440Hz or 432Hz
Re: 440Hz or 432Hz
Google this 432 440 hz stuff and you will find many articles.
Interesting stuff, just heard about it a month ago
Just spread this information.
Interesting stuff, just heard about it a month ago
Just spread this information.
Re: 440Hz or 432Hz
the baroque loudness war, singers having to sing loud and that explains why as much as i like classical some of the female vocals are just far to high and make your ears bleed.
this is turning out to be a really interesting thread guys
i think we should bitch about classical composers putting showing off before the music as well
i don't wanna tread on anyones toes but i can't stand that dream theatre esq a million notes per a second is "better" stuff
i think there was also a bit of a "who can play the fastest" war as well
this is turning out to be a really interesting thread guys
i think we should bitch about classical composers putting showing off before the music as well
i don't wanna tread on anyones toes but i can't stand that dream theatre esq a million notes per a second is "better" stuff
i think there was also a bit of a "who can play the fastest" war as well
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Re: 440Hz or 432Hz
I agree! Amazing how irrationality is part of the system. Our heart is not in the center of the chest, so to speak.BOB Cooper wrote:in some cases (or, I guess, most if not all cases) perceptions "prefer" tunings or pulses that are not exact (at some point). Irregularity is much richer in information /more pleasurable (again, at some point, and I mean very fine-grained irregularities).
biological systems, brains, experiences of perception... are dynamic systems : they are not mechanistically tuned to some sort of abstract predefined / fixed values. it's far more chaotic and (then) contextual !
Re: 440Hz or 432Hz
kind of off topic, tuning guitars...
I've always preferred to trust a tuner over my ears, tune it and forget it. lately I've used a tuner to get close then finish it off by ear and I seem to be getting better tunings. am I crazy in thinking this?
I've always preferred to trust a tuner over my ears, tune it and forget it. lately I've used a tuner to get close then finish it off by ear and I seem to be getting better tunings. am I crazy in thinking this?
In my life
Why do I smile
At people who I'd much rather kick in the eye?
-Moz
Why do I smile
At people who I'd much rather kick in the eye?
-Moz
Re: 440Hz or 432Hz
I don't think your crazy, I've been the same way. But I think it might be problematic. If you fine-tune an E chord by ear, you're more likely to tune towards the 'just' side of things than equal-tempered, which would throw off other intervals?
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Slightlydelic
- Posts: 776
- Joined: Tue May 26, 2009 1:42 pm
Re: 440Hz or 432Hz
Tone Deft wrote:kind of off topic, tuning guitars...
I've always preferred to trust a tuner over my ears, tune it and forget it. lately I've used a tuner to get close then finish it off by ear and I seem to be getting better tunings. am I crazy in thinking this?
i guess if you tune it by ear to where you think it is correct then you will always tune to what ultimatly pleases your ear. and feel that you have a better tuning. because you allowed your ear to please its self from the off.
Re: 440Hz or 432Hz
ahhhh, I like that. 
In my life
Why do I smile
At people who I'd much rather kick in the eye?
-Moz
Why do I smile
At people who I'd much rather kick in the eye?
-Moz
Re: 440Hz or 432Hz
Threads like these are why I keep coming back to this forum! Always interesting. 
Re: 440Hz or 432Hz
Code: Select all
This is a technical article that may be boring to many, so feel free to skip it.
There was a time that I was quite interested in alternate tunings and I made all sorts of unusual scales. I had an Ensoniq VFX which allowed one to make tuning tables.
I was particularly interested in making scales based on mathematical constants and their ratios.
I devised a method to make them more easily manageable by easily finding simple fractional intervals that are indiscernible to the exact, often irrational or transcendental, mathematical values. I used a rule of thumb value of about 3 cents difference as indiscernible in pitch. That corresponds to a frequency ratio of 501:500.
[ For a frequency ratio R: Cents(R) = 3986.313713865 log R ]
It involves something called expansion by continued fractions. It is easiest to show by example.
Suppose we have a frequency interval whose ratio is 1.265625... What is a small fraction equivalent ratio?
Let's start by truncating the value to 1.265625.
Then we expand it into a rational fraction:
1.265625 = 1 + 265625/1000000
The last fraction can be written into a similar form:
265625/1000000 = 1/(1000000/265625)
= 1/(3 + 203125/265625)
and this last fraction similarly is transformed:
203125/265625 = 1/(265625/203125)
= 1/(1 + 62500/203125)
Here it is shown in complete form:
1.265625 = 1 + 265625/1000000 =
1 + 1/(1000000/265625) =
1 + 1/(3 + 203125/265625) =
1 + 1/(3 + 1/(265625/203125)) =
1 + 1/(3 + 1/(1 + 62500/203125)) =
1 + 1/(3 + 1/(1 + 4/13)) =
1 + 1/(3 + 1/(1 + 1/(13/4))) =
1 + 1/(3 + 1/(1 + 1/(3 + 1/4)))
Now we form first, second, and third approximations until there is no discernible difference:
first approx: 1 + 1/3 = 4:3 = 1.3333.. = 498 cents
second: 1 + 1/(3+1) = 5:4 = 1.25 = 386 cents
third: 1 + 1/(3 + 1/(1+1/3) = 1 + 4/15 = 19:15 = 1.2666 = 409 cents
fourth: complete term 81:64 = 1.265625 = 408 cents
Since there is no discernible different between 408 and 409 cents, to the ear 81:64 = 19:15.
