched other videos about it, but still you told me things I didn't know, made me think of things I hadn't before. And your enthusiasm for how strange it is makes the video infinitely better. Thank you!

  • @neonblack211
    @neonblack211 Před 2 lety +7

    The most mind blowing thing to me will always be that pitch and rhythm are really the same thing, since I got into music from guitar i never really learned how true that was until much later in life when I started experimenting with synthesis

  • @llRoBoBinHoll
    @llRoBoBinHoll Před 4 lety +96

    When you play a harmonic on a string, you are actually physically stopping lower harmonics from ringing, while keeping the higher harmonics. For example your finger over the twelth fret, halfway across the length of the string, you prohibit the fundemental from sounding.

    • @woofelator
      @woofelator Před 4 lety +10

      What I really love is when I mute one string after playing it, and I hear the exact same harmonic vibrating from a different string that I didn't touch.

    • @IsaacArbec
      @IsaacArbec Před 4 lety +1

      🙀 too genius

    • @felixmarques
      @felixmarques Před 4 lety +3

      And then there's that violinist who somehow got the violin to produce tones *under* the violin's range and we still don't know what the physics are exactly.

    • @radioethiopiate9327
      @radioethiopiate9327 Před 4 lety +2

      @@woofelator That's sympathetic vibration, which is what makes sitars sound so goddamn cool. My high school music teacher demonstrated this to the class by taking the front off a piano and using his clarinet to play a note directly at the corresponding piano wire. We could then hear multiple piano wires sympathetically vibrate relevant to the harmonic series of the fundamental being played on the clarinet.

    • @0626love
      @0626love Před 4 lety +1

      No man, you'll get an entirely new fundamental that has a wave length starting from the fret you pressed the string at.

  • @GuidoGautsch
    @GuidoGautsch Před 4 lety +661

    Love how you censor "what the beeep is a sine wave?" With the the sound of...a sine wave 👏😂

    • @willixm2520
      @willixm2520 Před 4 lety +4

      I also noticed it and came to the comments to see if anyone else had noticed it too xD glad to find out I'm not the only one

    • @briefcasemanx
      @briefcasemanx Před 4 lety +4

      Lol I thought the exact same thing

    • @siblinghoodsys
      @siblinghoodsys Před 3 lety +12

      @You're fake and gay The regulatory TV censorship sound in the US is a 1000hz sine wave

    • @k.network8617
      @k.network8617 Před 3 lety

      You're so smart. I didn't get that!😂

    • @MKleege
      @MKleege Před 3 lety

      I'm also pretty sure that sine wave is an 'F'

  • @Cosmic_Sunrise
    @Cosmic_Sunrise Před 2 lety +4

    Absolutely bringing all of my music theory knowledge and real life experiences into clear focus. Such a massive inspiration, my friend.
    Thanks, Andrew! :)

  • @davidandrew7538
    @davidandrew7538 Před rokem +14

    Excellent video, Andrew - clear explanations and no wasted time. Top class stuff!

  • @ChannelMath
    @ChannelMath Před 2 lety +471

    I already "knew" all this as a scientist. But now, as a beginner musician, you made the relationship to chords, notes, and instruments so clear for me!

    • @harmitchhabra989
      @harmitchhabra989 Před 2 lety +18

      Omg same!
      (not a scientist but a physics student)

    • @thehealingguy1503
      @thehealingguy1503 Před 2 lety +12

      @@harmitchhabra989 and me as a JEE student is visualising these things. and its mindblowing.

    • @harmitchhabra989
      @harmitchhabra989 Před 2 lety +3

      @@thehealingguy1503 same mai bhi jee21 ka hu

    • @user-hm3ni1wd3f
      @user-hm3ni1wd3f Před rokem +4

      @@harmitchhabra989 isn't physics a branch of science?

    • @elliottpollock8550
      @elliottpollock8550 Před rokem +1

      Many folks out here are well familiar with this and many other concepts that are not scientists or engineers or anything like that themselves. Interestingly enough, these concepts in physics and other focused scientific fields are the shared connection between any other concept or endeavor. And funny enough you could be coming to understanding and awareness of technical concepts by actually practicing "science" and not even know it just by doing other work, craft or study. Now, a scientist may scoff at that bc the practice itself has a set of rigid formalities and standards to be consciously followed or its not credible as new theory, law or fact, but the process of discovery can be very similar and just as genuine to one's learning and comprehension of reality. I think its healthy, interesting and helpful to share such analogies.

  • @NTA_Luciana
    @NTA_Luciana Před 3 lety +613

    "Wait, it's all sine waves?"
    *Cocks gun* "Always has been"

    • @JonasHamill
      @JonasHamill Před 3 lety +7

      It goes deeper than that. If string theory is to be believed, then all subatomic particles are on a fundamental level 'strings' vibrating at different frequencies. Mean literally everything can be broken down to nothing but sine waves.

    • @llaith2
      @llaith2 Před 3 lety +4

      @@JonasHamill Leaving aside string theory for a moment, just pointing out that not all *vibrations* are sine waves. A sine wave is a smooth periodic oscillation. Vibrations can be way more complex than that: www.testandmeasurementtips.com/basics-non-sinusoidal-waveforms/#:~:text=A%20non%2Dsinusoidal%20waveform%20is,sinusoidal%20(sine%2Dlike).&text=A%20cosine%20wave%20is%20sinusoidal,but%20is%20neither%20of%20these.

