A Hard Day’s Night: Solving a Beatles mystery with mathematics
After a lot of experimentation, the band come up with a wondrous, jangling cacophony of sound: the opening chord to the song, album, and film A Hard Day’s Night.
more…
A Hard Day’s Night: Solving a Beatles mystery with mathematics
After a lot of experimentation, the band come up with a wondrous, jangling cacophony of sound: the opening chord to the song, album, and film A Hard Day’s Night.
more…
Tau.Neutrino said:
A Hard Day’s Night: Solving a Beatles mystery with mathematicsAfter a lot of experimentation, the band come up with a wondrous, jangling cacophony of sound: the opening chord to the song, album, and film A Hard Day’s Night.
more…
“Those missing F frequencies, Dr Brown concluded, came from a single note played on a mid-sized grand piano.
The final piece slid into place: buried deep in the mix of that shimmering opening chord, someone — maybe Ringo, but probably George Martin — had played an F on a piano.”
Well that’s finally solved that mystery…
But why would GM, or someone, in all that rush add an F on piano.. someone should ask him… Oh wait..
I remember that chord.
No solution though to the Beatles mathematical problem “8 days a week”.
I did like their maths, though in “sixty-four years is 33661440 minutes and one minute is a long time”.