harmonic
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- Posts: 273
- Joined: Thu Apr 10, 2008 9:47 pm
I think there are more than enough hints here to finish this challenge easily (Someone said it was 7 or 8 notes, just find them, it is straight forward), but if you think you are close and are truly stuck, PM me with what you have done so far and I will try to point you in the right direction without givng away too much
There's just one problem: the lazyness-factorgfoot wrote:Maybe you should instead search for how sound works then! There must be volumes of information about this available.m!nus wrote:i tried searching tools to analyze it but since i don't know how "sound" works (mean: frequencies, addition of tones (chords) etc.) it's rather difficult.
I will look at it when I'm feeling like it.
yes the answer are the notes from lowest to highest.
If the answer doesn't make any sense you're probably missing notes. This challenge really almost requires a way of accurately determining the notes. I doubt a human ear could distinguish all of them and not accidentally hear a harmonic where none really existed, but I suppose its possible.
If the answer doesn't make any sense you're probably missing notes. This challenge really almost requires a way of accurately determining the notes. I doubt a human ear could distinguish all of them and not accidentally hear a harmonic where none really existed, but I suppose its possible.
I had to resort to (almost) pure guessing… audacity provides a nice little spectrum analizer that even gives you the musical notes of the peaks if you toy around with it for a bit (a lograrithmic x axis works wonders), but I have no clue where to find the second letter in the answer in the three-digit Hz range… It just isn't there.
Thanks, that was the last hint I needed for solving this challenge. I used Audacity, too, but found it pretty hard to find the correct peaks and settings. I was pretty sure about some letters and tried-and-errored a lot - way beyond server pounding.wrtlprnft wrote:I had to resort to (almost) pure guessing… audacity provides a nice little spectrum analizer that even gives you the musical notes of the peaks if you toy around with it for a bit (a lograrithmic x axis works wonders), but I have no clue where to find the second letter in the answer in the three-digit Hz range… It just isn't there.
Is there any more hint
I knew quite a little about music
and i got only 8 notes
Seem like DEFACED OR Something....
But I just wondering if anyone can give any more hint to me...
THX!
Maybe PM
and i got only 8 notes
Seem like DEFACED OR Something....
But I just wondering if anyone can give any more hint to me...
THX!
Maybe PM
KeepMovingForward
Is there any more hint
I knew quite a little about music
and i got only 8 notes
Seem like DEFACED OR Something....
But I just wondering if anyone can give any more hint to me...
THX!
Maybe PM
and i got only 8 notes
Seem like DEFACED OR Something....
But I just wondering if anyone can give any more hint to me...
THX!
Maybe PM
KeepMovingForward
Help, Please!
Is there a Bb/H thing in it? I've analysed the frequencies in Audacity, played the chord on my piano, guitar, everything I could think of. Asked my music teacher who works with orchestras in his spare time. I cannot think of anything else, is there something I'm missing? A particular setting in Audacity frequency analyzer that would work well? I even looked for anagrams with up to four instances of each note, is that not enough? I thought I was a good musician before I ran into this...