Showing posts with label music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label music. Show all posts

Sunday, October 11, 2009

Metal instruments

This post was prompted by my recent exercises with trombone. Like many (but not all) brass instruments, trombone is actually made of brass, i.e. alloy of copper and zinc. Thus the English term “brass” is more pertinent than French cuivre or Russian медные (both mean “copper”). Still, it is misleading: saxophones (which are woodwind instruments) are also commonly made of brass. But then, I also heard of all-aluminium double bass which was patented in 1934 under the inconspicuous name “Musical instrument of the viol and violin type”.

Can one distinguish the sound of a silver flute from the sound of a gold flute? This study attempted to answer this question with a scientific experiment. Here’s the experimental setup:

A silver coated, full silver, 9 carat gold, 14 carat gold, 24 carat gold, platinum coated and all-platinum flute was played by 7 professional flutists (members of Viennese orchestras including the Vienna Philharmonic orchestra) in an anechoic chamber.

And the result?

As expected, the most significant assigned expressions for all instruments were the “contradictionary <contradictory?> expressions”: for example, the sound color of each instrument was evaluated as “bright” and simultaneously as “dark” or “full/round” and “thin/sharp”.
Tests with experienced professional flutists and listeners and one model of a flute made by Muramatsu from 7 different materials showed no evidence that the wall material has any appreciable effect on the sound color or dynamic range of the instrument. The common stereotypes used by flutists and flute makers are exposed as “stereotypes”.

So there. It’s a shame that Muramatsu does not make aluminium flutes.

Friday, February 13, 2009

Corrine, Corrina

The cover of Compendio de terminología química (the Spanish translation of IUPAC Gold Book) features the structure of corrin. So, I simply had to add the French (corrine) and Spanish (corrina) names to corrin entry. Undoubtedly, this will ensure that everyone who is googling for Corrine, Corrina will get to ChEBI. (Or maybe not: today there are about 315,000 results on Google, the top ones being the Wikipedia article and a Corrine, Corrina Home Page with a discography of over 160 different versions of this song.)

Compendio de terminología químicacorrinJohnny Carrol and His Hot Rocks

Thursday, January 15, 2009

Deep Purple

Continuing with hard rock theme: the December 2008 ChEBI Entity of the Month was a natural fluorochrome epicocconone, also known as “Deep Purple” and “Lightning Fast”. I think that will increase our traffic a bit as more and more Deep Purple fans discover wonders of ChEBI.

epicocconone

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Definitions of heavy metal

Anyone who wants to use the term “heavy metal” for any biological or chemical purpose, should consult this publication in Pure and Applied Chemistry first. It has great collection of useless definitions of this term and a conclusion:

The term “heavy metal” has never been defined by any authoritative body such as IUPAC. Over the 60 years or so in which it has been used in chemistry, it has been given such a wide range of meanings by different authors that it is effectively meaningless.

According to yet another definition (not included in the above paper),

Heavy metal is the 666th element in the periodic table of mixology. Heavy metal is the heaviest of the metals, even heavier than rocks. It was discovered in 1903 by the German physicist Satan although it was not until the industrial revolution of the 1970’s that it became important as the primary ingredient in the manufacture of Lead Zeppelins.