    • @JonasHamill
      @JonasHamill Před 3 lety +7

      @@llaith2 All frequencies can be broken down to sine waves. More complex wave forms are just multiple sine waves. You don't have to take my word for it but I have a degree in Electronic Engineering and work with signal processing on the regular. If you wish to look into it more look up Fourier Analysis.
      You can even look at the following quote from the link you provided "A non-sinusoidal waveform can be constructed by adding two or more sine waves"

    • @sanguinjr
      @sanguinjr Před 3 lety +5

      Fourier intensifies

    • @llaith2
      @llaith2 Před 3 lety +2

      @@JonasHamill Dude its cool. I did electronics engineering in uni before having a career in software. I get you but I thought your comment was simplifying the matter, given the context of the video where he didn't go into detail about recreating the timbre of instruments with pure sine harmonics. He did mention about other aspects of the waveforms a bit later, but it didn't seem connected for people who don't know this subject. I thought you were saying that any timbre could be recreated with simple sine waves at different amplitudes on the harmonics. Mainly it came across that way because of the way he was clicking in the software to add those harmonics in.
      So no offense meant. Btw, I suck at math, so those kinds of problems nearly killed me at uni! I decided to focus in on digital circuits and the micro-architure of chips instead. The switch to software was inevitable as I enjoyed coding in machine language for the chips we used.
      I'd rather not read any more on the subject in case my brain starts melting again! :D

  • @Beymaster666099
    @Beymaster666099 Před rokem +5

    This is wild. I'd heard about harmonics before, but never explored the concept before. God, I love music.

  • @Cosmic_Sunrise
    @Cosmic_Sunrise Před 2 lety +8

    Honestly, I wish that I had learned this while in music school! For a long time, I’ve understood the basic concepts of what this video goes over; But how the concepts are integrated into the philosophy and science behind all aspects of music really are mind blowing! If only this video was available, at the time.
    It’s always the right time to learn and apply
    something new! Thanks, so much, Andrew. You are a true inspiration, sir!

  • @ToyKeeper
    @ToyKeeper Před 4 lety +69

    This is also how most image compression works, like jpeg. Instead of storing the actual pixel values, it reduces each block to a sum of sine (er, cosine) waves which add up to something very similar to the original signal. It's a very effective way to represent the types of shapes which tend to occur in nature.
    It has a hard time with square waves though, since those are the sum of an infinite series of sine waves. It takes a lot of space to store an infinite list of all the harmonics needed to build a square wave, and the point of jpeg is to make things small, not large. So it usually stores only the first few harmonics and the error becomes pretty noticeable whenever the picture has sharp edges.

    • @anachronismic
      @anachronismic Před 4 lety +4

      Now you got me reading about DCT lol. Things get kinda wacky with compressive sensing/ whatever field it falls under in that context.

    • @anachronismic
      @anachronismic Před 4 lety +3

      My fairly basic understanding is that there are other bases/kernels that would be able to do better with square waves, no?

    • @ToyKeeper
      @ToyKeeper Před 4 lety +2

      There are definitely more compact ways to store data representing square waves... but they tend not to be as good at storing smooth contours. The compression is basically optimized for what the creators expect the input data to look like... so it'll be less optimal for unusual data.
      Although jpeg was a big step up from what came before it, there are definitely some corner cases (pun intended) where it's not so great.

    • @peekpen
      @peekpen Před 4 lety

      And when one end of the sound waves in the spectrum ends- light waves begin. They're all connected.

    • @ToyKeeper
      @ToyKeeper Před 4 lety +4

      Sound and light aren't part of the same spectrum. They're different types of waves. Sound is a compression wave of particles transferring kinetic energy by bumping into each other, like how ripples travel across a lake after throwing in a rock. The water itself isn't travelling outward; it's mostly just vibrating in place. The ripples don't exist without the lake.
      Light, however, is actually pure energy travelling from one place to another. It's not cascading vibrations of some other material... it's photons moving across space.
      Light exists as individual particles, while sound is a side effect of the movement of many many particles. Sound is a domino effect and only exists if there are dominos to move through, while light is more like throwing a ball.

  • @sebastianblue
    @sebastianblue Před 4 lety +74

    "fundamental" pun in the first 10 seconds

  • @Danocaster214
    @Danocaster214 Před 2 lety +1

    I learned about this late in college and it changed my whole world. Tuning became so much easier. But you've still managed to show it in a way that I'm learning new things, especially about synths. Great video thanks!

  • @MrMaxamillion213
    @MrMaxamillion213 Před 2 lety +1

    Just started reading up on music synthesis with the book “creating sounds from scratch.” This is a really nice supplement to chapter two when they go into harmonics, overtones, etc.
    Thanks for making the time to put this video together.

  • @Dekku
    @Dekku Před 4 lety +351

    me: I'm bored...
    Andrew Huang: Single pitches in your area!

    • @big924
      @big924 Před 4 lety +12

      The note told me she was single

    • @Greenbit5721
      @Greenbit5721 Před 4 lety

      HBERRGCCH

    • @katiako13
      @katiako13 Před 3 lety

      This deserves more likes seriously

  • @YerBoiDanul
    @YerBoiDanul Před 4 lety +29

    I remember being introduced to harmonics through throat singing one day. I think my local radio had a little segment on it, and it blew my mind that you could shape secondary notes over the main ones. I recall standing in front of the mirror with my electric toothbrush and opening and closing my mouth to isolate the different overtones. Thanks for bringing that fun time back to me, Andrew!

