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Do You Hear What I Hear?

机译:你听到我听到了吗?

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Deep in the Amazon rainforests of Bolivia live the Tsimane', a tribe that has remained relatively untouched by Western civilization. Tsimane' people possess a unique characteristic: they do not cringe at musical tones that sound discordant to Western ears. The vast majority of Westerners prefer consonant chords to dissonant ones, based on the intervals between the musical notes that compose the chords. One particularly notable example of this is the Devil's Interval, or flatted fifth, which received its name in the Middle Ages because the sound it produced was deemed so unpleasant that people associated it with sinister forces. The flatted fifth later became a staple of numerous jazz, blues, and rock-and-roll songs.
机译:Tsimane'居住在玻利维亚的亚马逊热带雨林深处,这个部落一直未受到西方文明的影响。蒂玛尼人具有一个独特的特征:他们不会畏惧听起来与西方人耳朵不和谐的音乐音调。基于构成和弦的音符之间的间隔,绝大多数西方人更喜欢辅音和弦。一个特别值得注意的例子是“魔鬼的间隔”,或者说是第五个扁平的,它在中世纪获得了名称,因为它产生的声音被认为是令人不快的,以至于人们将它与邪恶的力量联系在一起。平稳的第五名后来成为众多爵士,布鲁斯和摇滚乐的主打歌。

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  • 来源
    《The Scientist》 |2017年第3期|15-17|共3页
  • 作者

    Diana Kwon;

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