What is an octave? - Music: Practice Theory Stack Exchange An octave is simply an interval created by the use of the factor 2 instead - e g if we started with our 100Hz note again, and we wanted to go up an octave, we would double the frequency, taking us to 200Hz If we wanted to go down an octave, we'd halve it, taking us to 50Hz Why is this factor of 2 so special?
Why do octaves sound equivalent? - Music: Practice Theory Stack Exchange @CarlWitthoft: Octave equivalence isn't the statement that notes separated by an octave sound the same If I play 1000 Hz followed immediately by 2000 Hz, all humans can tell that there was a big change in pitch Octave equivalence says that these two pitches are perceptually similar in a variety of ways Depending on context, they can be easily confused with one another Across all musical
Simple way to add an additional octave in Musescore? I wrote an arrangement in Musescore, and I got complaints that some (most) notes on a particular instrument were too high for a beginner So now I want to add an additional lower octave for each no
如何评价最新的Octave Convolution? - 知乎 Drop an Octave: Reducing Spatial Redundancy in Convolutional Neural Networks with Octave Convoluti…
theory - When was the word octave first used? - Music: Practice . . . So who first used the word "octave" in the modern music-theoretical sense, and, more importantly, when? By "the word 'octave'" I mean any word in any language that relates to the number eight, though I expect that it will most likely be the Latin word octava or some variant thereof
Correct octave technique - Music: Practice Theory Stack Exchange I am an amateur pianist (of about 17 years) and I'm not sure if I ever learned correct octave technique I just "finished" Chopin's first ballad and there are several sections which require some