So we can use 19:15 intervals in tuning a scale based on that number.Re: 440Hz or 432Hz
Code: Select all
And here is a named table of common western intervals in ascending order:
Interval name interval value cents in interval
--------------- --------------- -----------------
unison 1:1 0.000
jnd 501:500 3.459 just noticeable difference
savart ~436:435 3.986
a skilled player can stretch a note on an instrument
by as much as 20 cents to be in tune with other instruments
syntonic comma 80:81 21.506
Pythagorean comma 531441:524288 23.460 3**12/2**19
diesis 128:125 41.059
smaller chromatic semitone
25:24 70.672
Pythagorean diatonic semitone = limma
256:243 90.225 2**8/3**5
larger chromatic semitone (small limma)
135:128 92.179
minor second 18:17 98.955
semitone 16:15 111.731
Pythagorean chromatic semitone
2187:2048 113.685 3**7/2**11
meantone semitone 8:(5*fourth_root(5)) 117.108
13:12 138.573
12:11 150.637
11:10 165.004
65536:59049 180.450
minor tone 10:9 182.404
meantone whole tone sqrt(5):2 193.157
449:400 200.059
major tone (Pythagorean whole tone) ---
9:8 203.910 3**2/2**3 (two fifths)
256:225 223.462 (two semitones)
8:7 231.174
pi:e 250.561 3.14159../2.71828...
7:6 266.871
13:11 289.210
32:27 294.135
minor third 6:5 315.641
19683:16384 317.595
11:9 347.408
100:81 364.807 (two minor tones)
8192:6561 384.360
major third 5:4 386.314
81:64 407.820 (two major tones)
9:7 435.084
13:10 454.214
perfect fourth 4:3 498.045
11:8 551.318
7:5 582.512
1024:729 588.270
augmented fourth 45:32 590.224
(also called a tritone = two major tones + 1 minor tone)
diminished fifth 64:45 609.777
729:512 611.730
10:7 617.488
36:25 631.283 (two minor thirds)
13:9 636.618
262144:177147 678.495
perfect fifth 3:2 701.955
25:16 772.628 (two major thirds)
11:7 782.492
128:81 792.180
minor sixth 8:5 813.686
6561:4096 815.640
phi:1 833.090 phi = 1.608033988749
13:8 840.528
32768:19683 882.405
major sixth 5:3 884.359
27:16 905.865
12:7 933.129
harmonic minor seventh 7:4 968.826
grave minor seventh 16:9 996.090 (two perfect fourths)
minor seventh 9:5 1017.596
59049:32768 1019.550
11:6 1049.363
13:7 1071.702
4096:2187 1086.315
major seventh 15:8 1088.269
243:128 1109.775
1048576:531441 1176.540
octave 2:1 1200.000
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1nfinitezer0
- Posts: 127
- Joined: Mon May 11, 2009 7:57 pm
- Location: Montreal, Canada
- Contact:
Re: 440Hz or 432Hz
In the wikipedia article on just intonation it mentions that Wendy Carlos used a keyboard to set the root of the key, which the other performance keyboard was altered so that the intervals were correct.
Recreating this in live with racks would be straightforward, but perhaps exhausting. Is there a simpler way than having each note altered a few centemes across the keys within nested racks?
Recreating this in live with racks would be straightforward, but perhaps exhausting. Is there a simpler way than having each note altered a few centemes across the keys within nested racks?
http://soundcloud.com/1nfinitezer0 - dj forage
Re: 440Hz or 432Hz
I prefer to get tuned 420 style
looks like this
for the first few minutes.
Seems to add some pizazz to a track from time to time.
looks like this
Seems to add some pizazz to a track from time to time.
Re: 440Hz or 432Hz
Oddly I found the same. I friend who is a guitarist (and plays with synths alot) regularly tunes his guitar just from his head - ie no tuner, just from his memory of the right pitch. So randomly I tried doing the same with mine one day when I was telling a mate about him doing this without ever expecting to get even vaguely close - much to my suprise - I was exactly on - really exactly on as close as could be determined with a good digital tuner (ie within a +/- a cent), and repeatably after detuning it.Tone Deft wrote:kind of off topic, tuning guitars...
I've always preferred to trust a tuner over my ears, tune it and forget it. lately I've used a tuner to get close then finish it off by ear and I seem to be getting better tunings. am I crazy in thinking this?
Thinking about it - I guess it isnt suprising - so much music that I hear is from synths perfectly tuned to 440. Same with most of what I play - even just picking up my guitar when the room is unusually warm or cold tends to irrate - strings are allready relatively correct, but is overall slighly sharp or flat, and I still notice it without a reference, but have always just switched the tuner on without giving it a thought and tuned the thing - quite an eye (or ear) opener!.
So trying another tuning (432 or whatever) actually makes me wonder if doing so will completely fuck up when seems to be a very good sense of absolute pitch (or maybe just normal for those of us used to nearly allways hearing perfectly tuned synths) - perhaps thats a good thing - I dont know
Edit: Just had a listen to some stuff re-worked to 432Hz - it mostly just sounds very flat - like a knackered tape deck to me
Nothing to see here - move along!
Re: 440Hz or 432Hz
hey guys
how can I detune the whole live???
thanx
g.
how can I detune the whole live???
thanx
g.
Re: 440Hz or 432Hz
666 
Julien Bayle
Art + Teaching/Consulting
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Art + Teaching/Consulting
Ableton Certified Trainer
Max Certified Trainer
Structure Void / Ableton Certified Training Center
