Encoding the Fibonacci Sequence Into Music

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  • Опубликовано: 9 фев 2025
  • I made a piano piece from the Fibonacci Sequence by assigning numbers to the E major scale.
    Arranged and Performed by David Macdonald
    Filmed by Tristan Rios
    Twitter: / asongscout
    Instagram: / asongscout
    Facebook: / asongscout-29199769758...
    My sheet music: www.musicnotes....
    Additional graphics from Wikimedia Commons

Комментарии • 12 тыс.

  • @bunthaideng2492
    @bunthaideng2492 5 лет назад +5441

    When you love math, but your parents forced you to be a musician

    • @bunthaideng2492
      @bunthaideng2492 5 лет назад +12

      Thank you, done!!

    • @JustinG1057
      @JustinG1057 5 лет назад +12

      Hangwelani Madilonga In America, it’s “math” so back off.

    • @bunthaideng2492
      @bunthaideng2492 5 лет назад +13

      Justin Garrison really?
      Thank you!
      However, Hangwelani he was trying to correct me because I missed the word “math”

    • @JustinG1057
      @JustinG1057 5 лет назад +6

      @@bunthaideng2492 Oh, I see. Still crappy to be a grammar/spelling nazi, so I regret nothing.

    • @aismyfirstletter5716
      @aismyfirstletter5716 5 лет назад +1

      underrated

  • @nembobuldrini
    @nembobuldrini 5 лет назад +1644

    As another guy mentioned down the line, the beauty of the composition is due to the harmonization + structure added by the player. It would probably work with random numbers as well. So it is human interpretation which renders it enjoyable. It would be interesting to have it generated *completely* algorithmically (melody+harmonization+rhythm) and see if it still would sound so great!

    • @XenophonSoulis
      @XenophonSoulis 5 лет назад +10

      Thanks, Mr. Obvious. π, as well as the Fibonacci sequence have a lot of Mathematical properties, but they don't have musical properties.

    • @tinottt1
      @tinottt1 5 лет назад +6

      My understanding is, the more mathematical a composition gets the less likely it sounds like music to the average human listener.

    • @jennabarton433
      @jennabarton433 5 лет назад +38

      I generated notes and chords using the Fibonacci sequence randomly when I was studying my computer science degree.
      It is much like any computer generated music and sounds.. Computer generated; quite random. The piece in this video sounds good but it's a human interpretation using the numbers in a way that fits Western composition rules. For example he has played larger numbers by sequencing the individual integers rather than playing those integers as a chord... Which would have sounded discordant and muddy but is what a computer would do unless you gave it additional rules to split those numbers into something more palatable to our musical sensibilities.

    • @technosaurus3805
      @technosaurus3805 4 года назад +7

      I'd like to hear it with octal based numbers instead of decimal. It just seems like the keys would match up better.

    • @jennabarton433
      @jennabarton433 4 года назад +1

      @@finlayson6868 Well put I totally agree xx

  • @DanLaDue
    @DanLaDue 2 года назад +438

    My mom sent me this video after I started learning music production because she thought it was cool and interesting. She passed away unexpectedly and I come back to this a lot to watch and share a moment with her, remembering how conscientious she was. Between that connection and the music it brings me to tears. Thanks for this.

    • @quirkaze
      @quirkaze Год назад +10

      I’m so sorry for your loss

    • @kosmicway3074
      @kosmicway3074 Год назад +11

      We are universe. We just change. You are everything. She's with you. She always be. Much love 💖

    • @HassleHoffer372
      @HassleHoffer372 Год назад +4

      I’m reading this with my mum sitting a few meters away

    • @DanLaDue
      @DanLaDue Год назад +4

      @@kosmicway3074 I genuinely appreciate the nice sentiment. But as much as that even is true, nothing eases the pain of wanting to be with her and talk to her. Thankful for music. Wishing you well.

    • @DanLaDue
      @DanLaDue Год назад +4

      @@HassleHoffer372 cherish that. wish i could have had that moment.

  • @mathieupasquini2678
    @mathieupasquini2678 2 года назад +977

    It's not beautiful because of the Fibonacci sequence, but because he use a diatonic scale where, by definition, the notes sound always great. You can play random notes or notes from Euler's numbers it will sound good. It's beautiful because of the piano player AND his harmonic chooses.

    • @ta_pegandofogo
      @ta_pegandofogo 2 года назад +63

      Welll said. He made a very good work with the harmony, the dynamics, the bass etc.

    • @pedrosaune
      @pedrosaune 2 года назад +27

      diatonic scale sounding ALWAYS great?? are you sure?? there are 2 semitones and one tritone, you can easily get very unconfortable sounds using chords that aren't base on stacking thirds

    • @boogieplayer1772
      @boogieplayer1772 2 года назад +17

      @@pedrosaune Yes I'm sure :) Only using whole tones could make you unconfortable. I have a exercise with my student about diatonic, you can't play wrong ;)

    • @rubberduckz2739
      @rubberduckz2739 Год назад

      Idc it helps me remember

    • @pleasecontactme4274
      @pleasecontactme4274 Год назад

      o

  • @xyzct
    @xyzct 5 лет назад +3260

    This just shows you can crawl around the major scale any way you want and it sounds okay.

    • @davidhyrman144
      @davidhyrman144 5 лет назад +82

      Exactly

    • @lemonwaterr
      @lemonwaterr 5 лет назад +34

      Exactly2

    • @LauWo
      @LauWo 5 лет назад +8

      Worthy of testing that theory :)

    • @rpyrat
      @rpyrat 5 лет назад +17

      Exactly3

    • @brendanswords4659
      @brendanswords4659 5 лет назад +51

      Well there was presumably a lot of thought into how he was going to play it to make it sound good

  • @DamaniJones
    @DamaniJones 6 лет назад +2009

    This man played the Fibonacci sequence so well that he was transported into nature lol.

  • @Gimbergp
    @Gimbergp 6 лет назад +26249

    Now play the Pythagoras theorem

    • @takumijoong6271
      @takumijoong6271 6 лет назад +361

      Gimberg Preval underrated comment

    • @bonbon2235
      @bonbon2235 6 лет назад +1043

      That’s makes no sense it’s not a sequence

    • @MrShyguyRS
      @MrShyguyRS 6 лет назад +467

      bon bon woosh

    • @bonbon2235
      @bonbon2235 6 лет назад +341

      Julius Trenkler r/doublewooooosh

    • @MrShyguyRS
      @MrShyguyRS 6 лет назад +258

      bon bon Boi nowhere in your comment was there a joke for me to miss. Additionally, there was no indication that you actually got OP's joke in the first place.

  • @gracerongli3929
    @gracerongli3929 4 года назад +417

    When I was about seven or eight years old, after seeing a lot of my mathematician father's notebooks with beautiful and mysterious math formulas like divine music notes from the sky, I asked my father, "dad, what is mathematics?". He answered, "at the highest level, it is like music, you can only feel". I never forget that moment....

    • @hentaiyamete1190
      @hentaiyamete1190 4 года назад +11

      I'm pretty sure, he inspired you to do the things that which you love such as the multiple wave lengths of each notes traveling through the air into our ears and of course our heart content.

