I really enjoy this avenue of exploration; quantifying synesthesia, I suppose I 
would call it.
I am just starting to 'listen' to visual art -  painting and sculpture - in a 
similar way - watching how the palette, texture(s), composition, and shapes, 
each stimulate a different emotion, leading to an aggregate appreciation of the 
piece. Musical silence.
 
---In [email protected], <noozguru@...> wrote:

 Heh, I once pissed off a Japanese artist who had created a computer program 
where one created music by drawing things on the screen.  I asked him if he 
knew there were long standing ideas about how musical scales correlate to 
colors.  His color scheme was all wrong! :-D 
 
 In music we often pick definitive keys for their "color".  Some tunes work 
well in "flat keys" and others in "sharp" keys.  Of course composers were also 
selecting keys for the range of instruments and vocalists.  Plus picking keys 
that were natural for brass instruments.
 
 On 03/02/2014 06:42 AM, awoelflebater@... mailto:awoelflebater@... wrote:
 
   http://www.educateinspirechange.org/2014/01/heres-convert-music-432-hz.html 
http://www.educateinspirechange.org/2014/01/heres-convert-music-432-hz.html

 


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