Well, technically, at no point is there chaos in this system, even when our brains perceive it that way. That would imply something that doesnt follow a set pattern, which (also technically) all of these do. If you were to..."stop" it in the middle of seems like the chaos and have them all play "at the same speed," (turning that V into two parallel lines, as it were) you would find that it actually makes a repeating pattern at every step.
The coolest part about it is how you chose to visualize this, and how that shows how much insight one can gleam from a dataset by representing it in different ways.
@@Toybox_blue what? They're moving at constant speeds, they will eventually synchronize when they hit a common factor, they don't need to be bound by a mechanical gear ratio for that to happen
There's a conscious creative decision to make each tempos click a different tone, so there's gonna be harmony regardless of the chaos. I think some of the moments are something we can rhythmically attach on to as opposed to harmonically, before it descends into unfamiliarity again.
Same thing with windshield wipers and whatever music you're listening to. The sway of the wipers lines up with the beat almost always but only for a couple seconds each time.
Actually typical car light signals don't work like that. Traditional relays aren't accurate enough, so the pattern is constantly randomized. If you have modern cars that don't use normal signal relays, then it does work. Btw. There is Technology connections video about that in YT
0:38 kind of weird how they formed what looks like a 3d solid.. wonder if this kind of projection could offer the same outlook of a higher dimension if this was somehow repeated in 3d?
this uses a similar effect to how holograms are currently made. a large spinning lightbar that makes light dance around like this and thus creates a floating 3D image with it.
The 2 coolest things about this is that you can see a spinning 3d object being formed at times AND it has the same effect as the ballerina silhouette illusion where you can see it rotating both clockwise and anti-clockwise!
Please, make it last until it closes the circle and all the beats get to the starting line position again. It would be just one more minute of satisfaction longer and with the absolutely perfect ending.
Very cool. Thanks. :) What did you make that in? I was thinking of re-doing this in javascript with MIDI. I'm guessing the math is really easy but... what is the math? :)
@@АркадийЛевский-м2р Nothing would surprise me with that guy. The limitations that hold us puny mortals back musically, do not exist for Jacob Collier.