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A Brief History of Synaesthesia and Music
 
Page 9
 


Bibliography:


Baron-Cohen, Simon, and John E. Harrison, editors. 1997. Synaesthesia: Classic and Contemporary Readings. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Blackwell Publishers.

Brown, Jeanell Wise. 1994. Amy Beach and Her Chamber Music: Biography, Documents, Style. Metuchen, N.J.: Scarecrow Press.

Carrà, Carlo. 1913. «The Painting of Sounds, Noises and Smells». Cytowic, Richard E. 1993. The Man Who Tasted Shapes. New York: Putnam.

Cytowic, Richard E. 1993. The Man Who Tasted Shapes. New York: Putnam.

Cytowic, Richard E. 1989. Synaesthesia: a Union of the Senses. New York: Springer-Verlag.

Dann, Kevin T. 1998. Bright Colors Falsely Seen: Synaesthesia and the Search for Transcendental Knowledge. New Haven and London: Yale UP.

Dannatt, George. 1991. Album notes to Bliss: A Colour Symphony; Metamorphic Variations. BBC Welsh Symphony Orchestra; Barry Wordswort, conductor. London: Nimbus Records.

Galeyev, Bulat M. 1988. "The Fire of Prometheus: Music-Kinetic Art Experiments in the USSR." Leonardo; volume 21: 383-396.

Galeyev, Bulat. 1987. Man -- Art -- Technology: The Problem of Synesthesia in Art. Kazan, Russia: Kazan University Press. (In Russian.)

Galeyev, Bulat M., and Irina L. Vanechkina. 2000. «Was Scriabin a Synaesthete?»

Jewanski, Jörg. 1999. Ist C = Rot?: Eine Kultur- und Wissenschaftsgeschichte zum Problem der wechselseitigen Bezeihung zwischen Ton und Farbe. Von Aristoteles bis Goethe. Berliner Musik Studien, Band 17. Sinzig: Studio.

Jenkins, Walter S. 1994. The Remarkable Mrs. Beach, American Composer. Warren, Michigan: Harmonie Park Press.

Kandinsky, Wassily. 1994. Kandinsky, Complete Writings on Art. Kenneth Clement Lindsay and Peter Vergo, editors. New York: Da Capo.

Marinetti, Filippo Tommaso. 1989 (1932). The Futurist Cookbook. Translated from the Italian by Suzanne Brill. Edited with an introduction by Leslie Chamberlain. San Francisco: Bedford Arts.

Moritz, William. 1997. "The Dream of Color Music, and Machines that Made it Possible." Animation World Magazine; issue 2.1; April. Reproduced here.

Newton, Sir Isaac. 1952 (1704). "Optics." In Robert Maynard Hutchins, Ed.; Great Books of the Western World; volume 34; London: Encyclopaedia Britannica, Inc. Pp. 373-544.


Riccò, Dina. 1999. Sinestesie per il design. Le interazioni sensoriali nell'epoca dei multimedia. Milano: Etas, Milano.

Samuel, Claude. 1994 (1986). Olivier Messiaen: Music and Color. Conversations with Claude Samuel. Translated by E. Thomas Glasow. Portland, Oregon: Amadeus Press.

Scriabin, Alexander. 1995 (1911). "Poem of Ecstacy" and "Prometheus: Poem of Fire". New York: Dover.

Yastrebtsev, V. (1908). "On N.A.Rimsky-Korsakov's color sound- contemplation." Russkaya muzykalnaya gazeta, N 39-40: p.842-845.

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Comment List

Topic: Author:
Time:
Amazing
Alice Crossroads 06.02.2008 23:16
I have just found out about this wonderful thing called synaesthesia and i think it is beautiful the way you picture songs colers places and things. I found out about this just yesterday and i am eager to learn more about it all. I read the book " A Mango Shaped Place" and typed up synaethesia to learn more about it and came across this.

i am speechless
Music Synesthesia
Phil Nyce 11.12.2007 21:19
I can never pinpoint the exact color of the notes i hear and they usually mix with sort of image that is difficult to describe.

