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There are many with various mathematical depth: - Fauvel et al., Music and Mathematics - From Pythagoras to Fractals, 2003, Oxford UP - Loy, Musimatics Volume 1, 2006 MIT Press - Tymoczko, A Geometry of Music, 2011, Oxford UP - Walker, Mathematics and Music, 2013, CRC Press - Toussaint, The Geometry of Musical Rhythm, 2013, CRC Press - Chew, Mathematical and Computational Modeling of Tonality, 2014, Springer - Hook, Exploring Musical Spaces, 2023, Oxford UP From my point of view, all titles can be appreciated by non-musicians with mathematical background (though I'm an engineer, not a mathematician, and very much involved with non-classical music). But for your specific requirement, maybe Loy is suited, but personally I consider the later books more interesting, especially Tymoczko and Hook. Book recommendations are always very subjective. Also note that the music theory commonly taught at high schools and universities is barely able to describe music, or only a small fraction of it. And only a fraction of this theory has a mathematical fundament. Most of it is just a heuristic projection of existing music, only useful for recognizing and classifying elements, and not for deriving new music. In recent years, however, new theories have emerged that allow for both a more formal and a more practical approach. |
Following the trail, I was glad to find he wrote a whole book, The Geometry of Musical Rhythm, where the article forms the basis of a chapter. It's one of my favorite books I keep returning to re-read different parts.
I hadn't seen "Exploring Musical Spaces", looking forward to reading it.
Dmitri Tymoczko's book is wonderful too, A Geometry of Music: Harmony and Counterpoint in the Extended Common Practice. Rich with ideas and insights, I like how he tells the history and development of Western music theory.
Oh I just learned from the author's website that he has a new book released.
> I have just finished a second book, Tonality: An Owner's Manual, that proposes a new, hierarchical, and geometrical model of musical stucture.
> One interesting outgrowth is the musical programming language arca. This line of thinking has also led me to contemplate a third book about category theory and music.
https://dmitri.mycpanel.princeton.edu/index.html
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This video of your live performance setup as a one-man band. Amazing.
https://www.youtube.com/shorts/S82hsEDY8Pc