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Music: A Mathematical Offering [Paperback]

Dave Benson
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
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Product details

  • Paperback: 426 pages
  • Publisher: Cambridge University Press; 1 edition (23 Nov 2006)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0521619998
  • ISBN-13: 978-0521619998
  • Product Dimensions: 24.7 x 17.8 x 2 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 77,086 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
  • See Complete Table of Contents

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D. J. Benson
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Review

'… informative and well-written … Not only does this book cover basic material thoroughly, it also presents much of interest to those already familiar with the area of math and music. And the author provides a wealth of citations to the often scattered literature on the subject.' Zentralblatt MATH

'… an excellent introduction to the interdisciplinary subject of music and mathematics (which also involves physics, biology, psycho-acoustics, and the history of science and digital technology). The book can easily be used as the text for undergraduate courses.' The Mathematical Intelligencer

Review

'… informative and well-written … Not only does this book cover basic material thoroughly, it also presents much of interest to those already familiar with the area of math and music. And the author provides a wealth of citations to the often scattered literature on the subject.' Zentralblatt MATH

'… an excellent introduction to the interdisciplinary subject of music and mathematics (which also involves physics, biology, psycho-acoustics, and the history of science and digital technology). The book can easily be used as the text for undergraduate courses.' The Mathematical Intelligencer --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
12 of 12 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
For many years, Dave Benson published early versions of this text online (you can still get an online version from his website) and that public exposure has pretty much worked all the errors out of the text. No doubt the feedback that Benson received has also helped improve the text in other ways. I have to say that I find it hard to find much wrong with this book. I use many sections for my teaching (I lecture in music at University) and always find the book full of inspirational ideas. If the maths is too tough in places, you can skip over it to the next general section with impunity.

CUP have said that Benson can continue to publish his text online but, at over 500 pages, the book is a far better bet. Only criticism is that the hardback is a too expensive for undergraduate students. Even the paperback version is a little pricey. However, top marks for this thorough work.
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4 of 11 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
Ever since Dave Benson has stopped insisting on being referred to by his full double-barrelled surname and dropped the suffix his output has become far more easily understood by the general public. This book is a prime example of how he is able to go beyond the complex task of attempting to produce work which reaches both a mature and a preteen audience exclusively, yet was successfully repellent to anyone aged between these two groups. His early social experiments (once shown on UK television), into the effects of authoritative pressure or subversive encouragement on children, can be viewed as at least as influential and ethically ambiguous as the standardly quoted Milgram study, etc. ~ Particularly so, given the child subjects in question were selected on the basis of them holding existing grievances against the parent on whom they would be encouraged and told to exact humiliating and degrading punishments, without fear of reprisals. While it is not directly referenced here, this clinical trial and the underlying themes exposed (or exploited) by Dave still, by necessity, contribute to the rich tapestry of garishly-hued human background over which this text stands as omniscient controller; ready to unleash a nauseatingly bright wave of social comment and cultural gunge upon its chosen targets. All of which serves to colour the reader's understanding of this work. This is a must-have, and it is something to which you will no doubt attach great sentimental worth. If you were my best and must trusted friend, and we both had an identical copy of this book, then, were I to leave your house one day with the wrong copy, I guarantee that you would do everything in your power to return my version to me, and get your own back.
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Amazon.com:  3 reviews
42 of 43 people found the following review helpful
Great explanation of the math behind the music 6 Jan 2007
By calvinnme - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
This book is the result of material that the author compiled while teaching an undergraduate course on the subject of sound and music and their relationship with mathematics. The mathematical level of different parts of the book varies tremendously from algebra to partial differential equations. Chapter 1 begins with the fundamental question "What is special about sine waves that we consider them to be the pure sound of a given frequency?" Chapter 2 deals with the mathematical subject that answers the question "To what extent can sound be broken into sine waves?". The answer is, of course, Fourier analysis. The mathematics of Bessel functions is also developed in Chapter 2. Chapter 3 goes on to describe the mathematics associated with musical instruments, which are divided into five categories depending upon the mathematical description of the sound they produce . This is done in terms of the Fourier theory developed in chapter 2, but it is really only necessary to have a vague understanding of Fourier theory for this purpose.

Chapter 4 is where the theory of consonance and dissonance is discussed along with the simple integer ratios of frequencies. Consonance and dissonance are musical terms describing whether combinations of notes sound good together or not. This is a preparation for the discussion of scales and temperaments in Chapters 5 and 6. The emphasis in these two chapters is on the relationship between rational numbers and musical intervals. The fundamental question here is "Why does the modern western scale consist of 12 equally spaced notes to an octave?" Has it always been this way? Are there other possibilities? After the discussion of scales, the book breaks off of its main thread to consider a couple of other subjects where mathematics is involved in music, the first being computers and digital music. Chapter 7 discusses how to represent sound and music as a sequence of zeroes and ones, and again Fourier theory is used to understand the result. Also described is the closely related Z-transform for representing digital sounds, and this is then used to discuss signal processing, both as a method of manipulating sounds and producing them. This leads to a discussion of digital synthesizers in Chapter 8, where we are again confronted with the questionof what it is that makes musical instruments sound the way that they do. The discussion is based around FM synthesis. Although this is an old-fashioned method of sound synthesis, it is simple enough to understand many of the salient features before taking on more complex synthesis methods.

Chapter 9 changes the subject completely and examines the role of symmetry in music. The area of mathematics concerned with symmetry is group theory, and the reader is introduced to some of the elementary ideas from group theory that can be applied to music. The book contains numerous exercises, and the answers to almost all of them are included in the book. It should be noted that the author assumes the reader can read music, as this subject is not approached with the exception of a few entries in the appendices. Thus this book is more of mathematics for musicians rather than vice versa. There is an online version of the book available if you want to browse it before deciding to buy. To me, this is one of the clearest books on the relationship of mathematics to music I have read. The text is accessible and clear, there is a good use of graphics, and the exercises emphasize the understanding of the mathematics presented. I highly recommend it.
21 of 21 people found the following review helpful
Excellent for the right reader 19 Feb 2007
By Charles B. Madden - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
This is an important book. Although very technical, and intended for musicians with a strong mathematical background, others can learn a great deal by neglecting the more technical parts. It is probably the most complete treatment of its various topics so far. It is interestingly and well written by a strong mathematician who has researched the musical aspects well.

Despite all this, I do propose that there needs to be a more elementary treatment of much of this material for those who have not taken major coursework in college-level mathematics. Thus, Benson has left a niche for others, less gifted, to fill.
10 of 10 people found the following review helpful
Great Book 3 Jan 2008
By Jeff Graham - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
Although this book is not comprehensive (it would have to be 5 times as thick), it does contain a really terrific overview of many of the places that math and music intersect. The writing is engaging and clear. There are ample references if you want to go into more depth in a particular area. There is also a valuable list of sound recordings in Appendix G that make a lot of the material come alive. All in all this is a must have book if you are interested in math or music or both.
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