Doc, I've got to say, I'm highly impressed, in awe, and a little frightened all at the same time. Did you sell your soul to Satan in exchange for knowing everything about everything?
Can you tell me how not to want to stab myself in the ear whenever I hear Schoenberg?
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The physics of sound and music are intimately related as you would expect.
Tonality and its moorings are a little complex to understand, but not that bad.
Lets us just clear one piece of housekeeping. In interest of clarity, I called the 20 to 40 Hz octave the first to have the frequencies progress in order. In fact that octave is the last and actually spans 16 Hz to 32 Hz. The first octave being 10 KHz to 20 KHz.
Now there are 12 tones in the full eight tone octave. So the equal tempered scale is a 12 note scale. However most music is rooted in tonality and has well defined tonal boundaries, or moorings if you like. Not that composers don't push the boundaries. There is a lot of dissonance in Bach's music and many of his chords if not frankly dissonant have a delightful "crunchy" feel to them, which makes his music so easy to recognize. His music however is firmly rooted in tonality and defined, if frequently changing keys.
Composers like Wagner pushed the boundaries to not formally anchor their compositions in strict tonality. At the same time his music is not strident, in fact relaxing, to the point of inducing a form of hypnosis, especially in the Ring Cycle to make a short cut to the subconscious brain. This has often been called the hypnotic line.
Arnold Schoenberg however wanted to free music from its tonality, for reasons I have never understood. As music in the well tempered scale is twelve note with the full tones equally spaced thought the octave, he kept to that. But what Schoenberg did was to organize the composition such that once a tone was sounded it could not be repeated until the entire scale had been gone through. So he did not ditch the Well Tempered 12 note scale of J.S Bach. However the result was "noise". As you put it a stick in the ear.
However Arnold Schoenberg's early works are firmly routed in tonality. An example would be his Gurrelieder, which is a lovely composition. These early works are now the most often performed of his compositions!
His followers and adherents who have rejected tonality, as they say to free the composition, have largely been at Universities and one way or another been snarfing at the public trough.
In music that actually gets an audience, Arnold Schoenberg's method of composition is pretty much rejected, although is not to say that elements of his style can and often do get into modern composition. However the strict atonal method drives audiences away and always will.
The great British conductor Sir Thomas Beecham said of this atonal method of composition: - "Not one nth part of it will survive." Time has proved him right.