  • @mlwinter82
    @mlwinter82 Před 2 lety +3

    I worked with this during my Computer Science degree, making instruments with additive synthesis and envelope shaping. Music and the physiology and psychology of hearing is such fascinating stuff!

  • @rlewis8821
    @rlewis8821 Před 2 lety +2

    Wow! This takes me back to my undergraduate courses in Electrical Engineering (many moons ago) dealing with Fourier Transforms in Signal Processing. It's been always fascinating to me that music, a fundamentally artistic endeavor, is totally based on mathematical concepts.
    You do a great job at explaining this!

  • @jackporath2434
    @jackporath2434 Před 4 lety +125

    Acoustics nerd/musician here!
    While overtones do not have their own overtones, they do "create" more notes! These notes are perceived when any 2 notes (including overtones) are present. The term for this phenomenon is a "combination tone" or more specifically in this instance a "resultant tone". Resultant tones are often sounded an octave below the fundamental, adding additional depth to a tone of a given instrument. This is one of the aspects that makes virtual instruments not as "real" as their real instrument counterparts.
    This goes into what is known as the undertone series which is a whole topic of it's own (your string player friends should be able to tell you more. "wolf tones").

    • @XenoghostTV
      @XenoghostTV Před 4 lety +10

      And that's why fifth chords sound so damn good on a distorted electric guitar

    • @gonzoengineering4894
      @gonzoengineering4894 Před 4 lety +4

      @@XenoghostTV it's also why distorted triads sound nasty if you don't fudge the intonation.
      The difference tone from an equal tempered major third is a very out of tune minor second, two octaves down. Gnarly on it's own, nightmaremish in a mix

    • @benjaminschallwig43
      @benjaminschallwig43 Před 4 lety +3

      @@gonzoengineering4894 That's quite some nerdy stuff there. ;)

    • @gonzoengineering4894
      @gonzoengineering4894 Před 4 lety +6

      @@benjaminschallwig43 it gets headspinningly more nerdy when you realize that, unlike overtones, difference tones DO make more difference tones

    • @JustCallMeMookie
      @JustCallMeMookie Před 4 lety +3

      Wut

  • @fpsmusicofficial
    @fpsmusicofficial Před 4 lety +113

    Thats also the reason why distorted Major chords sound better than distorted Minor chords!

    • @not-on-pizza
      @not-on-pizza Před 4 lety +7

      And probably also the reason why Power Chords sound better still.

    • @MrTerrormonkey
      @MrTerrormonkey Před 4 lety +4

      I think Paul Davids went deeper into this once. I think it was about chord progressions in classic rock.

    • @JonyRoy
      @JonyRoy Před 4 lety +6

      I've actually tried tuning my guitar's distorted major and minor chords to their just intonated intervals (tune the major third 14-ish cents flat, minor third 14-ish cents sharp, perfect fifth just a hair sharp) and found they often sound marginally better. Of course then I have to re-tune for each chord I play.

    • @No.0.o.0
      @No.0.o.0 Před 4 lety +2

      Adam Neely blew my mind when he talked about why power chords have a major flavor somehow.... I should find that video.

    • @jakegearhart
      @jakegearhart Před 4 lety +2

      ​@@not-on-pizza Power chords are actually just major chords. The 3rd is produced by the overtones and is easily audible, your brain just convinces you not to notice it out of habit.

  • @ComplexVariables
    @ComplexVariables Před rokem +2

    I teach Fourier analysis and this video will now be required viewing. You are right; this is all beautifully mind-blowing!

  • @ErikaSulich
    @ErikaSulich Před rokem +2

    Mind BLOWN- from MSU brass at 7 pm

  • @scorinth
    @scorinth Před 4 lety +69

    Why am I watching? For gems like, "What the f-_[sine wave]_ is a sine wave?"

    • @atomictraveller
      @atomictraveller Před 4 lety

      he should have done overtone singing
      hold a steady pitch and transition between "oo" and "ee"
      with a little practice you will get a resonant filter sweep and be able to pick out specific partials
      audio should start with sine wave but commercial products don't need erudition or educators

  • @matteomatwallace
    @matteomatwallace Před 4 lety +58

    I learned about this in college music theory, and listening to an additive tone generator my mind was officially blown. They also talked about how square waves vs sawtooth waves are all of the even overtones or all of the odd overtones.
    AND THEN my mind was blown further when realizing that all the brain can do is sense vibrations from tiny hairs inside our ears, meaning that (like you said briefly) the brain is constantly doing math to decide if it’s hearing a single timbre or multiple timbres.
    AND THEN my mind was blown further when realizing that the only difference in human vowel sounds is their timbre, meaning our understanding of language is all due to these lightning fast calculations done by the brain because one hair wiggled a little faster or a little harder than another one.
    Don’t even get me started on how it impacts our perception of three dimensional space...

    • @Epic501
      @Epic501 Před 4 lety +3

      The way waveshapes are built would've been a good addition to the segment in ableton with the additive synth, I thought he was leading there.
      Well presented video anyway though.

    • @hassaanbangash4294
      @hassaanbangash4294 Před 4 lety

      Can you explain how the only difference between vowel sounds is their timbre? Sorry its kinda making sense based on what I heard in this video but not fully

    • @matteomatwallace
      @matteomatwallace Před 4 lety +1

      Sure, basically the way our bodies make different vowel sounds is by making shapes with the tongue and lips which dampen or amplify certain overtones. “EE” shapes highlight higher overtones, while “OOH” shapes highlight lower overtones.

