Substack was down for maintenance around 8pm. About that same time I heard a helicopter circling in my neighborhood. I went on my flight tracker app to identify, but nothing showed. I then proceeded to go outside to check it out, but the sliding glass door had dozens of midge flies waiting to come inside. Christmas drone flies that show up every year around this time when the temperature gets above 50 degrees. Mystery unsolved.
Have they answered , it may not be where but when , like time is different for them, and if they can move in time space by changing frequencies , the questions probably need to be different LOL SK
Mike, I just listened. The first clip has a tone based on a B note. It might be just several octaves of B. And here is what I hear in the second clip's tones:
D major chord (with the third F# being prominent), followed by a D + a G (with the G being prominent), and then a B + an E (with the E being prominent).
So the most striking tones in the second clip are F#, G, then E.
There are harmonics/overtones in both clips that I can't grasp just using my piano and my ears. I'd have to spend some time on that, which I don't have today. One of my best friends is treating me to a belated birthday lunch and wine tasting.
Substack was down for maintenance around 8pm. About that same time I heard a helicopter circling in my neighborhood. I went on my flight tracker app to identify, but nothing showed. I then proceeded to go outside to check it out, but the sliding glass door had dozens of midge flies waiting to come inside. Christmas drone flies that show up every year around this time when the temperature gets above 50 degrees. Mystery unsolved.
Why are you wispering?
My wife's asleep.
Thanks Sharine. A kind of Close Encounter sound game going on. I’m on wine now listening.
Have they answered , it may not be where but when , like time is different for them, and if they can move in time space by changing frequencies , the questions probably need to be different LOL SK
Mike, I just listened. The first clip has a tone based on a B note. It might be just several octaves of B. And here is what I hear in the second clip's tones:
D major chord (with the third F# being prominent), followed by a D + a G (with the G being prominent), and then a B + an E (with the E being prominent).
So the most striking tones in the second clip are F#, G, then E.
There are harmonics/overtones in both clips that I can't grasp just using my piano and my ears. I'd have to spend some time on that, which I don't have today. One of my best friends is treating me to a belated birthday lunch and wine tasting.
OH YOU ROCK, musicians to the rescue and truth see my response above LOL SK