Harmonograph: A Visual Guide to the Mathematics of Music (Wooden Books North America Editions) - Softcover

Ashton, Anthony

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9781952178047: Harmonograph: A Visual Guide to the Mathematics of Music (Wooden Books North America Editions)

Synopsis

Why did Pythagoras pause outside a Blacksmith’s workshop? Can the nature of Harmony really be understood visually? Why do harmonies leave gaps or ‘commas’ when added together?

In this charming pocket book, Anthony Ashton uses a Victorian device called a Harmonograph to tell the story of Harmony and the intervals in the scale. With useful appendices and exquisite line drawings this is a unique and original introduction to this magical subject. 

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About the Author

Anthony Ashton is a journalist and economist. A lifelong interest in the building blocks of the sciences led him to the Harmonograph, a Victorian machine which draws musical intervals. After building a few in his garage, he wrote this book. 

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

Many of the drawings in this book were produced by a simple scientific instrument known as a harmonograph, an invention attributed to a Professor Blackburn in 1844. Towards the end of the nineteenth century there seems to have been a vogue for these instruments. Victorian gentlemen and ladies would attend 'soirées' or 'conversaziones', gathering round the instruments and exclaiming in wonder as they watched the beautiful and mysterious drawings appear. A shop in London sold portable models that could be folded into a case and taken to a party. There may well be some of these instruments hidden in lofts throughout the country.
From the moment I first saw drawings of this kind I was hooked: not only because of their strange beauty, but because they seemed to have a meaning―a meaning which became clearer and deeper as I found out how to make and operate a harmonograph. The instrument draws pictures of musical harmonies, linking sight and sound.
However, before going any further I feel I should issue a health warning. If you too are tempted to follow this path, beware! It is both fascinating and time-consuming.
I have acknowledged my debt to the book Harmonic Vibrations. It was coming across this book in a library soon after the end of the Second World War that introduced me to the Harmonograph. Seeing that the book had been published by Newton & Co., a firm of scientific instrument makers in Wigmore Street I went one day to see if they were still there. They were, though reduced merely to making and selling projectors. I went into the shop and held up my library copy of the book for the elderly man behind the counter to see.
“Have you any copies of this book left?” I asked him.
He stared at me as though I was some sort of ghost, and shuffled away without a word, returning in a few minutes with a dusty, unbound copy of the book.
“That's marvelous,” I said, “how much do you want for it?”
“Take it”, he said, “it's our last copy, and we're closing down tomorrow”. So I have always felt that someday I must write this book.

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