If you take the frequency 111Hz (angelic frequency) and add 17Hz you get 128Hz.
If you take 111Hz and 128Hz and play then binaurally (each in a separate ear), you produce a relative 120-121Hz frequency.
However, it doesn't like to stay put. It bounces around in a very specific pattern. If you pass it through a tuner, you can spot a repeating pulse.
From my comparisons thus far, that pulse appears to be identical to the human heartbeat, if just a bit slower in rhythm, like someone in a deep trance/sleep.
It actually loses pace with this heartbeat, but is exactly the same pulse. At times they are perfectly in sync.
I'm starting to think 17 is a very important number. If I tweak the higher frequency even a bit, I lose the heartbeat pattern. It has to be exactly 17Hz from the start.
I'm working on this some more. I'll post a continuation when I have some video/audio to share.
Should I upload it to Rumble?
u might what to do some digging around on 432Hz and why good rock bands tune to this freq. also, just why did " they " change 432Hz to 440Hz as the " standard ", u are on to some facinating stuff, keep researching .../!
We know why.
Yes.
I've looked into it in a cursory fashion. It goes back a LONG TIME in the history of music. ?