    • @gracerongli3929
      @gracerongli3929 4 года назад +14

      @@hentaiyamete1190 yes, the rhythm of our heartbeat is the most beautiful music, when it’s tuned into the frequency of vibration of universe

    • @ikidu1102
      @ikidu1102 3 года назад +5

      @@gracerongli3929 He's right indeed. I felt the whole beauty of mathematics as soon as you make your first proof of a theorem. Finding the "idea" or the "spark" that makes a proof a proof is a very intuitive process, indeed only something that can be felt.

    • @afulford
      @afulford 2 года назад

      Beautiful.

    • @calypso
      @calypso 2 года назад +1

      Lol sure that thing happened 🤣

  • @LeaveBetter
    @LeaveBetter 5 лет назад +22147

    Better be careful playing that, you might open some portals or something.

  • @kurisukunn2495
    @kurisukunn2495 5 лет назад +3183

    Ive never imagined that math can make you cry the other way

  • @dannychatzi4834
    @dannychatzi4834 4 года назад +3284

    Composing music with maths. This is just magical.

    • @petrovbulgaria7160
      @petrovbulgaria7160 4 года назад +13

      Totally!

    • @MakLife
      @MakLife 4 года назад +72

      Music is based on maths, specifically the intervals between notes; simple ratios sound nice to the human brain.
      (Though in the modern tuning system of equal temperament, approximations of those ratios are used as just using the ratios will render many keys and chords useless, but your brain doesn’t really notice the difference between equal temperament and the ratios unless you’re really listening for it.)

    • @gtgodbear6320
      @gtgodbear6320 4 года назад +25

      Bach wrote most of his music with math first then translated it into music.

    • @nuovoalbergooperai2630
      @nuovoalbergooperai2630 4 года назад +19

      music is math

    • @alexandrahsueh4428
      @alexandrahsueh4428 4 года назад +15

      mathimagical :)

  • @Leah1run
    @Leah1run 2 года назад +22

    PLEASE I am literally BEGGING you to make this song longer…. It’s so beautiful 😢

  • @SpectralChimera
    @SpectralChimera 6 лет назад +2282

    *when the recommendation is actually worth it*

  • @victort.4798
    @victort.4798 4 года назад +319

    This should be in a detective movie. Like this mysterious piano is playing this song and you don't know what it means, until this super smart person figures out it's the fibonacci sequence in E major, and that leads them to the next clue

    • @Rising_Pho3nix_23
      @Rising_Pho3nix_23 2 года назад +5

      something like this is in the show fringe. child music prodigy just cant solve the end of the song, and a mathematician cant complete a formula. i wont spoil it for you

    • @ardhendumitra3458
      @ardhendumitra3458 2 года назад +4

      there is a detective Conan movie like this

    • @VenThusiaist
      @VenThusiaist 2 года назад +2

      what

    • @philipmurray6897
      @philipmurray6897 2 года назад

      Look at criminals minds codas theme tune

    • @dainswedd9900
      @dainswedd9900 2 года назад

      @@ardhendumitra3458 and also moonlight sonata murder case, the very ep 11

  • @joshp6061
    @joshp6061 5 лет назад +1506

    You can make music out of anything if you add harmonizing notes like he did

    • @TechnicalDribbler
      @TechnicalDribbler 5 лет назад +218

      Yea i wanted to hear it without the harmonizing notes. Kinda disappointed.

    • @TechnicalDribbler
      @TechnicalDribbler 5 лет назад +55

      @@CaptainMyCaptain33 dude.. what.. 😂😂

    • @mukulabdagiri4726
      @mukulabdagiri4726 5 лет назад +56

      Right.. it sounds harmonious just because he is adding notes.. otherwise the numbers are just randomly dispersed.

    • @miriahjohnson5567
      @miriahjohnson5567 5 лет назад +6

      Exactly

    • @trurocker03
      @trurocker03 5 лет назад +43

      Yeah this was a total cheat. I’d like to hear the right hand alone and see how well it creates music

  • @philiproyd6563
    @philiproyd6563 3 года назад +32

    A few years ago, I added this video clip into the favorites on my channel. After reviewing it again I see why it is a favorite. This is beautiful.

  • @jacobansari808
    @jacobansari808 5 лет назад +2026

    This sounds good because it’s in e major and has harmonies

    • @traviskoser883
      @traviskoser883 5 лет назад +65

      Euler's Number major. So glorious! :D

    • @roy2201
      @roy2201 5 лет назад +76

      Obviously because of adding the harmonie however the melodie is built up with the fibonacci scale. In General all music is created with harmonies to complete. It's not "just a piece in E Major" it's built up from a mathematical starting point not a musical inspiration.

    • @bryan.conrad
      @bryan.conrad 5 лет назад +127

      And he's playing notes corresponding to the *digits* of each number. With a system like this he could be using a random number generator and get indistinguishable results. Nothing specific to the Fibonacci sequence here.

    • @tinolucasvalencafernandes8201
      @tinolucasvalencafernandes8201 5 лет назад +5

      No, he is only using chord functions, he could have used any scale he wanted to. So he chose major to make it easier

    • @Trumpophone7
      @Trumpophone7 5 лет назад +8

      Thiks vf But the point is he didn’t use like a chromatic scale or like a whole tone scale I’m pretty sure

  • @Joepert1983
    @Joepert1983 4 года назад +1144

    I really don't care if it's right or not, the idea of putting one of the worlds most famous mathematical sequence, into musical notes, is simply brilliant. Even if it was just to act as the spark to this beautiful piece of music. The fact that he eventually made this into what it is, merely points out to me that he's probably a great musician, with an even greater open mind. I like it... Keep it up!

    • @FoxyBoxery
      @FoxyBoxery 4 года назад +14

      Well, it wasn't an act.
      This is the actual notes to numbers correlation.
      He only added the harmony (the chords)

    • @zedrictaylor1992
      @zedrictaylor1992 4 года назад +1

      A

    • @user5214
      @user5214 4 года назад +3

      @@FoxyBoxery and rhythm

    • @krishnachandra8857
      @krishnachandra8857 4 года назад +5

      Talk to Princeton Maths Department Head, Manjul Bhargava. He has proved beyond doubt, that all music is combination of mathematical sequence, the ‘Pingala series’ or Europeans commonly know it as Fibonacci sequence. Indian mathematician codified the nature’s sequence in mathematics, from where everything could be traced.

    • @balthasarte5649
      @balthasarte5649 4 года назад +1

      ACtually the Fibonacci sequence is in the Harmonic Series and Just Intonation

  • @arturryba6724
    @arturryba6724 6 лет назад +643

    Beautiful. The next one: 'music from my DNA sequence'

    • @ElectricEarth
      @ElectricEarth 6 лет назад +49

      Or how about: "music from my bowel movements." Butthoven's turd symphony. It could really make a splash.

    • @mikhailthegreatestdragon3627
      @mikhailthegreatestdragon3627 6 лет назад +3

      Electric Earth
      Bruv

    • @shunalicekazami
      @shunalicekazami 6 лет назад +1

      Electric Earth Why not mozart, he's a scatologist. Let's just say he's full of shit.

    • @gammafreak
      @gammafreak 6 лет назад +2

      Played by a biological super computer melded into our brains.

    • @rubendez
      @rubendez 6 лет назад +1

      Yesssss.

