600-year-old musical cipher decoded

  • All right, I don’t have an appro­pri­ate cat­e­gory head­ing, but this is just neat-o. Greg sent me this Slash-dot arti­cle:

    Musi­cians recently unlocked a 600 year old mys­tery that had been encoded into the walls of the Ross­lyn Chapel in Scot­land, the one fea­tured in “The Da Vinci Code.” The song was carved into the walls of the chapel in the form of geo­met­ric shapes that a father-son team — both are musi­cians and the father is an ex-Royal Air Force code breaker — finally matched to so-called Chladni pat­terns (see the Wikipedia arti­cle on cymat­ics). The recov­ered melody was paired with tra­di­tional lyrics (trans­lated into Latin) and recorded; the result can be heard in this video (also linked from the musi­cians’ web­site). The video also gives a visual rep­re­sen­ta­tion of how the engrav­ings match up to the cymatic patterns.”

    Here’s the video they’re talk­ing about:


    Hav­ing watched it, there are things I still don’t under­stand, but maybe a trained musi­cian could fig­ure it out. What the father and son fig­ured out was a 13-note scale and a cou­ple of specif­i­cally sig­nif­i­cant notes. But how did they get the motet from that? Or are they say­ing that that scale is some­thing dif­fer­ent than what we use now? Like I said, I couldn’t quite fol­low that part.

    Other ques­tion that the Wikipedia arti­cle didn’t address: How long have peo­ple known about cymatic pat­terns? Unless they knew about them 600 years ago, how could they have come up with that musi­cal code?

    Going off to the musi­cians’ web­site didn’t help me with that, but it did take me off on this tangent:

    Con­cealed Music?

    Why would any­one want to hide music? Could it be threat­en­ing or dan­ger­ous to some­one or some­thing? Unless it was very spe­cial piece that con­tained mag­i­cal, har­monic and res­o­nant prop­er­ties that res­onated in sym­pa­thy with spir­i­tual beliefs. Was this music ‘out­lawed’ by the Catholic church for some reason?

    That’s it. There’s noth­ing the Catholic Church hates more than music in a chapel. And this is obvi­ously a very dan­ger­ous motet. Good thinking.

    Well, so the poor old Catholic Church still gets impli­cated some­how. But if every­one gets to haz­ard a guess, I think the more obvi­ous answer is that it wasn’t made into a cipher out of fear or het­ero­doxy. I think it was made into a cipher so that it would be a mys­tery. And in that way, it’s no dif­fer­ent than the many other things in West­ern and East­ern Church art, archi­tec­ture and music that speak to the mys­tery of our faith. Why couldn’t this have been another one? For that mat­ter, why is it that every­one loves try­ing to solve the puz­zles of the his­toric Church but would rather come up with totally flimsy answers rather than notice the con­sis­tent answer of ortho­dox Chris­t­ian beliefs?

    Oh well. Lots of ques­tions and no answers. Just another day with a ‘y’ in it. Any­way, the music is pretty and the thing about cymatic pat­terns is just fascinating.


    Related posts:

    1. “Pop cul­ture dis­cov­ers Jesus — once a year”
    2. “The DaVinci Code” — did I watch the right movie?
    3. O Heav­enly King …
    4. Four guys, one cello
    5. The fate of Chris­tians in Iraq

2 Responses and Counting...

  • They are using just as much mys­tery in order to sell their book/CD.

    As far as know­ing the pat­terns 600 years ago: its not that far fetched. All you need is the head of a drum and some sand (as they demon­strate in the video). I’m much more curi­ous about the lyrics used in the com­po­si­tion they play. Are they from the chapel? Are they just made up? etc

  • Sell­ing the book/CD: (sigh) I think that’s what I think as well. Oh well, everyone’s enti­tled to try to make a buck, right?

    As for the lyrics, the Slash-dot arti­cle said that the melody was “paired with tra­di­tional lyrics (trans­lated into Latin),” what­ever that means. If they had to be trans­lated into Latin what tra­di­tion did they come from?

    Heck, at this rate, I’ll take up a col­lec­tion and buy a CD or video to pass around just so we can get more of the ques­tions answered.

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