    • @TiqueO6
      @TiqueO6 Před 4 lety

      Any ideas on the origin of our harmonic series? I have my theories but would love to hear others'!

  • @cyrven
    @cyrven Před 10 měsíci +1

    9:36 As a brass player, it finally clicked for me when I realized that the partials are divided into these pitches. On trombone the partials go Bb1, Bb2, F3, Bb3, D4, F4, a very flat Ab4, Bb4, C5, D5...

  • @LDXReal
    @LDXReal Před rokem +1

    I had a subconscious understanding of overtones for a while, when I was younger and sang a particular note I'd hear a 5th overtone in the back of my head and never really knew why. Later in precalculus my teacher showed us the sine waves of certain volumes and pitches using a DAW, and I was enamored by it. Then when I started playing guitar and discovered pinch harmonics I was fascinated by being able to hear 3rds, 5ths and 7th depending on how I hit the string. It feels great knowing that these patterns I noticed have a name and are prevalent everywhere 🙏🏾

    • @Nae_Ayy
      @Nae_Ayy Před rokem

      I used to say "wooow" really slowly and notice how the harmonics of my voice would appear and disappear in "units." You can hear a distinct quantization of the harmonics. I thought it was really interesting and now I know why that happens.

  • @phillholbrook9515
    @phillholbrook9515 Před 3 lety +124

    "It's the foundation of all the chords and scales we use. It's the reason why certain notes sound good together. It wasn't just that someone back in the day decided on a scale they liked and we all agreed to it and are using it out of habit. It's that the physical laws of the universe determined what these note relationships would be, long before music existed, long before humans even existed. Any resonant body vibrating at a consistent frequency would also include harmonics, would include those integer multiples of that base frequency."
    This is absolutely profound to me. It confirms to me the idea that our relationship to music is innate and universal rather than cultural and relative.

    • @lukewilliams7020
      @lukewilliams7020 Před 3 lety +13

      I felt the same. It confirmed to me why music by default is therefore so powerful in terms of provoking emotion etc as it is so intrinsically linked with the universe as a whole and all living structures. Basically the universe is a construct formed by numbers and mathematical equations both biologically as well as physically and on every quantifiable level, in this case audibly too. Everything we both comprehend and don’t, consists of vibration and frequencies. If you are able to master the rate of this vibrations you are able to master life. Raise your vibrations and you raise your synchronicities. Raise your synchronicities and you create the ability to manifest.

    • @MRtecno98
      @MRtecno98 Před 3 lety +2

      I think it's more of a thougth to apply to science and math in general rather than just music, the fact that science and math are so accurate to describe our world despite being made by humans it's mind blowing

    • @maxferl3680
      @maxferl3680 Před 3 lety

      @@MRtecno98 czcams.com/video/FY74AFQl2qQ/video.html

    • @Theroha
      @Theroha Před 3 lety +1

      @delt That gets more into philosophy than math and science. There's a lot to be said for the question of was math invented or discovered?

    • @Theroha
      @Theroha Před 3 lety +2

      @delt Wow, I somehow said that Google was the keepers of the mathematical constants we use to describe the universe 🙄 No. You said that those constants would exist without someone to discover them, and I countered that the assertion is based in philosophy (specifically, epistemology) rather than the hard sciences. Thanks for strawmanning something that is only really debatable in philosophy, the field I mentioned, because 2 is how we describe that quantity of items, not an actual physical substance. You can hold two apples, but you can't hold 2. That's my whole point 🤦‍♂️

  • @bakedbrotatoes
    @bakedbrotatoes Před 4 lety +115

    The Fourier series video by 3blue1brown shows how it's probably the most important concept in sound, and physics in general. When you draw notes out in your DAW, then record it into a waveform it's exactly the same thing. We can extract all the drawn notes from the waveform by doing a Fourier transform. Conversely, we can create the waveform from the drawn notes by doing an inverse Fourier transform. It’s all just transformations from frequency domain to time domain (and back). This concept is the most important element in quantum mechanics. Math is the friggin best

    • @midinerd
      @midinerd Před 4 lety +1

      Where is this video? 10 yrs ago I wanted to be able to do an FFT fromwaveform|drawn_notes

    • @VoilaTadaOfficial
      @VoilaTadaOfficial Před 4 lety +2

      like they said, look up 3 blue 1 brown. you wont miss it.

    • @thebigboi5357
      @thebigboi5357 Před 4 lety +3

      @@midinerd czcams.com/video/spUNpyF58BY/video.html
      3blue1brown is incredible.

    • @elnolde754
      @elnolde754 Před 4 lety +2

      You DIG IT. Cool to have someone who actually watches 3b1b and Andrew. Bet You watch Adam N and Anton P...as well?

    • @FlauFly
      @FlauFly Před 4 lety

      Yes, as a someone with physics background harmonic series in music was very quickly digestible and intuitive.

  • @alexhallam3456
    @alexhallam3456 Před měsícem

    I don’t often comment on CZcams videos. But this, and your one on musical theory are brilliant. Perfect in fact. Your delivery is clear, concise, accurate, and amusing. Keep up the good work. Using this in my physics lessons on waves from now on!

