Major Chords Are Primary Colors
Major Chords Are Primary Colors
Major Chords Are Primary Colors
red
orange
yellow
green
blue
indigo
violet
C
Root
E
D
Second
F#
E
Third
G#
F
Fourth
A
G
Fifth
B
A
Sixth
C#
B
Seventh
D#
debate. In reality, any color circle or color wheel which presents a logically arranged sequence of pure hues has
merit.
Primary Colors
Red, yellow and blue
In traditional color theory, these are
the 3 pigment colors that can not be
mixed or formed by any combination
of other colors. All other colors are
derived from these 3 hues
Secondary Colors
Green, orange and purple
These are the colors formed by
mixing the primary colors.
Tertiary Colors
Yellow-orange, red-orange,
red-purple, blue-purple, bluegreen and yellow-green.
These are the colors formed
by mixing one primary and
one secondary color
Orange
Second
Yellow
Third
Green
Fourth
Blue
Fifth
Indigo
Sixth
Violet
Seventh
If you could actually "hear" the extremely high frequencies the red, yellow and blue (primary color) light waves are
vibrating at... you would hear a Major chord.
If you could "see" the sound of notes in a major chord relative to the same "rainbow scale" used by light... you would
see notes and chords in primary color just like way they are used in the chord diagram program above.
Special thanks to Go
o
g
le for inadvertently making me think of this, and J.L. Morton
By Richard Merrick
Harmonic Visualization Models
Harmonic Interference Theory provides a foundation for the construction of geometric models for the
representation of music. Such models are helpful in cross-reference musical concepts with
phenomena elsewhere in nature, explaining otherwise difficult concepts using musical terminology.
The first thing to do in building a visual model for music is the creation of a color model compatible
with harmonic physics. This is done by recognizing that the frequency range of human vision is itself a
frequency-doubled octave beginning with dark magenta at 370 terahertz and increasing in frequency
up to dark violet at 740 terahertz.
Within this color octave, at 12-step logarithmic scale can be calculated by multiplying each successive
step by 21/2 just like an equal tempered musical scale. This yields the standard color wheel - all that
remains is to determine its Harmonic Center.
This can be done using the same method described for finding the Harmonic Center of a musical
octave. We need only balance the 7 colors of the rainbow around the only symmetrical center possible
in the color wheel - namely, the dark blue color known as Indigo. In this way, Indigo and YellowOrange form a polar Harmonic Axis of symmetry in the color wheel, enabling the relative assignment
of each tone in a musical octave to be assigned a color starting with the Harmonic Center of the key.
This should not be taken as an absolute assignment to specific tones, but instead as a color mapping
that is moveable and applied to any diatonic key.
The symmetry of this color-tone mapping becomes apparent when the 12-step color wheel is divided
into two rings of six each and aligned with a piano keyboard relative to the key of C major (or A
relative minor) having Harmonic Center D.
This creates what we might call a diatonic rainbow where Primary, Secondary and Tertiary colors
balance perfectly around the Harmonic Axis {D, G#) in the key of C.