  • @NatureGloseScience
    @NatureGloseScience 3 года назад +75

    This is soooo good that it just makes me cry. I love how you put the numbers beneath the view of you playing so that we can actually see and UNDERSTAND how the music and the number sequence is being played. Truly beautifully brilliant work!

    • @deanne1671
      @deanne1671 Год назад +3

      You said what I was already feeling. Thank you! ❣️

  • @tippyandfriend
    @tippyandfriend 6 лет назад +2724

    Now I want to know what pi sounds likes, and e.

    • @user-ob6gc3io6i
      @user-ob6gc3io6i 6 лет назад +27

      Pi as music ruclips.net/video/HV1-AjwDJwM/видео.html

    • @chelseaduran762
      @chelseaduran762 6 лет назад +1

      Tippy Magoo great question

    • @jlt131
      @jlt131 6 лет назад +2

      This same user has done so:
      ruclips.net/video/OMq9he-5HUU/видео.html

    • @haronka
      @haronka 5 лет назад +4

      I am insterested in this in hexadecimal form

    • @anilkumarsharma1205
      @anilkumarsharma1205 5 лет назад +1

      @@haronka octane
      nine
      deca
      septa
      hexa
      penta
      quadrupling
      thrice
      binary etc
      so many things are there

  • @kingtesttube4996
    @kingtesttube4996 4 года назад +567

    Playing this song on the piano seems like the cheat code to unlocking the secrets of the universe.

    • @PurpleAmalgam
      @PurpleAmalgam 3 года назад +15

      nah its an easter egg

    • @kevinralfi4641
      @kevinralfi4641 3 года назад +10

      the fact that your like is the 13th number on the fibonnacci sequence

  • @LilDeuceDeuce
    @LilDeuceDeuce 6 лет назад +7151

    Incredible, incredible work...you have an amazingly creative mind

    • @aSongScout
      @aSongScout  6 лет назад +73

      Thank you!

    • @dash_R
      @dash_R 6 лет назад +14

      From LDD himself, what an honor

    • @djtrackyard1833
      @djtrackyard1833 6 лет назад +4

      LilDeuceDeuce woahhh what a surprise ... lildeucedeuce dude love ur music

    • @ciscobriano
      @ciscobriano 6 лет назад +2

      LilDeuceDeuce How can you start this on C? It seams like it can be easier to play

    • @peppelocura185
      @peppelocura185 6 лет назад +5

      I wanna listen with the number pi π or the number e sequence

  • @gsg7354
    @gsg7354 5 месяцев назад +2

    WOW that was amazing I use the numbers sequence almost daily I am truly impressed by how nice that sounded. I knew music was numbers but it never occured to me anything about how fibo could play into the world of sound & music good job man.

  • @RADIOACTIVEBUNY
    @RADIOACTIVEBUNY 6 лет назад +710

    Sometimes RUclips has a good idea when it decides to show me something.

    • @kentwinstonmedia
      @kentwinstonmedia 6 лет назад

      Same

    • @Giggiyygoo
      @Giggiyygoo 6 лет назад +1

      Yeah, I like this stuff. But oddly, I've been getting multiple recommendations for how to make my own butter, San Francisco travel tips, and proper bicycling gear ratios. None of which I have any interest in, or have viewed.

  • @anorangewithacapybaraunder2370
    @anorangewithacapybaraunder2370 5 лет назад +3224

    How to play piano,
    Step 1: Get a PhD in mathematics

    • @advocate1563
      @advocate1563 5 лет назад +45

      How to write music - get a PhD in mathematics

    • @rafaelguerra4748
      @rafaelguerra4748 5 лет назад +13

      Enter the italian mafia

    • @katherinevaldez7792
      @katherinevaldez7792 5 лет назад

      😂

    • @bxbyhair4955
      @bxbyhair4955 5 лет назад +2

      @Commenter in a Box but.. He's playing a piano???? *confusion*

    • @wereldkaart
      @wereldkaart 5 лет назад +16

      I don't think you need a PhD to google the Fibonacci sequence

  • @retrorebootmusic
    @retrorebootmusic 6 лет назад +2804

    *when simple endless addition is better at writing melodys than you*

    • @lnetz77
      @lnetz77 6 лет назад +47

      That part though! It violates rules taught in classical music theory due to jumps that aren't usually favored, but for contemporary classical aaaah fck it it works😜

    • @MCMaterac
      @MCMaterac 6 лет назад +34

      Lemme fix it... *When a basically pseudorandom melody sounds better than one written by you.* (Playing digit by digit makes it pseudorandom).

    • @TheVeritableQuandary
      @TheVeritableQuandary 6 лет назад +9

      @@MCMaterac
      I hear an echo of pointlessness.

    • @gabumonboys
      @gabumonboys 6 лет назад +5

      It's because it's all in the same scale.

    • @dandanthedandan7558
      @dandanthedandan7558 6 лет назад +18

      Pretty sure it sounds good because of the creative liberty taken into the harmony and melody; only the main scale is based on the Fibonacci sequence.
      What works, works. Do not think about it.

  • @HollwegX
    @HollwegX 15 часов назад

    This is INSANE.
    Easily one of the most beautiful melodies I ever heard.

  • @PoisedGuitar417
    @PoisedGuitar417 5 лет назад +683

    No one:
    Tool:
    NOW THIS LOOKS LIKE A JOB FOR ME

    • @zeldadevideos
      @zeldadevideos 5 лет назад

      Miguel Ponce Ponce you should look into lateralus and fibo

    • @megatroid7083
      @megatroid7083 5 лет назад +13

      @@zeldadevideos I think they commented _because_ they have already have knowledge of it

    • @weswhitbeck6645
      @weswhitbeck6645 5 лет назад

      Lateralus

  • @borisvandruff7532
    @borisvandruff7532 5 лет назад +2338

    Very impressive...
    But can you play pi-ano? Harmonizing the digits of pi?

    • @vbgvbg1133
      @vbgvbg1133 5 лет назад +73

      He did that already

    • @ModernMozartMC
      @ModernMozartMC 5 лет назад +22

      he already did

    • @goofyknight_9693
      @goofyknight_9693 5 лет назад +13

      He did

    • @switzerlandful
      @switzerlandful 5 лет назад +6

      Take 987 of the Fibonacci sequence and get the square root of it and it's first 4 digits are the same as the first 4 of pi.

    • @martinvannostrand8488
      @martinvannostrand8488 5 лет назад +16

      What is this, davie504’s channel?

  • @momonjaa
    @momonjaa 6 лет назад +1260

    Now play prime numbers

    • @primalelement8785
      @primalelement8785 6 лет назад +4

      Great idea

    •  6 лет назад +6

      I'm pretty sure it'll sound better than Schoenberg.

    • @elgamer3003
      @elgamer3003 6 лет назад +8

      Pucci approves this

    • @stronkmug1911
      @stronkmug1911 6 лет назад +1

      @@elgamer3003 I was hoping to find a reference to steel ball run but I guess this is ok

    • @lydialaughing9126
      @lydialaughing9126 6 лет назад +1

      Okay but actually do this

  • @jimfowler278
    @jimfowler278 3 года назад +32

    Incredible. I have used this as a music lesson for the classes I teach. Thank you.

