Pattern-chaser wrote: ↑January 3rd, 2024, 8:35 am
This topic/discussion is about art, so naturally there are many 'subjective' opinions that may be held, on so many areas of music (and art) it's difficult to keep track of them all! And I don't want to drag this interesting discussion down into details, perhaps unhelpfully.
But I would like to briefly defend percussion. The primary characteristic of percussion instruments is the percussive transients, but they also have notes as well as small explosions presented rhythmically (i.e. 'in time'). And there are other instruments, too, that feature percussive elements to their sounds. The obvious example is plucked string instruments, which feature a clear percussive start to nearly every note.
My summary would be that most instruments (including voice) have both notes and rhythm; frequency and time. Oh, and I think there is a large and unmentioned grey area between harmony and "inharmony", starting with untypical (of Western music) scales and modalities, and progressing from there, eventually, into pure noise.
Yes, aesthetic preferences and areas of interest are going to be different for each of us
Natural sound generation in musical instruments is almost always a noisy generator, followed by a resonant system. The noisy generator is something like movement of air, a bow dragged across a string, a plucking action or a percussive impulse. That is usually connected to a resonant system, such as a column of air, a string, or a membrane. So almost all musical instrument sounds have a relatively chaotic generator which might be transient or continuous, followed by a resonant system which uses feedback to emphasize related resonances (often the harmonic series, but sometimes other relationships, as in a cymbal or some types of drums). In sound synthesis, this is done most directly by physical modeling, which uses algorithms to model the resonant system, and either algorithms or samples to produce the chaotic generator.
Yes, I agree that there is a large, often ignored, gray area between harmony and dissonance. Cymbals being one of the alternative types of relationships between pitches . . . not a harmonic series, but a different type of relationship. This interesting area has started to be explored by music with an ambient influence, with many natural inharmonic sounds like the sound of the wind or a waterfall being presented as aesthetically worthy of interest.
Chris