source file: mills2.txt Date: Mon, 10 Mar 1997 19:40:30 -0800 Subject: Missing Manuscript - Help Please! From: clucy@cix.compulink.co.uk (Charles Lucy) As a result of reading the recent postings on Greek philosophy, mathematics, music, etc.: it seems to me that we at at a crossroads in musical tuning, similar to that which mathematics passed, a couple of hundred years ago. Many still seem to judge the validity of a tuning system only by its proximity to integer frequency ratios and the "harmonics" which are arrived at by this (to my mind) simplistic logic. >From my readings, experiments, and observations, I am convinced that John Harrison had managed to break through this barrier in the mid-eighteenth century. At the end of a very successful scientific career, during which he made three major new inventions, and "won" the prize for Longitude with his horological designs, he devoted his last years to the study of musical tuning. This is a subject very closely akin to his other particular areas of expertise, i.e. navigation, pendulums, harmonic motion, and the study of mechanical systems with regard to TIME. In his book "Concerning Such Mechanism ......" [A transcription of which is at: http://www.wonderlandinorbit.com/projects/lullaby] (after "slagging off" his contemporaries), he very clearly states his conclusions: The "Natural Notes of Melody" may be derived mathematically from pi. He gives no experimental details, except that he used monochords, and clearly understood and criticises WNR (whole number ratio) logic and practice. He seems to have been criticized for this work, in the same way that his tunings are criticised today. [Not for their impracticalities, tunelessness, or any musical reasons - (it works exquisitely for musical harmony, modulation, and transposition for all types of "ethnic" music which I have encountered to date); yet for its lack of "scientific proof"]. After "CSM ....." was published he wrote a manuscript HARRISON, John. "A True and Full Account of the Foundation of Musick, or, as principally therein, of the Existance of the Natural Notes of Melody". An unpublished manuscript of 182 pp., which is cataloged as item 8961 in Bibliotheca Chemico-Mathematica issued by Messrs. H. Sotheran of London in 1921, but has since been lost. I have seen only one page of this manuscript. It arrived at my London address from a horological researcher, about ten years ago. I hear that it was by way of a Folkestone antiquarian bookseller. The page was a diagram of a clockface, with the note names written around the circumference, and marks where later steps of fourths and fifths would arrive. It showed the Large interval at the angle of the radian i.e. 360/(2*pi) 57.3 degrees. C was at 6 o'clock and the other naturals were arranged ascending clockwise. >From this page and the title, I suspect that the missing manuscript revealed Harrison's experiments. I heard that the offices of Sotheran were destroyed during the London blitz by a direct hit. I wish to attempt to reconstruct Harrison's experiments, for I believe that they will give us much greater insight into his thinking, and possibly provide us with "scientific proof". Any help, pointers, or comments about this manuscript will be appreciated. lucy@hour.com Received: from ns.ezh.nl [137.174.112.59] by vbv40.ezh.nl with SMTP-OpenVMS via TCP/IP; Tue, 11 Mar 1997 09:17 +0100 Received: by ns.ezh.nl; (5.65v3.2/1.3/10May95) id AA01610; Tue, 11 Mar 1997 09:17:13 +0100 Received: from ella.mills.edu by ns (smtpxd); id XA01608 Received: from by ella.mills.edu via SMTP (940816.SGI.8.6.9/930416.SGI) id AAA04931; Tue, 11 Mar 1997 00:15:26 -0800 Date: Tue, 11 Mar 1997 00:15:26 -0800 Message-Id: <199703110314_MC2-125E-3FCD@compuserve.com> Errors-To: madole@mills.edu Reply-To: tuning@ella.mills.edu Originator: tuning@eartha.mills.edu Sender: tuning@ella.mills.edu