  • @ernodios
    @ernodios 6 лет назад +8724

    Sounds good but it wouldn't without the other hand playing around with harmonies

    • @BrnBear
      @BrnBear 6 лет назад +607

      I disagree. I think it still would have been melodic if taken at the pace it was at.
      With the inflections of rests and the acelerando sections provide the tension.
      This is coming from someone who musics tho

    • @Naurder
      @Naurder 6 лет назад +40

      I fully agree

    • @premoist2095
      @premoist2095 6 лет назад +328

      Yeah as a musician you can tell he is compensating for the imperfections a lot. It could be performed musicly but not on its own.

    • @premoist2095
      @premoist2095 6 лет назад +116

      @@BrnBear all music is melodic, a bad performance of a scale is still melodic whether you like it or not.

    • @Dabrar
      @Dabrar 6 лет назад +188

      There isnt a right way to apply the sequence. The use is almost subjectve. There are many other approaches he could have used. The Fibonacci acts as a guidance, but not even nature follows it strictly.

  • @houloudini
    @houloudini 5 лет назад +3821

    Imagine god composing the universe with this.

  • @clowieflowers770
    @clowieflowers770 5 лет назад +1053

    when you love music but you enrolled in an engineering school

    • @Cons-Cat
      @Cons-Cat 5 лет назад +10

      Music degree programs are heavily math based too, they just have a lot of performance/producing. But engineering still has theses, so it's a similar amount.

    • @ashleyd4563
      @ashleyd4563 5 лет назад +2

      Steve Jobs loved literature and science, apparently it's a good mix! 😉

    • @braydontomak
      @braydontomak 5 лет назад +5

      I’m switching to be a music major from computer science and engineering! Do what you love🤙🏼

    • @anonymouse7773
      @anonymouse7773 5 лет назад

      Ha SAME. Too late to change now, I’m about to graduate in less than year and get a career in something that will never satisfy me like music does but whatever pays the bills and makes the fam happy...i know I know, not a good way to live life. But you know, maybe I can find a way to merge music and STEM in a way that hasn’t been done before.

    • @anonymouse7773
      @anonymouse7773 5 лет назад +2

      @@viniciusguedesdossantos2905 True true and tbh I don't actually hate STEM. I mean it wasn't my first choice but there are many really incredible real world applications and I don't want the bad experiences from college to ruin what the field actually is. Especially the field I’m going into, there are applications in gene editing and other upcoming issues in the field of medicine and ethical issues concerning it, so it’s actually really exciting. I think school sometimes takes away from the excitement of certain fields.

  • @Bflygrl2176
    @Bflygrl2176 2 года назад +4

    This is why we like music, why notes, everything is constructed the way it is and is pleasing to us. I often think about these types of things; I love this guys’ simple profundity at just laying it out the way he did!

  • @atinyknobofbutter9015
    @atinyknobofbutter9015 5 лет назад +627

    Me: im sleepy
    RUclips: *w a n n a h e a r s o m e m a t h t u n e s ?*

  • @benjaminwalter2258
    @benjaminwalter2258 5 лет назад +569

    Scrolled the comments
    Glanced back up He’s in a field now

    • @CollinBoerema
      @CollinBoerema 5 лет назад +26

      Reading your comment
      Glanced back up because of it
      Indeed he's in a field now

    • @lotvs7056
      @lotvs7056 5 лет назад +4

      Scrolled the comment
      glanced back up he‘s in a field now
      read your comment

    • @demolitionwilliams7419
      @demolitionwilliams7419 5 лет назад

      Dad the same thing while reading your comment haha

    • @matthewguard3661
      @matthewguard3661 5 лет назад +1

      @@demolitionwilliams7419 thanks dad

    • @adrena7321
      @adrena7321 5 лет назад

      same lol

  • @sharperd2
    @sharperd2 5 лет назад +2122

    “Mathematics is the alphabet with which God has written the universe”
    -Galileo Galilei.

    • @everytopicoftopicandthings2860
      @everytopicoftopicandthings2860 5 лет назад +39

      I'm glad someone else has mentioned him.

    • @Arev1978
      @Arev1978 5 лет назад +56

      Yes God is the MASTER PHYSICIST

    • @kurniasormin806
      @kurniasormin806 5 лет назад +10

      how come ?, if Galileo was burn in order to proving science to the churches ?

    • @ExTorvo
      @ExTorvo 5 лет назад +10

      @@kurniasormin806 dude please it wasn't burned. Second, there were several trials where he tried to prove his theory. It wasn't like that back then. newsroom.ucla.edu/releases/the-truth-about-galileo-and-his-conflict-with-the-catholic-church

    • @martinholland8558
      @martinholland8558 5 лет назад +18

      God is best explanation of this. Why else would such structure exist in a seemingly random universe?
      EDIT: I realize that the design argument is weak when presented like the way I did. I apologize.

  • @cookingwithsimon
    @cookingwithsimon 4 года назад +6

    Wow, David, didn't know you played piano so beautifully. I imagined I was at a memorial and you were playing that piece for our hero. Wow so beautiful, musical, mathematical, emotional, just what I needed.

  • @aSongScout
    @aSongScout  6 лет назад +6881

    Thanks for watching! For those asking about a pi song - I've actually made one for pi as well: ruclips.net/video/wM-x3pUcdeo/видео.html

    • @carlosrobbins9178
      @carlosrobbins9178 6 лет назад +11

      I never heard of VidCon before. But I logged on, and it looks confusing. How do we find you?

    • @dunmill9632
      @dunmill9632 6 лет назад +8

      How about left hand? Right hand can work on Fibonacci sequence, while I have no clue about left hand

    • @souny1372
      @souny1372 6 лет назад

      Nope

    • @Tiaggus
      @Tiaggus 6 лет назад +7

      Could you play the golden number and pi sequences? Please

    • @anybodynoname8767
      @anybodynoname8767 6 лет назад

      Geweldig, dit is echt ziek vet👍

  • @ltrizzle12
    @ltrizzle12 5 лет назад +1147

    There’s something so unnatural about a guy playing a digital piano in a field.

    • @aSongScout
      @aSongScout  5 лет назад +122

      I wish I had ThePianoGuys' budget and resources to get a grand piano out there haha! Maybe someday

    • @CrazyCowboyBuilds
      @CrazyCowboyBuilds 5 лет назад +3

      ltrizzle12 ‘Mercia 😁

    • @GryphonFilmsVids
      @GryphonFilmsVids 5 лет назад +9

      I thought that part was supposed to be funny. Oh, it wasn’t supposed to be funny? *____*

    • @Zuhaa567
      @Zuhaa567 5 лет назад +1

      Thats the gist of it

    • @diegoescudero6994
      @diegoescudero6994 5 лет назад +2

      Nah, it's dope

  • @emmanuelwinston8817
    @emmanuelwinston8817 6 лет назад +802

    I see so many people disliking this man. Now come on! He did something creative. At least give him credit for that!

    • @User-ju9rv
      @User-ju9rv 6 лет назад +9

      Emmanuel Winston except it's not creative! There are much better ways this could've been done!