  • @rule20a
    @rule20a Před 2 lety +1

    the part with the cymbal is perfection.
    (yeah, when I first got serious about sound design and delved deep into the theory and the physics of sound, I think there were several weeks where I was just constantly flabbergasted by the universality and elegance of the harmonic series.)
    great video man

  • @michaellag.s.751
    @michaellag.s.751 Před 4 lety +68

    As a physics nerd, I think this video is perfect! I love Harmonics!!

  • @jendose.archive
    @jendose.archive Před 4 lety +36

    I've already knew this thing, but each time I hear about that, it doesn't getting less mindblowing

  • @davidisraelii2694
    @davidisraelii2694 Před 2 lety +4

    dude, i love learning things like this. peeling back the fabric of reality and seeing the mechanics 👌🏼👌🏼👌🏼

  • @jesperfladeby2313
    @jesperfladeby2313 Před rokem +9

    We have just recently learned about how to model a guitar string in my university mathematics class, and we also saw, from a mathematical standpoint, that any sound from a string instrument is an infinite sum of harmonic waves (actually and infinite sum of a product of sin and cos). For anyone curious the search words would be Fourier series, Fourier transforms and partial derivative equations. Fourier transforms are also fundamental to sound engineering and editing and is really cool.

    • @PureRush94
      @PureRush94 Před rokem

      You can essentially hear the infinity
      Music is magical

  • @markusmulholland
    @markusmulholland Před 4 lety +77

    You make CZcams something else Andrew. The amount of work that has gone into this video for us to view for free. Damn dude... Mad respect. This is untouchable content.

  • @garbage8790
    @garbage8790 Před 4 lety +84

    Is it bad that I have actually started to hi-five the air whenever an Andrew Huang video starts?

    • @andrewhuang
      @andrewhuang  Před 4 lety +44

      It’s unequivocally good 😊

    • @FH-ux4rf
      @FH-ux4rf Před 4 lety +3

      Don't worry, I've done this for every single video he's posted for the last 4 years (except the ones where there is no high five of course)

    • @ryanperez3883
      @ryanperez3883 Před 4 lety

      I DO TOO!!!! LMAO!!

    • @woofelator
      @woofelator Před 4 lety +2

      think of it like the musical fluffy unicorn version of the brofist

    • @jamesc5801
      @jamesc5801 Před 4 lety

      It is good and fitting

  • @michellen6595
    @michellen6595 Před měsícem +1

    This is amazing! You are an excellent teacher!! ❤

  • @michaelcaprarola6716
    @michaelcaprarola6716 Před 2 lety +2

    I watched this a few months ago and thought it was really cool. I watched this again a few days ago and now I’m in a deep dive on the harmonic series and all different temperments and trying to accentuate the overtones in my voice haha. Thanks for this awesome video, really opened my world up.

  • @faedraemberhart5500
    @faedraemberhart5500 Před 3 lety +145

    I remember this high school teacher who taught math and guitar class would always say that theirs two universal languages: math and music. Mr Nolan was such a chill hippie teacher ^_^ He would even bring his own drums in for a drum circle club once a week. It was him who made me realize how much math is related to music in a non negative way

    • @IntrepidInfinity
      @IntrepidInfinity Před 2 lety +2

      In a way math and music are the same language

    • @reitairue2073
      @reitairue2073 Před 2 lety +1

      @@IntrepidInfinity 🤯

    • @elliottpollock8550
      @elliottpollock8550 Před rokem

      Was his favorite band Dream Theater? lol. also, math is a tool but also language that can describe anything. spoken and written languages can be related this way. Software languages are no different, they just have their own systems and application where it makes sense. Your genetic code is kinda like firmware in a way, your personality and own awareness is like an algorithm. Brains are not computers though, well kinda like a router I would say and your consciousness resides in hyperspace, a bit like cloud computing. Electricity is pretty important lol and also needs math to be explained studied and manipulated. Everything is math, its the root. Not everything is music... We like music because of patterned harmony of sound waves and patterns in arrangement of events over a formatted time parameter. Our brains really only do one thing, notice patterns. Aesthetics are patterns pleasing our purpose.

  • @leonwaves
    @leonwaves Před 4 lety +68

    "Overtones don't have their own overtones."
    Yes and no.
    While each overtone of a fundamental is its own sine wave (pure tone), each overtone has its own overtone scale within the original fundamental's overtone scale.
    For example:
    The partials (fundamental plus overtones) of a C fundamental:
    C - C - G - C - E - G - Bb* - C - D - E
    1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5 - 6 - 7 - 8 - 9 - 10
    Order of the first few intervals:
    C - C (octave 2:1)
    C - G (perfect fifth 3:2)
    G - C (perfect fourth 4:3)
    C - E (major third 5:4)
    E - G (minor third 6:5)
    Now let's look at G, the 2nd overtone (3rd partial) of C.
    To get its overtone series start with 2:1,
    G - G (oh look, the octave up of the first G is the 5th overtone (6th partial) of C)
    G - D (a fifth up (3:2) the D is the same D from the ninth partial of the C overtone series)
    D - G (a fourth up (4:3) the G is the third G in the C overtone series, or partial #12)
    You will find the G harmonic series within the C harmonic series simply because G was introduced.
    Every time a new note is "introduced" in the harmonic series, it too will have its intervals up to infinity (2:1, 3:2, 4:3, 5:4, 6:5, 7:6, etc.)
    So an overtone series is self containing of other overtone series. 🤯🤯🤯

    • @wooof8575
      @wooof8575 Před 4 lety

      Mind blown

    • @jadeblades
      @jadeblades Před 4 lety +1

      Bro...

