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> Sound never becomes light. Sound is kinetic energy and light is > electromagnetic energy. > > http://csep10.phys.utk.edu/astr162/lect/light/spectrum.html > > I've done the pulse to pitch experiment and it's interesting, but I > don't really think it has a lot to do with being able to keep tempo. > As far as that is concerned, you've just got to practice practice > practice... and being able to hear everyone in the group. Hey Marky Mark! Seems James Lampheer has the goods to deliver the "all is one" argument (see his thread "Sound DOES Become Light..."). But I'm taking my asbestos suit out of the closet and relearning Johnny Cash's "Ring of Fire" anyway...... ;-) My point re. "rhythm is pich made slow" is that just as one might use an electronic tuner to improve one's sense of pitch and make oneself more sensitive to subtle variations in pitch, so one might use a metronome to improve one's sense of rhythm. Electronic tuners generate a reliable standard of pitch; metronomes generate a reliable standard of rhythm. We may "tune" our tuning chops just as we may "tune" our rhythmic chops. Drummers who think that metronomes make their playing too stiff belong in bands with guitarists who think that tuners make their guitars too stale. And rhythm is pitch made slow... And the universe is the manifestation of one vibration. Maya is one huge overtone series, of which we get to experience one little pie-slice. All is bliss, all is bliss................... Douglas Baldwin, coyote-at-large coyotelk@optonline.net