    • @sdivine13
      @sdivine13 6 лет назад +3

      James maynard keenan did it first and did it better

    • @businessbuilder92
      @businessbuilder92 6 лет назад +2

      I think mentioning Fibonacci attracts detractors, though i could be wrong

    • @supernovasightseeing4133
      @supernovasightseeing4133 6 лет назад +4

      No, he didnt do anything creative. He tried to apply math to music. All he did was to prove that science these days has become a "religion", trying to smear math over everything they come across. :P

    • @RyanRenteria
      @RyanRenteria 6 лет назад +8

      its really not that creative. certainly not creative enough to warrant making a youtube video about it. its just a random number generator in e major. been done a million times before

  • @AndyBigMac
    @AndyBigMac 2 месяца назад +1

    Last night, I had a dream that Animusic 3 had a secret special teaser, and aSongScout posted a piano version of it, but he ruined the whole surprise because it had not been released to the public yet. Also, he had posted it on his aGameScout channel, which made no sense and made me sad because I had wished that his aSongScout channel would see the light again, and not only that, but in the end, it wouldn't be perfect and he would have to reupload a new version to the channel again! Then I met Wayne Lytle, who rudely walked away after saying hi for a few seconds, and Dave Crognale, who stayed longer, but I still didn't seem to get to talk to him in the entirety. Anyways, I hope someday my brother hearts this comment.

  • @yezsir715
    @yezsir715 5 лет назад +533

    The music is so good that he got spawned in the forest out of nowhere

    • @jayv.1983
      @jayv.1983 5 лет назад +8

      LMFAO

    • @Colonies_Dev
      @Colonies_Dev 5 лет назад +12

      It's like in legend of Zelda

    • @BUCKETHEADache
      @BUCKETHEADache 5 лет назад +1

      @@Colonies_Dev song of soaring 🤔

    • @Colonies_Dev
      @Colonies_Dev 5 лет назад

      @@BUCKETHEADache I was thinking of the song you learn after forest temple in ocarina of Time xD

    • @Ying-yang6969
      @Ying-yang6969 5 лет назад

      Lol

  • @TheShadowless
    @TheShadowless 5 лет назад +1657

    I never believed my teacher when she said “math is in everything”
    Oh boy how wrong I was 😂

    • @ifyoubelieveanythingmatter8924
      @ifyoubelieveanythingmatter8924 5 лет назад +25

      Pythagoras said " All is number . "

    • @shiptadaharu1678
      @shiptadaharu1678 5 лет назад +14

      Math is in regular music as well

    • @terjir.
      @terjir. 5 лет назад +1

      I know same..

    • @qscott777
      @qscott777 5 лет назад +31

      There's nothing mathematical about this because of the way he's doing it. He could to the same thing with literally any series of numbers because he's putting it to the notes in a scale.

    • @manischkreativ8868
      @manischkreativ8868 5 лет назад +4

      My dad told me something similar, when I was seven.
      This was when I secretly started fearing life.

  • @quantumstate4796
    @quantumstate4796 5 лет назад +939

    Me:Uses calculator for calculation.
    Him:Uses piano for calculation.

    • @zoltano_cortez
      @zoltano_cortez 5 лет назад +5

      ashib thapa i bet there is a system one could devise to actually do math on piano, sort of like an abacus but nothing like an abacus.

    • @gurudattahh3345
      @gurudattahh3345 5 лет назад +1

      And someone used calculator to play music😂

  • @foureducks1248
    @foureducks1248 3 года назад +27

    Lateralus by Tool is also something to check out. Their usage of syllables follows the sequence, and some other things, such as the intro being 1 minute and 38 seconds long: 13 and 8 are numbers in the sequence, and 13:8 is also thus, an example of the golden ratio. There's an in depth video on all the math they crammed into their 9+ minute song called "How Tool Used Math to Create 'Lateralus'".

  • @artofdylan2356
    @artofdylan2356 6 лет назад +353

    I love how you transported into the garden haha

  • @xandermijares342
    @xandermijares342 6 лет назад +1049

    Fibonacci has been waiting for someone to discover this.

  • @joaomatheus6222
    @joaomatheus6222 5 лет назад +103

    SPIRAL OUT
    KEEP
    GOING

  • @JoshDaniel-c8j
    @JoshDaniel-c8j 11 дней назад

    sounds pretty majestic actually. from what i've known about music. it usually falls in between two keys: major and minor. major being more uplifting, minor being more sad, mellow etc. this sounds otherworldy honestly.

  • @tnuoccaeht
    @tnuoccaeht 6 лет назад +212

    I remember when I first saw your pi video, my life circumstances were just like now. I feel like we’ve all come full circle.

    • @RennieAsh
      @RennieAsh 6 лет назад +1

      Couldn't stop at one slice of the pi, you had to have the whole thing ;)

    • @Angel-rq3pi
      @Angel-rq3pi 6 лет назад

      Rennie Ash "and Bring me done pie! I loves me some pie." Dean, to Sam

    • @floppydisk4500
      @floppydisk4500 6 лет назад +1

      Then I guess that means you should be ready for it to spiral out of control 😉

  • @feuwn00256
    @feuwn00256 5 лет назад +1583

    I Guess Fibonacci also told you to pick E Major scale 😉

    • @Darrel_Owen
      @Darrel_Owen 5 лет назад +158

      Right? Because Fibonacceeeeeee!

    • @feuwn00256
      @feuwn00256 5 лет назад +35

      @@holly3520 You're right he's a genius D Major wouldn't be exactly the same at all 👍🏻

    • @feuwn00256
      @feuwn00256 5 лет назад +11

      @@holly3520 Then Fibonaccd does not sound that great 😂

    • @aa5284
      @aa5284 5 лет назад +3

      @@feuwn00256 hi I love you

    • @jayhache5609
      @jayhache5609 5 лет назад +6

      Because F Ascending Melodic Minor would somehow be too appropriate...

  • @pyqio
    @pyqio 6 лет назад +21

    The Fibonacci sequence is naturally beautiful, and everything is done with it makes that thing amazing. This piece of music doesn’t disappoint this quote. Good job!

  • @dorksauce6676
    @dorksauce6676 2 года назад +7

    Man the goosebumps I got when you began playing. It was BEAUTIFUL my dude. I know this comment is late by a few years, but excellent work nontheless.

  • @ihateidiots1316
    @ihateidiots1316 6 лет назад +600

    Can you play x² + 2x - 4 = 0 ?

    • @MonteePoke
      @MonteePoke 6 лет назад +117

      What's the point of playing two notes?

    • @andreyb4593
      @andreyb4593 6 лет назад

      School program, about 9 class

    • @bertjamsolina2663
      @bertjamsolina2663 6 лет назад +20

      He could actually try by substituting x values into the equation huehue

    • @akhilmichael7604
      @akhilmichael7604 6 лет назад +2

      u play the 2 root numbers of the equation

    • @lnetz77
      @lnetz77 6 лет назад +4

      @@akhilmichael7604 interesting!!!! If we took your approach, then this equation would be a fancy way of saying the pianist must play 0 and -2; those are the roots from "x(x+2)=4," which is the same thing)... And if 0 on the scale of E Maj is d#, then here's my question: would -2 in this system be the stand in for the note of b, or would it not exist at all in this song? Just because if we stuck to how this man laid numbers out on the scale fot the Fibonacci sequence, then b should technically be equal to 5.... Yet he doesn't use negative numbers.

  • @snailboat9687
    @snailboat9687 5 лет назад +3546

    “So what’s your favorite music genre?”
    “Math”
    Thanks for all the likes! Never got this many.

