If you had just said there is good music and there is bad music, i would agree. After years of playing using the reference tuning of 440 hz, I have never found any one that wanted to worship satan due to the music. Maybe that means I’m a decent musician. I have also tuned to 432 hz and haven’t been able to find anyone that could discern we were not playing in 440 hz. It seems the 440 conspiracy had something to do with disparaging the Germans after WWII. 440 hz as a reference tone was used well before WWII. Personally, as long as all band members/instruments are in tune, regardless of 440 vs 432 hz, I can’t tell the difference between the two.
The downvote makes me think I offended someone. Sorry. Just finished playing in a jazz quartet tonight and the other guitarist knew much more than I about various tunings. He said I was correct about 444 hz being the correct tuning for 528. But one thing I had completely forgotten was the actual A note on a guitar is 110 hz when tuned to 440 hz. 440 hz is a harmonic. Great tidbit to know when talking about tension. So if your a guitarist, tune the A to 111 instead of 110 hz if you want to play in 528. I’m sure I would not be able to tell the 1 hz difference, but maybe others can. Kind of fun to see.
I don't think so, 440 is considered standard and 432 is often used because it is a natural harmonic frequency. I have a tuner that maxes out between 410 and 480. I honestly think that 432 hz = 432 hz and 528 hz = 528 hz, but I'm not sure why a guitar (for example) couldn't be tuned to 528 hz instead. I imagine it would be way too much string tension.
Yes. Too much string tension unless you want to destroy the guitar. 528 hz as the reference frequency of A , I do not think it makes sense for orchestal instruments either, too high. The reason I asked about 444 hz as the reference is that it would make the C(5) note to be exactly the 528 hz frequency. This seems to be the logical tuning to achieve 528 hz. After all, the exact frequencies we are discussing represent only one note in the scale. By tuning to 444 hz for A you are in harmony to C at 528 hz.
If my thoughts are correct, I’m not sure why they call this 528 hz music as opposed to 444 hz. I can understand the possibility of healing tones, but once again that is one specific frequency, not really music. Maybe 528 hz music has a subliminal drone tone buried in it at 528?
For a musician wanting to achieve 528 hz music would this be the same as 444 hz tuning?
I think it just means A=528 vs 440.
Research 440 as satanic dissonance
Wonder if that's why the 440 engine in the Dodge was named Dodge Demon lol.
If you had just said there is good music and there is bad music, i would agree. After years of playing using the reference tuning of 440 hz, I have never found any one that wanted to worship satan due to the music. Maybe that means I’m a decent musician. I have also tuned to 432 hz and haven’t been able to find anyone that could discern we were not playing in 440 hz. It seems the 440 conspiracy had something to do with disparaging the Germans after WWII. 440 hz as a reference tone was used well before WWII. Personally, as long as all band members/instruments are in tune, regardless of 440 vs 432 hz, I can’t tell the difference between the two.
The downvote makes me think I offended someone. Sorry. Just finished playing in a jazz quartet tonight and the other guitarist knew much more than I about various tunings. He said I was correct about 444 hz being the correct tuning for 528. But one thing I had completely forgotten was the actual A note on a guitar is 110 hz when tuned to 440 hz. 440 hz is a harmonic. Great tidbit to know when talking about tension. So if your a guitarist, tune the A to 111 instead of 110 hz if you want to play in 528. I’m sure I would not be able to tell the 1 hz difference, but maybe others can. Kind of fun to see.
I don't think so, 440 is considered standard and 432 is often used because it is a natural harmonic frequency. I have a tuner that maxes out between 410 and 480. I honestly think that 432 hz = 432 hz and 528 hz = 528 hz, but I'm not sure why a guitar (for example) couldn't be tuned to 528 hz instead. I imagine it would be way too much string tension.
Yes. Too much string tension unless you want to destroy the guitar. 528 hz as the reference frequency of A , I do not think it makes sense for orchestal instruments either, too high. The reason I asked about 444 hz as the reference is that it would make the C(5) note to be exactly the 528 hz frequency. This seems to be the logical tuning to achieve 528 hz. After all, the exact frequencies we are discussing represent only one note in the scale. By tuning to 444 hz for A you are in harmony to C at 528 hz.
If my thoughts are correct, I’m not sure why they call this 528 hz music as opposed to 444 hz. I can understand the possibility of healing tones, but once again that is one specific frequency, not really music. Maybe 528 hz music has a subliminal drone tone buried in it at 528?