yo yo yo check it yo its calleds my little brother singin in the shower
peace out 1 luv
2007-02-11 10:30:05
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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When two loud notes are played together, they give rise to two more tones, one formed from the sum of the frequencies of the original two notes, and the other from the difference of the two frequencies. That is, you subtract the frequency of one from the other.
These extra tones are called "resultant tones". When the two original frequencies are very close together in pitch / frequency, the difference tone will be very low in pitch and will not be perceived as a musical note, but instead as wah wah wah sound. This phenomenon is called "beats". The slower the beats, the closer the two original notes are to each other in pitch.
2007-02-11 10:14:20
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answer #2
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answered by Gnomon 6
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the respond your instructor needs is D. yet, that's a terrible definition of dissonance. it incredibly is easily incredibly offensive to me. No musical relationship? What does that propose??? The implication of that's that "dissonant" song is a thoroughly arbitrary conglomeration of notes. Whoever created this definition has NO theory approximately song written from approximately 1900 till on the instant. (none of this even gets to the fact that the definitions of dissonance have replaced dramatically over the direction of song historic previous. remember that THIRDS was dissonant...)
2016-10-01 23:43:19
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answer #3
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answered by pomar 4
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beats
2007-02-11 10:06:47
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answer #4
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answered by black_lotus007@sbcglobal.net 3
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dischordant
2007-02-11 10:10:15
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answer #5
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answered by clarity 7
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disharmony
noise
2007-02-11 10:10:24
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answer #6
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answered by flywho 5
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disharmony
2007-02-11 12:25:14
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answer #7
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answered by rico3151 6
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