    • @weegee_47
      @weegee_47 5 лет назад +36

      I mean, Math Rock is a legitimate genre

    • @snailboat9687
      @snailboat9687 5 лет назад +4

      Victor Munoz oh wow. I have to check that out

    • @enabler2456
      @enabler2456 5 лет назад +3

      How do youtube likes make you feel?

    • @snailboat9687
      @snailboat9687 5 лет назад

      Enabler I feel meh. I’m thankful and happy I made that many people happy but tbh I don’t really care.

    • @DukeOfEarl88
      @DukeOfEarl88 5 лет назад +2

      There’s not much which is more lame than thanking people for likes on a RUclips comment.

  • @HerpDerp
    @HerpDerp 6 лет назад +81

    10% of comments "this is great"
    1% of comments "this is really great, have you heard of >this piece< by >this band

  • @chloemacdonald1892
    @chloemacdonald1892 2 года назад +2

    Please put this on your spotify! Four years later it still gets stuck in my head sometimes!

  • @TiagoIanuck
    @TiagoIanuck 5 лет назад +1191

    Oh, com'on, this is just an E7+ improvisation, any sequence will sound nice.

    • @AboveAllNations
      @AboveAllNations 5 лет назад +88

      There should be a Fibonacci sequence challenge where people assign numbers to complimentary items and film the results. Like, how about a Fibonacci cooking challenge using Italian ingredients like garlic, olive oil, Parmesan cheese, basil, tomatoes, and pasta. IMAGINE THE COMBINATIONS, WOW MATH IS AMAZING!!!

    • @witri9
      @witri9 5 лет назад +24

      Arthur I fell for it. Tell me how it’s a trick.

    • @Erg893
      @Erg893 5 лет назад +12

      @@witri9 do your research or start practising music

    • @XxQueenChristinaxX
      @XxQueenChristinaxX 5 лет назад +19

      Doesn't this work for any key too?

    • @michaelseminatore6148
      @michaelseminatore6148 5 лет назад +46

      Exactly, and actually, if you concentrate on just the "melody" itself, it just sounds like random notes in the scale he chose, which it kind of is.

  • @j.m.mariano6654
    @j.m.mariano6654 5 лет назад +1821

    I am sure most of us didn't search for this video.

    • @PangestuRatnoKumoro
      @PangestuRatnoKumoro 5 лет назад +14

      I found this video on my yt recommendation, before i clicked it, my browser I use suddenly reloaded. So I search this video

    • @jixster1566
      @jixster1566 5 лет назад +4

      I did

    • @feminico2613
      @feminico2613 5 лет назад +4

      I did lol

    • @awesomestevie27
      @awesomestevie27 5 лет назад +1

      J.M. Mariano I created the intention to learn about the golden ratio thru music so here it was for me

    • @NaveenDewangan
      @NaveenDewangan 5 лет назад

      I searched yesterday what is Fibonacci series... Now this was recommended to me

  • @jeffreycfmok
    @jeffreycfmok 5 лет назад +958

    More impressive is how you got your electric keyboard to work outside in the park

    • @djteejay87
      @djteejay87 5 лет назад +45

      On battery?

    • @svedge42
      @svedge42 5 лет назад +6

      or maybe playback? ;/

    • @dionyates2482
      @dionyates2482 5 лет назад +125

      USB trees - they're a thing now.

    • @niaurina98
      @niaurina98 5 лет назад +19

      My keyboard has battery 😂

    • @reinortega23
      @reinortega23 5 лет назад +22

      Have you heard about something called the battery...

  • @bluebull399
    @bluebull399 3 года назад +141

    For those that don't play the piano. Ill let you into a secret. Once you know the keys and scales, you can basically press any key you want in that scale and it will sound good.
    If you look at his left hand he is playing arpegiated chords that set the mood or feel of the music. However, the right is essentially playing random notes (the fibbernachi sequence). However, it still sounds good because it's in key.
    I'll prove it, with your left hand hold down C, E and G. Now with your right hand, press any white note you like, it doesn't matter which one, they will all sound good.
    You've just learnt the chord of C, in the key of C with the scale of C. A free one hour piano lesson in 10 seconds...you're welcome.

    • @MaximumSunlite
      @MaximumSunlite 3 года назад

      👀👀👀

    • @acakeyboi4345
      @acakeyboi4345 3 года назад +6

      Don’t mind me, taking notes rn.

    • @balvsmalvs5425
      @balvsmalvs5425 2 года назад

      Well done.

    • @beatsoara
      @beatsoara 2 года назад +2

      how much i owe u?

    • @commonpike
      @commonpike Год назад +2

      With your left hand, just hold the C and G. The E sounds a little dark when it's that low.
      Now do the same with F and C. Bang! That's Lydian.

  • @aldozulfikar54
    @aldozulfikar54 6 лет назад +1324

    Can you play 10÷3 ?

    • @logantaylor1606
      @logantaylor1606 6 лет назад +20

      I Just Looking For a Warm hahahahaha this is great

    • @w.tibbsclemens636
      @w.tibbsclemens636 6 лет назад +39

      Actually you could... It depends on how you would apply it.. you could apply it to the tuning ratio of the strings on the piano keys.. or rhythmically, or chordal or intervallic ratios too. Actually whatever number you can think of even imaginary ones , they can all b represented with music in some way

    • @cruz.c
      @cruz.c 6 лет назад +3

      yea just tune the 10th a 0.1 reapeating down and there ya go

    • @flint6753
      @flint6753 6 лет назад +5

      Just replay 0:53 as much as you'd like

    • @melodymate8978
      @melodymate8978 6 лет назад

      I'm pretty sure it's gonna be boring lul

  • @Thelonelyscavenger
    @Thelonelyscavenger 5 лет назад +234

    I bet no one else though of this.....
    TOOL- "Hold my beer"

  • @duVillage
    @duVillage 6 лет назад +564

    Amazing how well an unplugged electrical piano still plays!
    5 stars per banana!

    • @breakdownwolf4423
      @breakdownwolf4423 6 лет назад +61

      Ron 'duVillage' van Dorp some electric pianos can use batteries too

    • @duVillage
      @duVillage 6 лет назад +28

      Breakdown Wolf Good thing it has no speakers either then ^_^

    • @duality4y
      @duality4y 6 лет назад +3

      Yea what is that about

    • @mikaeljeanpierre7570
      @mikaeljeanpierre7570 6 лет назад +36

      its got wifi

    • @castiello_008
      @castiello_008 6 лет назад +3

      Some electric keyboards operate on batteries, and sound the same.

  • @STEAMzgjoi
    @STEAMzgjoi 4 года назад +80

    "There is geometry in the humming of the strings, there is music in the spacing of the spheres." - Pythagoras

  • @katrailhitchens7072
    @katrailhitchens7072 5 лет назад +96

    He secretly gave us his phone number

    • @MrProminister
      @MrProminister 5 лет назад +9

      And his Bank Acc. No. with all PIN's numbers also plus date of birth and end of World date.

  • @xy6830
    @xy6830 6 лет назад +335

    Mathematics can give a lot of ideas for music... Nature sounds beautiful...

    • @Shervin86
      @Shervin86 6 лет назад +19

      Blue Flame music IS mathmatical vibrations...

    • @TheClassicDoomGuy
      @TheClassicDoomGuy 6 лет назад +6

      Proof we love in a simulation bro everything goes back to numbers

    • @devanarayanj6689
      @devanarayanj6689 6 лет назад +4

      I read it as Naruto sounds beautiful.