    • @HowPowWow
      @HowPowWow Před 4 lety +4

      Andrew is actually right when he says the overtones don't generate their own overtones.
      It's a standing waves problem--if your original C sounds off a string of length L, then the G would sound off a string of length 2L/3. Strings of these lengths may share a few harmonics coincidentally but for the most part will not mach up.

    • @heyzeusghoti1483
      @heyzeusghoti1483 Před 4 lety

      The Fundamental generates all partials, period.

    • @SamyDeluxeFan1993
      @SamyDeluxeFan1993 Před 4 lety

      this man waves

  • @isingbass
    @isingbass Před 3 měsíci +1

    Wonderful demonstrative introduction to such an enormous topic. Related to that is a physical phenomenon called inharmonicity that piano tuners have to compensate for by stretching octaves slightly wider across the range of the instrument so that the overtones won't clash. 🤯

  • @Yupppi
    @Yupppi Před 2 měsíci

    I too learned about harmonic series in uni. As mechanical engineer doing vibration of a tensioned metal string lab. As in putting a random string of metal in a vice and pulling it over an unsupported corner, loaded by a weight. Sort of important for designing structures that are supposed to last for a long time.

  • @jordylokhorst8905
    @jordylokhorst8905 Před 4 lety +111

    Andrew Huang slowly entering the domain of Adam Neely :D

    • @alderankorym
      @alderankorym Před 4 lety +20

      If this becomes the new trend in electronic music... I wont be bothered at all. :D
      More Xen stuff please.

    • @tibbarnogard8404
      @tibbarnogard8404 Před 4 lety +10

      Ade WE WANT XENHARMONICS

    • @AnimationArrow
      @AnimationArrow Před 4 lety +5

      Andram Hueely

    • @MBEG89
      @MBEG89 Před 4 lety +3

      @@alderankorym everyones gonna get into fm synthesis, then proceed to slowly rip their hair out while screaming in frustration.

  • @e8heterotic649
    @e8heterotic649 Před 4 lety +28

    This is why I'm a microtonalist. 12 equal isn't bad, but it shouldn't be viewed as God-given, when it's really just a system of compromises for particular goals. If you're mostly staying in one key, meantone is better than 12 equal. Composers in the Romantic period started to modulate keys a lot, so it was important that there be a tuning system that could handle that.
    Of course, you can always divide the octave equally by a different number than 12. Each number is its own musical universe. Each can do some things better and some things worse than 12. 53 tone equal temperament is super accurate (at least for major and minor chords) but it's really complex. 17 equal is melodically better sounding than 12 equal, and it's also almost as easy as 12, but its harmonies are a bit off from what we're used to. 19 is harmonically more in tune than 12, but melodically worse.
    Different tuning systems are all about compromises between good melody, good harmony, and ease of use. There's nothing wrong with 12, but it shouldn't be the only system that's ever used.

  • @AngelinasSpinningHead-xc1vz
    @AngelinasSpinningHead-xc1vz Před 4 měsíci

    Incredible video! Truly mind-blowing 🤩🤩 thank you for putting this together so well!

  • @karalissotiris1474
    @karalissotiris1474 Před rokem +1

    Great work Andrew, very well elaborated and explained. Two things: the string cannot simultaneously be in different modes.That is a physical imposibility. Rather, i think, it passes in dt from one mode to another. And secondly, that was also mind bloiwing for Pythagoras, who first discovered this, that is why he said that all things are numbers .

  • @Apophlegmatis
    @Apophlegmatis Před 3 lety +22

    When I was in a choir growing up, they trained us to listen to the harmonics, so we could use them while we sang to improve tuning. When voices are in tune they become less distinguishable, but the overtones get stronger.
    Really cool stuff!

  • @donaldmclovin798
    @donaldmclovin798 Před 4 lety +97

    Let us just appreciate Andrew for a minute

  • @illinoisan
    @illinoisan Před 2 lety +2

    When I was a kid, every house had an aerial antenna made of hollow aluminum tubes that would occasionally whistle when a breeze hit them just right. That was my first encounter with the harmonic series, though to me it was an inexplicable, unearthly sound. I was an adult when I first heard an elk bugling on the wild which is another example of the harmonic series. It’s still mind blowing to me to consider this as the foundation of music.

  • @kimbrleedo
    @kimbrleedo Před rokem +1

    That was amazing! You did a great job of explaining it so that it's more easily understood. Thank you

  • @donnbialik9085
    @donnbialik9085 Před 2 lety +64

    You literally just explained virtual instruments. And more importantly the basis for timbre and what bit really means. AWESOME !!!!!!! No matter how rich you get on youtube don't forget that creators like you still figured out how to make great content by being yourself and sharing your knowledge!!!!

  • @CellarDoor-rt8tt
    @CellarDoor-rt8tt Před 3 lety +16

    Physics major here, I wanted to say that I love that you are going out of your way to teach this. But, I wanted to shout out the guy to first discover many of these effects and give credit to him as few people actually know of him, but his contributions mathematics and science have changed all our lives far more than the vast majority of people we do all know about. Joseph Fourier is the father or harmonic analysis and Fourier analysis. This mathematics is used to study everything from the musical concepts you’re discussing to electronics to thermodynamics. Even many of the physicists who use his work all the time don’t know this but, he is also credited with discovering the greenhouse effect. One could argue this would effectively credit him as being the discoverer of global warming.

