Harmonical - meaning and definition. What is Harmonical
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What (who) is Harmonical - definition

ANCIENT MUSICAL AND SCIENTIFIC LABORATORY INSTRUMENT
Sonometer; Monopipe; Monocorde; Monocordo; Duochord; Divine monochord; Mundane monochord; Monochordum mundanum; Harmonical canon
  • Medieval drawing of the philosopher [[Boethius]]
  • 1/1, 5/4, 4/3, 3/2, and 2/1 (in C: C, E, F, G, C')
  • (1617)
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  • Two monochord instruments (marine trumpets) on display
  • Monochord
  • 0-486-61964-8}}.</ref> density may be tested by using different strings
  • Several monochords, sharing a single resonator table

Harmonical      
·adj Concordant; musical; consonant; as, harmonic sounds.
II. Harmonical ·adj Having relations or properties bearing some resemblance to those of musical consonances;
- said of certain numbers, ratios, proportions, points, lines. motions, and the like.
III. Harmonical ·adj Relating to harmony, - as melodic relates to melody; harmonious; ·esp., relating to the accessory sounds or overtones which accompany the predominant and apparent single tone of any string or sonorous body.
harmonical      
a.
Harmonics         
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COMPONENT OF A WAVE WHOSE FREQUENCY IS A MULTIPLE OF THE FUNDAMENTAL FREQUENCY
Harmonics; Harmonic frequency; Flageolet-note; Natural Harmonics; Flageolet tone; Harmonic Waves; Flageolet tones; Flageolet Tone; Harmonic wave; Natural harmonic; Harmonic (string); Harmonic (strings); Natural Harmonic; Harmonic partial
·noun The doctrine or science of musical sounds.
II. Harmonics ·noun Secondary and less distinct tones which accompany any principal, and apparently simple, tone, as the octave, the twelfth, the fifteenth, and the seventeenth. The name is also applied to the artificial tones produced by a string or column of air, when the impulse given to it suffices only to make a part of the string or column vibrate; overtones.

Wikipedia

Monochord

A monochord, also known as sonometer (see below), is an ancient musical and scientific laboratory instrument, involving one (mono-) string (chord). The term monochord is sometimes used as the class-name for any musical stringed instrument having only one string and a stick shaped body, also known as musical bows. According to the Hornbostel–Sachs system, string bows are bar zithers (311.1) while monochords are traditionally board zithers (314). The "harmonical canon", or monochord is, at its least, "merely a string having a board under it of exactly the same length, upon which may be delineated the points at which the string must be stopped to give certain notes," allowing comparison.

A string is fixed at both ends and stretched over a sound box. One or more movable bridges are then manipulated to demonstrate mathematical relationships among the frequencies produced. "With its single string, movable bridge and graduated rule, the monochord (kanōn [Greek: law]) straddled the gap between notes and numbers, intervals and ratios, sense-perception and mathematical reason." However, "music, mathematics, and astronomy were [also] inexorably linked in the monochord." As a pedagogical tool for demonstrating mathematical relationships between intervals, the monochord remained in use throughout the middle ages.