When distortion or overdrive is added to guitars, i get this static or grainy type of image. this is the only somewhat describable image and it varies from degree of overdrive to degree.

It's not only color, but i "see" the sound or note. If something is played on a violin, i see the note drawn out and i usually see it in a tan color.

Piano notes seem to have a more percussive and black and white image to them, like the keys.

High to mid-range guitar notes are almost always yellow and the guitar screech from Jimi Hendrix's "Foxy Lady" is very purple and grainy with overdrive.

bass guitars have colors in the black to purple range, incorporating other dark yellow tones as well.

This is the best description i can give. It's really impossible to communicate the "sensation" or "image" that reflects the music but there's definitely something weird about it.

It makes music more interesting and adds "dimension".
CAN YOU HEAR, SMELL, TASTE OR FEEL COLOURS OR SHAPES?
T P 30.08.2007 16:38
http://theartbeyondsight.blogspot.com/
   RE: CAN YOU HEAR, SMELL, TASTE OR FEEL COLOURS OR SHAPES?
sam burrell 16.11.2007 08:35
> http://theartbeyondsight.blogspot.com/


yea
i dunno
when i hear an individual note
i see a flurry of colors that act in different ways
like
a low E flat
i see a flashing of lights
and i feel weightless and extra heavy at the same time
but as soon as i hear more notes together
like in a song
in my mind
i see places
these places are usually more vivid than the real world
but i can't help but wonder if i really have synesthesia
or if i just have a wild imagination
Volume
lance h 07.04.2006 07:03

i also experience notes and sounds as 'textures' and sometimes colors. Dm is a deep midnight blue, Dmaj more purple in hue. the 'textures' are akin to a 'feeling on the skin' but on some other skin that doesn't exist - somehow outside of spatial dimension.

the curious thing, for me, is that these effects generally only occur at high volume levels, or intensities. and they are not neccessarily 'logical' at all: the white needle of a test pattern whine is somehow also blunt and smooth and chrome and cool.

somehow, somehow: this has led me to a love of noise music and experimental artists who work with high-volume soundscapes. i just hope i don't go deaf anytime soon ;)
Synesthesia
Cecily s 08.01.2006 15:06

I am a synesthesiac with perfect pitch, and I always see different notes as colours, not keys. For example, a C major chord consists of a C - red/yellow, E - pink, and a G - brown. When I hear this chord, I see all of these colours ina picture that I can't describe. It has been very interesting to see how other people conceive things, and also how they can find it difficult to describe. I also see the texture of sounds; a c major chord played quite long on a stringed instrument reminds me of something in a very sticky substance, amber or resin, for example.
Synaesthesia is Fascinating
Kip Rosser 21.01.2005 08:52
This is one of the most comprehensive treatises I've ever read about the phenomenon of synaesthesia. The depth and breadth of the research is stunning.
synaesthesia
Nicole Collins 16.11.2004 07:55

Thanks for an informative article. It has given me lot's of names to follow up on.
I am a painter and teach Colour and 2D Design at an art college and am researching for a section on synaesthesia for my classes. I'm really looking forward to exposing the students (and myself) to some experimental music to go along with the abstract painting that we will explore.
cheers
Nicole Collins
   RE: synaesthesia
marty quinn 17.10.2007 23:23
Nicole,

I have just given a talk at the MET as part of the Art Beyond Sight Multimodal Approaches to Learning, Creativity and Communication on ArtMusic. I would be interested to hear what you think of my approach. You can view and listen to a number of art works as music at www.drsrl.com/artmusic.

Regards,

Marty Quinn
>
> Thanks for an informative article. It has given me lot's of
> names to follow up on.
> I am a painter and teach Colour and 2D Design at an art
> college and am researching for a section on synaesthesia
> for my classes. I'm really looking forward to exposing the
> students (and myself) to some experimental music to go
> along with the abstract painting that we will explore.
> cheers
> Nicole Collins
 
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