Originally posted by Izzle
I meant unique to music. There is almost none.
Here's some examples why I think there's a lot:
1) Musical instruments. Take e.g. the guitar. OK, it works with oscillating strings. Seems simple. But if you want it to sound right, you have to obey some rules. Different string materials give different sounds. Gut sounds different from nylon, or steel. And there's even different types of steel strings. Bronze-wound sounds different from Phosphor-bronze. A set of .008's will sound very different from .013's, and will show another sensitivity to fingering, bending, hammering, tremolo, etc. Maybe you must redjust the neck & bridge if you use different strings. Next, it's important what kind of frets you use, and how the fretboard is curved. Also, the sound depends heavily on where and how you pick - the theory of the oscillating guitar string is quite complicated in fact. OK, maybe the guitarist doesn't have to 'know' any physics, but it's behind all this.
2) The human ear. It has interesting properties concerning pitch perception, pitch resolution, time resolution, loudness perception, etc. OK, it's 'just' a Fourier analyzer, but a very flexible one. For engineers who are concerned with the mixing and mastering of records, it's surely good to know some rules, since the effect can be dramatic if you turn the wrong knob.
3) Electroacoustics. Anybody who works with microphones, pickups, amplifiers, speakers, FX processors etc. must have some knowledge about how these work and what equipment to choose for a given task. This is even more true for the engineer who designs them.