    • @riboanpjg
      @riboanpjg 6 лет назад

      Blue Flame I guess this would be irl background music

  • @meking1808
    @meking1808 5 лет назад +6

    This is AMAZING!! Honestly, I didn't think it would sound the great. Good job!

  • @kalp7568
    @kalp7568 4 года назад +133

    I showed This To My Math Teacher Now He Teaches Us Maths With Piano.

  • @victorhenrique9212
    @victorhenrique9212 6 лет назад +132

    The music "Lateralus" from tool was writen based on the Fibonacci sequence.

    • @colbybeltz8836
      @colbybeltz8836 6 лет назад +5

      Victor Henrique W A T C H I T B E N D

    • @nikitasavenged9374
      @nikitasavenged9374 6 лет назад +1

      Well, the lyrics. Not the music itself, IIRC

    • @victorhenrique9212
      @victorhenrique9212 6 лет назад +2

      Nikitas Avenged The music too, watch the drum beat time.

    • @NatalyaPlaysPiano
      @NatalyaPlaysPiano 6 лет назад +2

      Victor Henrique 😮 I didn't know that! Big TOOL fan!

    • @VioletPhoenixDude
      @VioletPhoenixDude 6 лет назад +2

      There's a video on it. ❤
      ruclips.net/video/wS7CZIJVxFY/видео.html

  • @megann1416
    @megann1416 6 лет назад +522

    I never thought I’d say this but...
    maths is beautiful

    • @shalemprayerhouse6654
      @shalemprayerhouse6654 6 лет назад +2

      Good for ya

    • @User-ju9rv
      @User-ju9rv 6 лет назад +8

      Welp you're right and you're wrong miraculer. You can literally take any song and convert different keys into numbers. However, this isn't actually the Fibonacci sequence. This is just a bunch of specific numbers.

    • @asukanakamura3743
      @asukanakamura3743 6 лет назад

      miraculer 1416 true

    • @seanl.5181
      @seanl.5181 6 лет назад +2

      Math is beautiful anyway. It's surprising symmetries and marvelous properties are nice to derive and comprehend. It also predicts completely new things, such as the antielectron.

    • @jeerdace8625
      @jeerdace8625 6 лет назад

      Search up Euler's identity. Combines five fundamental concepts in mathematics seamlessly and is voted the most beautiful equation ever.

  • @lojanak60
    @lojanak60 6 лет назад +16

    wow such a fantastically beautiful work..
    in fact, I'm listening to this in memory of my lovely dad who was a genuine math-lover. He passed away few months 4 months ago..
    thank you!

  • @benjaminmckinney7246
    @benjaminmckinney7246 4 года назад +10

    Man I wish I could like this video a million times, every time it bring about the most positive emotions inside me. Thank you so much for bringing this together❤️

  • @truther11seeker63
    @truther11seeker63 6 лет назад +41

    Well done Maestro. The brilliance of a human mind at its finest.

    • @lkdsamte4910
      @lkdsamte4910 6 лет назад +3

      Truther11 Seeker its God given wisdom bro.

    • @nyloaf
      @nyloaf 6 лет назад +2

      @@lkdsamte4910 or maybe its just skill he learned himself that should be credited to said person 😘

    • @lkdsamte4910
      @lkdsamte4910 6 лет назад +1

      Nyloaf God sets things and patterns and all laws of science ..

    • @nyloaf
      @nyloaf 6 лет назад +1

      @@lkdsamte4910 im not going to get into an argument with you about this, its impossible to try to discuss something like this with someone that doesnt want to understand it anyway

    • @lkdsamte4910
      @lkdsamte4910 6 лет назад

      Nyloaf why do you feel sp hard to acknowledge God? Im not saying he has no talent. Ineed he got Im telling that his talent comes from God.

  • @lakejizzio7777
    @lakejizzio7777 6 лет назад +1950

    Comments:
    +People who don't know music theory: "This proofs god's existence bla bla bla"
    -People who know music theory: "This will work on any sequence because every note is in E major"

    • @itech40
      @itech40 6 лет назад +88

      Well. This music isn't a proof of God obv... lol
      The fact that we find in literally everywhere thought, uh is quite an incredible proof of God. It is even in your DNA o.o!

    • @mzellecaro4600
      @mzellecaro4600 6 лет назад +64

      @@itech40 stop with this, always thinking that Fibonacci is everywhere because he is NOT . Nature is beautiful because it isn't symmetric, and the presence of Fibonacci in the DNA depends of individuals , so this is false

    • @davidjohnston710
      @davidjohnston710 5 лет назад +23

      Fibonacci, as well as Mandelbrot Fractals, Pi, repeating decimals, are all instances of calculations that are the result of multiple iterations, sometimes never reaching a conclusion with a definable whole number unit. Prime numbers are interesting because they fit a specific limitation of division, not divisible by other numbers than itself or one. In either case, there is a hint of something infinite on their characteristics. The iterations could continue as long into the future as we have time to look, and the same for discovering prime numbers.

    • @LarJgrip
      @LarJgrip 5 лет назад +15

      David Johnston
      You seem to understand a little bit about math, let me ask you …
      …where in your opinion did math come from?

    • @LarJgrip
      @LarJgrip 5 лет назад +6

      türk türkoğlu
      A little triggered are we?

  • @Andmau2552
    @Andmau2552 6 лет назад +1297

    I mean every note on a scale sounds good with the rest of the scale, that's what they were designed for, but still its a great piece with a lot of emotion :D

    • @cameoshadowness7757
      @cameoshadowness7757 6 лет назад +35

      Andrés Ksnv
      But order and harmony is the key.

    • @joakimawesome
      @joakimawesome 6 лет назад +233

      It only sounded good because of good chord progression and harmonization by the left hand. Otherwise it's randomness by itself.

    • @Andmau2552
      @Andmau2552 6 лет назад +31

      Joakim Nguyen I mean, I can't respond because I know very little about composition and less about piano, but my point is that the piece in the video does not represent the fibonacci sequence in music. What do you think?

    • @joakimawesome
      @joakimawesome 6 лет назад +33

      So in composition, you can take any melody and create a chord progression and harmonize it any way you want. For example, you could try to make the majority of the piece minor instead. You could even make it sound like jazz (but not quite sure if the melody will allow for any success at jazz). Perhaps you wanted to make it sound thematically random on purpose. This piece is one representation, or one interpretation, of the Fibonacci sequence in music. There is a variety of ways you can represent it, so there is no absolute way of representing *The* Fibonacci sequence... so you're right, but in addition there is no way to make a piece that does.

    • @joakimawesome
      @joakimawesome 6 лет назад +14

      I would also add, that this representation was beautifully harmonized with an excellent chord progression as you can hear, so props to the composer! :)

  • @martinvoet217
    @martinvoet217 3 года назад +2

    It is the harmonies that did the job. Just a very tallented composer with a sequence to deal with.

  • @christinew1644
    @christinew1644 6 лет назад +351

    As a gigantic nerd, I was very excited to see this. It did not disappoint.

  • @NatalyaPlaysPiano
    @NatalyaPlaysPiano 6 лет назад +646

    Damn that was my idea! Started writing it last year haha 😅 I love mathematics in music!! Incredible work, love the editing!

