Bridges Lecture March 1: Music and Math
Benoit Charbonneau
benoit.charbonneau at uwaterloo.ca
Thu Feb 14 13:33:08 EST 2013
Friday, March 1 2013 @ 7:30 p.m.
Siegfried Hall - St. Jerome's University (right next to U Waterloo Health Services)
FREE ADMISSION - OPEN TO THE PUBLIC
FREE PARKING
FOLLOWED BY A RECEPTION
In time & out of tune: Some perspectives on consonance and dissonance
speakers: Ian Quinn, Yale (music)
Thomas Ivey, College of Charleston (math)
http://sju.ca/2012-2013-bridges-1
Both of us -- a mathematician and a music theorist -- bridle when we hear someone say "music is all mathematics," but we also know that music has many mathematical secrets. Math is essential to the problem of tuning musical instruments, and helps explain which combinations of musical notes are consonant and which are dissonant. But does this determine what sounds good and what doesn't? The answer -- yes and no -- involves prime numbers, hairy ears, a brain evolved for language, and why you shouldn't pick a fight with someone who plays the kettledrum.
Speakers:
Ian Quinn is Professor of Music and Cognitive Science at Yale University. His work addresses questions about whether music theory can be put on an empirical, quantitative footing. Mathematical modelling of musical concepts, computational modelling of musical repertories, and laboratory studies of human musical behaviour form a central part of this investigation. His other interests include the music of György Ligeti, Protestant folk hymnody, and musical minimalism.
Tom Ivey grew up in Port Dover, Ontario, graduated from Waterloo with a BMath in 1987, and obtained his PhD in mathematics from Duke University in 1992. His research concerns the connections between geometry and applied mathematics, including completely integrable systems of differential equations. Together with JM Landsberg, in 2003 he published Cartan for Beginners, a widely used reference on exterior differential systems, and has contributed to a series of monographs on the Ricci flow. Since 2000, Ivey has taught at the College of Charleston in South Carolina. He enjoys classical music, cats, and Sacred Harp singing.
This event is part of the Bridges lecture series sponsored by St. Jerome's University, the Mathematics Endowment Fund, and the uWaterloo Faculty of Arts. Each of the series' public lectures will be delivered jointly by a mathematician and a non-mathematician. More informations about the series can be found at sju.ca/bridges<http://sju.ca/bridges>
Coming up next:
May 24th, 2013
Quantum Computation and Phenomenological Hermeneutics
Kieran Bonner (sociology) and Michele Mosca (math)
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