    • @TiqueO6
      @TiqueO6 Před rokem

      As a physicist, do you know where the harmonic series came from, its origin? It's a question that I have thought about a bunch and have some ideas but I hope somebody who studied the subject has their ideas as well.

    • @CellarDoor-rt8tt
      @CellarDoor-rt8tt Před rokem

      @@TiqueO6 This notion of the harmonic series essentially comes from the notion of a Fourier series or a Fourier Transform. The fundamental idea is essentially exactly what this guy is talking about in the musical context, but the idea has consequences that much wider reaching than that. For example, the same technique can be used to study how heat in some distribution will diffuse over time. Basically, it is possible to represent a surprisingly large amount of functions as a sum of sine and/or cosine waves. In fact, any continuous function on a finite region can be represented this way. Now I would explain how this works, but I think 3blue1brown explained it better than I ever could in this video here. czcams.com/video/spUNpyF58BY/video.html&vl=en

  • @satchelack
    @satchelack Před 2 lety +11

    OK, you blew my mind. You have synthesized elements from my math and science education (sine function and waves) with my language education (Latin and Greek stems), resulting in my mind-blown music education (@AndrewHuang videos). Thanks and a high five 🤚💥 from Brasil 🇧🇷!

  • @farisamin_cello
    @farisamin_cello Před rokem

    This is really the best video explaining scales, harmonics and everything in between in a simple and clear way! Thank you!

  • @DadaNabhaniilanandaTheMonkDude

    "Our ears are doing math..." Love it!

    • @weareallbeingwatched4602
      @weareallbeingwatched4602 Před 3 lety +6

      Except they aren't... it's the natural geometry. No math. Just sound.

    • @tartanhandbag
      @tartanhandbag Před 2 lety

      @@weareallbeingwatched4602 the brain is doing the math, or rather, the brain, through many many successive evolutionary iterations, tended towards the most energetically favourable way of interpreting the natural geometry of sound waves in a manner that is beneficial to the various selective advantages and disadvantages

  • @jmb2624
    @jmb2624 Před 4 lety +104

    1:54 Speaking as a physics student: the guitar string animation seems off, these should be standing waves with fixed nodes (like the graphic you showed before) instead of waves propagating down the guitar neck.
    This is a pretty cool demonstration of these standing waves: czcams.com/video/BSIw5SgUirg/video.html

    • @Jimmymcjimthejim
      @Jimmymcjimthejim Před 4 lety +7

      If you have multiple harmonics, you will end up with something that looks like that animation. Standing waves only occur when a single harmonic is present.
      czcams.com/video/LNNQvG0jWtw/video.html

    • @smhill818
      @smhill818 Před 4 lety

      I believe it's like Jimmymcjimthejim says, and on guitar, the standing wave with fixed nodes is more specific to what is called (somewhat confusingly in this context) playing a "harmonic", where you intentionally quiet all but one of the harmonics by lightly touching the string at a particular spot, to kind of force a standing node. czcams.com/video/5j2AxGGmT-g/video.html

    • @chizhang2765
      @chizhang2765 Před 4 lety

      @@Jimmymcjimthejim Yes but Andrew was clearly talking about each vibrational mode. The standing wave picture would agree more with the context.

  • @ThomasHope73
    @ThomasHope73 Před rokem

    Great video; the graphics with narration were spot on. 👍

  • @Jack458111
    @Jack458111 Před 2 lety

    You actually did blow my mind. Playing with synths for a while and never really knew the details of harmonics.

  • @raenfox
    @raenfox Před 3 lety +240

    Me: randomly clicks video on a video.
    Also me: learns how synthesizers actually emulate the sound of real instruments.
    Mind blown.

    • @Allupertti
      @Allupertti Před 3 lety +7

      @mark heyne Yep. Also those usually aren't synthesised. They're recorded samples. Things like the SWAM instruments instead are modeled and they sound very realistic

    • @PatatasForever
      @PatatasForever Před 3 lety +2

      Well, they are called synthesizers because they synthesize de sound into simple waves

    • @swj2278
      @swj2278 Před 3 lety +1

      most synths don't make sounds this way....

    • @paulandrew5791
      @paulandrew5791 Před 3 lety +1

      Yes, agreed, it is quite intriguing, moreover, you laid it all out in a very intelligible and digestible manner, thanks for conveying this all very clearly!

    • @everope
      @everope Před 3 lety +2

      Also how organs have done it for ages btw

  • @jolanderz
    @jolanderz Před 3 lety +88

    I understand nothing, but it's still interesting.

  • @sholland42
    @sholland42 Před rokem

    I’m only half way through but my mind has already been blown a number of times, I’ve always been a geek about this stuff. Thanks.

  • @kengit2
    @kengit2 Před 9 měsíci

    Wow! mind blown! First time to your channel, I have been seeking this knowledge for the longest and you have illustrated it to me in such great clarity and depth. It's filled in so many gaps and questions I have had. Thank you so so much! Subscribed!!

  • @michaelkonomos
    @michaelkonomos Před 3 lety +118

    This is amazing. And what really blows my mind is when you start thinking about wave patterns in nature and the physical universe. Gravitational waves, electron waves, color spectrum, movements in the ocean, heart and brain waves. So much is oscillations and waves. I don’t mean any of this in some new age stoner way, just that what you are tapping into feels significant.