    • @Katwashere71
      @Katwashere71 6 лет назад +39

      Natalya Plays Piano let this be a lesson to move quicker on your ideas x

    • @chrheca
      @chrheca 6 лет назад +97

      Actually let this be a lesson on keep on working and we all look forward to your version of it. No nedd to get competitive for no reason. Good luck

    • @simasjanusas1766
      @simasjanusas1766 6 лет назад +6

      Natalya Plays Piano have you tried playing pi values?

    • @beepbeep6200
      @beepbeep6200 6 лет назад +4

      Christian Hess well said

    • @chrheca
      @chrheca 6 лет назад +1

      beepbeep thank ya

  • @elkieelkie
    @elkieelkie 6 лет назад +48

    I love my RUclips recommendations

  • @amart3632
    @amart3632 3 года назад +12

    🎵 This is the song that never ends...
    Yes it goes on and on my friend... 🎵

  • @MapexMiata
    @MapexMiata 6 лет назад +5

    Far more beautiful sounding than I anticipated, thank you for doing this and well done!!

  • @blackcoffee5415
    @blackcoffee5415 5 лет назад +219

    Thanks, now im gonna try to play my math score, that might sounds like funeral march?

  • @tsolc8876
    @tsolc8876 5 лет назад +37

    I had never experienced the feeling i just experienced. It was one of amazement, awe and wonder and at the same time one of deep sadness and homesickness finally a sense of wisdom and peace.

    • @angrytedtalks
      @angrytedtalks 5 лет назад +1

      Same. Frustration and anger too.

    • @tsolc8876
      @tsolc8876 5 лет назад +1

      Angry Ted I didn’t feel those 2 lol

    • @c.l.368
      @c.l.368 5 лет назад

      Yea, I could feel I was turtling too, weird... but super deep....

  • @LetheMaghia
    @LetheMaghia 4 года назад +5

    This is so great. It sounds so beautiful. It's always so intruiging to wonder how certain patterns would sound as music

  • @yagzozandibek5196
    @yagzozandibek5196 6 лет назад +143

    i mean, im pretty sure this guy could make any random number sequence sound beautiful

    • @edudomingos
      @edudomingos 6 лет назад +17

      Yağız Ozan Dibek you're probably right, he actually didn't play the numbers of a Fibonacci sequence, but the digits of that numbers, what is very different.

    • @get_off_my_back
      @get_off_my_back 6 лет назад +3

      Eduardo Domingos True, he should've done chords and see how that sounded.

    • @goodknyght4319
      @goodknyght4319 6 лет назад

      Nooo, what about 111111111111111111111

    • @moonsuske
      @moonsuske 6 лет назад

      Thtas seems true

    • @bradleyhenry1996
      @bradleyhenry1996 6 лет назад

      Is that Gameboy Pokemon I see 👏🏼👏🏼

  • @binyguy
    @binyguy 5 лет назад +36

    Love it. Could you make this song a longer version please?
    Sounds from the heaven

  • @solargreg1
    @solargreg1 5 лет назад +37

    This is a beautiful piece of music, but I agree with other commenters who have said it only sounds good because it started with a major scale, which is already pre-selected to contain notes that harmonize. It has half-steps and whole-steps, so the proportionality of pitches and intervals is not the same as for natural numbers. You've assigned the distance from 0 to 1 is a half-step, but your distance from 1 to 2 is a whole step. So the relationship of pitch intervals to each other is not proportional to a Fibonacci sequence.
    To hear what a Fibonacci sequence sounds like in the audio domain, you need to use a full chromatic scale. Assign each half-step to equal the quantity of 1. Start a Fibonacci sequence in a very low octave, because you'll need a lot of high notes. On a piano, you'll only be able to explore the sequence up to the number 88.
    The first several numbers fit inside the first octave (0 1 1 2 3 5 8) , then you have 13 21 in the second octave, 34 in the third octave, 55 is in the 5th octave, and 89 (frustratingly) wont even fit on the piano, unless you have some kind of digital programmable thing. The next one, 144, im not sure, but i think is out of the range Given that human hearing is only about 9 or 10 octaves wide, the sequence will rapidly expand beyond human hearing.
    I tried this sequence on a guitar, and it produces a mildly consonant series at first, increasingly dissonant above 13. However, I think it should be possible for someone more creative than me to compose a piece that sounds interesting using this kind of scale.
    If you ever try this, I'd be very interested to hear what you come up with.

    • @ThisReckless
      @ThisReckless 4 года назад +1

      But how do you solve the 0+0=1

    • @solargreg1
      @solargreg1 4 года назад +3

      @@ThisReckless Good question. A sequence does not necessarily have to start from 0, it can have some pre-defined starting point. The classic Fibonacci sequence is arbitrarily defined to start from O and 1. Otherwise, if it started from 0 and 0, it would simply repeat zero's forever, which is not very interesting. You can also create Fibonacci sequences starting with any two numbers you want, and see what the sequence produces. Try negative numbers, fractions, or irrationals. This is not necessarily musical, its just fun math.

  • @Howzley
    @Howzley 3 года назад +2

    It’s so nice to see that people find enjoyment in these aspects of math. I recently had to write a 4000 word essay for my high school and decided to base it off of the Fibonacci Sequence and the Golden Ratio derived from it. Although it was an interesting experience I don’t think it’s something I would ever do again as it was a gigantic pain in the ass.

  • @pratyushsrivastava7536
    @pratyushsrivastava7536 6 лет назад +6

    Now you can listen to the nature's beauty which could only be felt before.... Such an amazing work it is! Thank you so much😊

  • @dannyboi981
    @dannyboi981 6 лет назад +4933

    Math should not sound this pretty

    • @cutelyricsfromlily3126
      @cutelyricsfromlily3126 6 лет назад +307

      Math is actually THIS PRETTY

    • @darionkormos-mysticcity7997
      @darionkormos-mysticcity7997 6 лет назад +83

      But it can... so deal with it. *Puts on sunglasses like a boss*

    • @formbi
      @formbi 6 лет назад +40

      it doesn't have to, it would sound much different if he used ex. hexadecimal system

    • @darionkormos-mysticcity7997
      @darionkormos-mysticcity7997 6 лет назад +3

      I guess so

    • @WWuxian
      @WWuxian 6 лет назад +24

      i know how you feel about it but now we just discovered that math is truly amazing

  • @teresemaple4134
    @teresemaple4134 6 лет назад +1360

    This is truly fascinating and BEAUTIFUL❤️✨

  • @taskforce1174
    @taskforce1174 2 дня назад

    It's like a growing life. It has so much vitality and positive energy. It's wonderful!

  • @swingardjr
    @swingardjr 6 лет назад +20

    So awesome! Have become so intrigued by the fibbanaci numbers and have always appreciated solo piano that was just awesome. Only down side it wasn't longer. Lol. Thanks so good

  • @jessiecator1740
    @jessiecator1740 5 лет назад +57

    I feel like something should have unlocked, did something unlock? Did anyone else feel it?

    • @arkbirdarcher19
      @arkbirdarcher19 5 лет назад

      Yeah I know I have

    • @BIGCHUNEx
      @BIGCHUNEx 4 года назад

      Jessie Cator i did, I’m super saiyan now thank you very much.

  • @aawagga
    @aawagga 5 лет назад +286

    Now speed it up 2x faster and it sounds like an anime opening.