The complex mathematical proportions and elemental structure of Gothic cathedrals represent classical music. Compare the multifaceted and complicated architectural structure to the simple structure of your home.The intricacies, the details, the complexities of the patterns.Pretend you are standing in front of one of these gothic-style buildings. Think of the Rheims Cathedral or the Cathedral of Notre Dame. In order to understand the architectural structure of classical music, you need to think of the Gothic cathedrals of Europe. Can you see the squares, triangles, and rectangles that make up the shape and structure of this home? Math in Music: A Complicated Architectural Structure The architectural structure of most homes is simple and straightforward–like most genres of music. Classical music has a much more complicated structure than a few simple shapes making up your home would illustrate. But it can’t be compared to classical music. If you look at the mathematical proportions or elemental structure of your home (or any building in your city or neighborhood), it can be compared to any musical structure that would be found in jazz, rock’ n’ roll, or new age music. Do you see squares, rectangles, a couple of triangles, and maybe an oval or round shape?.Notice the architectural shapes that go into making your home.Stand in front of your home, apartment building, or condominium.Try this architectural comparison with your children: It’s a simple matter of understanding what classical music and gothic cathedrals have in common… Let me explain… Math in Music, Architecture, and Cathedrals Interestingly, people who research and study music refer to Mozart’s music as a “science,” and describe his music as “architectural” because it is built around the same mathematical proportions and elemental structure laws as are found in famous cathedrals. Just before his sixth birthday, he discovered math and “suddenly the house erupted with figures scribbled on every bit of space–walls, floors, tables, and chairs.” It comes as no surprise that the first music to be put on the computer (an orderly structured device) was the mathematical music of Bach. Bach loved the mathematical structure, patterns, and order, which can be observed most readily in his music. ![]() Many of the great composers enjoyed math and understood its pattern relationship to music. ![]() Music is an ordered pattern of sound waves and the structural patterns in music are also found in math.
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