    • @veronicagorosito187
      @veronicagorosito187 Před 2 lety +5

      Same happened to me when talking about this. People generally get into ''new age'' chatting without getting into the real talk, and start to lead the conversation into ''energies''..and you try to redirect saying ''no no, not energies like spiritual and good & evil, but real energy, the one that happens every moment in daily life'', and they look at you as if you were high or psycho or just trying to look smart 🙄

    • @jammiewins
      @jammiewins Před 2 lety +5

      Have a Google of electron orbitals. It's like this in 3(+)D

    • @SpiritmanProductions
      @SpiritmanProductions Před 2 lety +3

      It's funny because "I don’t mean any of this in some new age stoner way" sounds exactly like a harmless version of "I'm not racist, but..." 😉

    • @johnjohn5932
      @johnjohn5932 Před 2 lety +1

      I instantly thought about a 3D sound wave oscillating in a medium.

    • @JetBob84
      @JetBob84 Před 2 lety

      @@veronicagorosito187 Go to Santa Fe, New Mexico. I met a woman from the Pleides star system. She told me all about chakra energies at a party. And numerology. It was a great sociological observation until it got boring.

  • @Thorrison
    @Thorrison Před 4 lety +174

    SO THAT'S WHY THE B-STRING SUCKS
    I FINALLY UNDERSTAND BUT THIS DOESN'T MAKE ME HAPPIER ABOUT IT

    • @KramerPacer2
      @KramerPacer2 Před 4 lety +17

      accept it. it is fine. use a tuner! this is the reason why all these wannabe "my ears are so good i can tune without a tuner" dudes are wrong. if your ears are good, you struggle hard with tuning. you can actually detune the b string slightly to make major chords that have their root on the a string get a perfect major 3rd interval. paul davids did a video for that, you should watch it "why didn't frusciante tune his guitar" is the name.

    • @mikeciul8599
      @mikeciul8599 Před 4 lety +2

      Another solution is to add frets to your guitar... czcams.com/video/iRsSjh5TTqI/video.html

    • @lgp6344
      @lgp6344 Před 4 lety +12

      The B-string is fine. The G-string on the other hand...

    • @256k_
      @256k_ Před 4 lety +1

      @@KramerPacer2 you had me at frusciante

    • @TallicaMan1986
      @TallicaMan1986 Před 4 lety +2

      @@lgp6344 The G string is the best. The Vibrato when using the neck pick up is so creamy and warm.

  • @chrisklocke5648
    @chrisklocke5648 Před 2 lety

    Explained so well. Great visualizations

  • @lonniesands1716
    @lonniesands1716 Před 2 lety +1

    I have learned more from your videos than I have the last 10 years of playing... I so wish I could take your Monthly class! Thanks Andrew. Mind=Blown!

  • @felixmarques
    @felixmarques Před 4 lety +30

    For those interested:
    Early Music Sources (here on YT) have a couple videos on how just intonation worked in the Renaissance-covering the concept of composing a piece whose general pitch slowly rises as it's all relative.
    Adam Neely more recently made a video exploring that musical notion, Benedetti's Puzzle.
    Anyone who liked this video might find that interesting.

    • @liquensrollant
      @liquensrollant Před 4 lety

      And Early Music Sources have just released a new video on temperaments. It's been a good week to explore pitch!

  • @DeepCrossing1
    @DeepCrossing1 Před 3 lety +52

    This is just a fantastic explanation of one of the most complex concepts in music, and it’s made complex because we aren’t taught this from the start, we are pre conditioned to accept the “rules” of music and intervallic relationships. Thank you so much dude, this vid is very helpful to people, I’ll be sharing with my students

  • @davidjackson5498
    @davidjackson5498 Před 2 lety

    Dope video, thanks for breaking it down in easy to understand terms. Keep it up!

  • @naMnivraM
    @naMnivraM Před 2 lety

    I learned the harmonic series in school but just the notes. We didn't get into the temperament stuff. I enjoyed this video immensely. I'm a guitar player and love Blues, jazz, and country and play traditional music, but you've opened my mind to the world of sampling and electronic music. I enjoyed your multiple producer videos (yours are always the best) and seeing another side of the music industry I've been blind too with my traditionalist ideals. Great channel! You have a new subscriber!

  • @johnferguson4089
    @johnferguson4089 Před 3 lety +29

    Harmonics, the stuff of sound. I remember when I first started to learn about harmonics, it was mind blowing. As an organist, I feel that it's necessary to understand harmonics up to at least the 8th because it will determine what sounds you use and certain sounds to avoid and why certain sounds blend together while others do not. At 76, and having had a life in music, teaching, playing etc, I'm still blown away at how the physics of sound is so important in getting the sound that you want. Thanks Andrew for explaining this subject so well and so clearly.

  • @gNatflaps
    @gNatflaps Před 4 lety +4

    i had to sample and additively re-synthesize a pipe organ for my sound design class this past semester, and it honestly still blows my mind how close it sounds. Understanding the harmonic series has really done so much to enhance my understanding of production and synthesis.

  • @rolandwarren3834
    @rolandwarren3834 Před rokem +5

    OMG this about scales is blowing my mind so hard
    I’ve always wondered this

  • @quindelamer
    @quindelamer Před rokem

    Brilliant! Loved this so much!!🤩