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Reply to Jon.

🔗robert thomas martin <robertthomasmartin@...>

6/16/2008 11:28:05 PM

My musical algorithms/substitutions work very well and consistently for
ALL equal temperaments with sometimes surprisingly beautiful results.
It is a method which music-loving non-musicians with no musical ability
whatsoever can implement in the living rooms of their homes for their
own enjoyment. My methods are child-proof and could be called
Microtonality for Dummies. My methods enable non-musicians to make
microtonal music which can compare favorably with the efforts of
genuine musicians. So there must be something good and universal about
them regardless of how disconcerting they might seem to some of the
pioneers of electronic microtonality and to others who have vested
interests in the design and manufacture of microtonal instruments.

🔗Mike Battaglia <battaglia01@...>

6/17/2008 1:04:36 AM

That isn't what Jon is saying. He's just asking what your algorithms
are, and if they are limited to 12 notes to the octave, although
perhaps unequally spaced.

-Mike

On Tue, Jun 17, 2008 at 2:28 AM, robert thomas martin
<robertthomasmartin@...> wrote:
> My musical algorithms/substitutions work very well and consistently for
> ALL equal temperaments with sometimes surprisingly beautiful results.
> It is a method which music-loving non-musicians with no musical ability
> whatsoever can implement in the living rooms of their homes for their
> own enjoyment. My methods are child-proof and could be called
> Microtonality for Dummies. My methods enable non-musicians to make
> microtonal music which can compare favorably with the efforts of
> genuine musicians. So there must be something good and universal about
> them regardless of how disconcerting they might seem to some of the
> pioneers of electronic microtonality and to others who have vested
> interests in the design and manufacture of microtonal instruments.
>
>