Chess and musical instruments

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11th December 2007, 03:45am
#21
by silentfilmstar13
Medford, OR United States
Member Since: Sep 2007
Member Points: 2143
Drums and voice are my main musical outlets, but I do play bass, guitar, and piano for songwriting purposes.
11th December 2007, 04:32am
#22
by avdel
United Kingdom
Member Since: Aug 2007
Member Points: 73
I have played guitar and piano in the past, don't have time these days.
11th December 2007, 04:32am
#23
by sotyguitarist
glyfada Greece
Member Since: Oct 2007
Member Points: 10
gomaster wrote:

I did a bit of googling on the subject of chess, music and maths.

I quote from the following web page http://www.edutechchess.com/whychess.html

 "Many parallels have been drawn between mathematics, music, and chess. Lasker (1949) states:

Mathematical thinking is generally held to be more or less closely related to the type of thinking done in chess. Mathematicians are indeed drawn to chess more than most other games. What is less widely known is that very frequently mathematicians are equally strongly attracted to music. Many musicians do not reciprocate this attraction, but I firmly believe that this is mainly due to their lack of acquaintance with mathematics, and to the widespread confusion of mathematics with “figuring.”

An intriguing phenomenon that links mathematics, music and chess is the fact that child prodigies have been known only in these three fields. That children have never produced a masterwork in painting, sculpture, or literature seems only natural when we consider their limited experience of life. In music, chess, or mathematics, that experience is not needed. Here, children can shine, because native gifts are the dominant factor. Aesthetic sensitiveness and ability to think logically are certain inborn qualities. How, otherwise, could Mozart have composed a minuet, and actually written it down, before he was four years of age? How could Gauss, before he was three years old, and before he knew how to write, have corrected the total of a lengthy addition he saw his father do? How could Sammy Reshevsky play ten games of chess simultaneously when he was only six?

The reasoning ingredient in a chess combination is always of prime importance, even though a vivid imagination will make a chess player think of possibilities that will not occur to a less imaginative logician. (p. 142)

The above passage indicates abstract reasoning, a generally accepted quality inherent in both mathematics and music, is of prime importance in chess.


 thnks bro!!!!that one was really cool....


19th December 2007, 09:09am
#24
by ThomasK
Wales
Member Since: Aug 2007
Member Points: 137

I  play the french horn

19th December 2007, 09:24am
#25
by roshak12345
United States
Member Since: Nov 2007
Member Points: 68
Wow, almost a complete lack of drummers!?!?    Yeah, I'm a really good drummer and a REALLY LOUSY electric guitar player. But I'm learning. I find that surgery on a finger doesn't help build calluses well  Tongue out 
19th December 2007, 11:59am
#26
by Redserpent2000
Stockport United Kingdom
Member Since: Aug 2007
Member Points: 551

Cool a drummer at last, not that I was waiting for one. I took up drumming but was told I have two left hands!Embarassed So took up the guitar instead. Still no good but at least it's less noisy.

Red

 

19th December 2007, 12:31pm
#27
by RobertABrown
Terrace, BC Canada
Member Since: Aug 2007
Member Points: 1232

I make my living playing and teaching classical guitar – or, at least, a large part of my living. Chess and music have some important aspects in common: tempo, timing, and harmony, for example, as pianists Mark Taimanov and Igor Ivanov, singers Emil Sutovsky and Vassily Smyslov, as well as that pioneering pawnpusher and composer A.D. Philador will tell you or, in the case of Ivanov and Philador, might have told you.


19th December 2007, 01:51pm
#28
by batgirl
NC United States
Member Since: Jun 2007
Member Points: 4398

You might also confer with (or have conferred with) avant-garde composer, John Cage; Russian conductor, Sergei Prokofiev; violinist, David Oistrakh, and even the Soviet composer, Dimitri Shostakovich.

 

Paul Morphy, when he was in Paris, often attended soirées by Mme. D'Angely. On one such occassion he was introduced to the Italian baritone, Francesco Graziani who had been taking chess lessons from Jean Préti (the founder of La Strategie). Mme D'Angely persuaded Morphy to play Graziani, spotting him Queen odds with the condition that Morphy sing a duet with him after the game. It's unknown whether they actually sang the duet, but after the game, Graziani said, "if anyone should ask me if I am a chess player, I will reply, 'Oh yes, I sometimes play with Mr. Morphy.'"

 

16th January 2008, 03:34pm
#29
by rocking_g_real
West Hollywood, CA United States
Member Since: Sep 2007
Member Points: 31
Music is my profession. I play keyboards and guitar primarily, but most of my work is in production, writing and arranging.
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