Impressions 12-31-18

originally posted by Jayson Cohen:
To unify. All of these terms speak to sound wave frequency ranges, whether musical scale-related ranges (treble and bass, i.e., the high and low clefs) or vocal, in which bass is also used to indicate a low frequency range.

Unacceptable. Frequency of sound does not change when entering different media, which wines identified here, respectively, with treble and bass registers clearly are.
 
originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
originally posted by Keith Levenberg:
Different concepts to me - masculine/feminine is more about structure, size, proportions and texture than higher or lower toned flavor elements. Of course we're in the realm of metaphor here, not science.

Though, to a gentleman, higher usually means feminine, while lower usually means masculine.

Not necessarily. And I wouldn't attach tones to a sex. Tracey Thorn, for instance, is not higher tone in any sense.
 
As a life-long numbers/math oriented person, my inclination was to consider that "treble register" must mean to signify something threefold.

. . . . Pete
 
originally posted by Peter Creasey:

As a life-long numbers/math oriented person, my inclination was to consider that "treble register" must mean to signify something threefold.

. . . . Pete

No. Best to refer to Keith’s penultimate post above should you wonder in future.
 
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