As a professional musician/teacher for 40+ years, I can tell you first hand that when I switched from tuning my guitar/bass etc. to 432hz from 440 hz there was a definite change in how the music sounded. It just sounds more "real", "round", "pure" etc. When I hear my students playing in A=440hz, it sounds "sharp" "pointed", "harsh", etc.
I've been playing in 432hz for a few years now, and I have no intention of ever going back to 440hz. I always tune a student's instrument to 432hz so that they get used to how it is supposed to sound. I've even taught advanced players and teachers how much better it sounds and they have been experimenting with it trying to make the change over. However, usually they are met with "resistance" when trying it within a band, as the other players have become so accustomted to 440hz that 432hz sounds a bit "flat" and "out of tune" to their ears (which makes sense).
For those interested in the 432hz vs 440hz comparison, there are YouTube videos that do a comparison that shows the difference. I did a quick search and here's a video that I found that was short and did a side by side comparison... the guy hasn't played it enough to notice a difference, BUT, check out the comments!! Overwhelmingly they are in favor of 432hz!
Yes and beautifully written. I cannot thank you enough. My wife and I both have seen videos like the one you shared and have thought the same thing. We have also got 432Hz players to convert the music we listen to. More calming in nature and just soothing, no matter the type. It's just better and so far as the 440Hz - yes, much more sharp and harsh. It's odd to me that they knowingly did this with the understanding that some changes (such as this) would affect our brains, ourselves at the cellular level. disturbing to say the least. I thank you again for all of what you've said here. I really appreciate it and I hope the other anons do as well. -many thanks Dragon'. cheers friend. 🍻
Hmmm... I never considered a 432hz player/converter! Thanks for the tip... I'm going to have to check them out! ;) ... and thank you for the kind words, friend!
I listen to Paraleven out of Atlanta (EDM). He publishes most of his music in 432hz. Also, he is a pure patriot and very awake to what is happening in the U.S. Artists like Paraleven need to be supported by the Patriot Community. In fact, I suspect he is on GA.
It is at the level of instrument tuning, when the music is created.
There is some discussion of converting music from 440Hz to 432Hz (search 432 or 432 Hz on GAW search bar), but for the most part anything created in 440Hz stays that way regardless of playback equipment.
The tuning of music to a specific frequency like 440Hz or 432Hz happens at the track level. This is determined during the creation or mastering of the music itself, where the instruments or audio sources are tuned to a reference pitch—typically A4 (the A above middle C) at 440Hz for standard tuning, or 432Hz for an alternative tuning some folks swear by for its supposed "natural" vibe.
The audio renderer (like your software or DAW) and the speaker don’t inherently "tune" the frequency unless you’re applying some real-time pitch-shifting effect. They just play back what’s in the track. So, if a song’s mastered at 432Hz, that’s baked into the recording, not adjusted by your speakers or renderer. That said, some fancy audio tools or plugins can shift pitch post-production, but that’s not the norm for how tuning is set.
good man. I saw this from him as well "I wanted to create a mix that was tuned to 432Hz (down from the normal 440Hz) so people could listen to music the way it should be heard."
thanks again for bringing this out for more attention. it's very much needed and more people should know just how far the evil runs in the country- music included. Now, if only more artists would start doing this. - cheers friend, and thank you again 🍻
definitely an interesting watch and does make you wonder - if they know certain frequencies can hurt you more than help as in disrupt the behaviors of us at the cellular level, then why allow this in the first place? wait, .. I forgot. They're evil. I'll say it again, had I known all of everything we've been given these last years, it probably would've put me in the hospital. The level of evil is insane and how insidious it is, even worse! -many thanks for the reply JD' 🍻
As a professional musician/teacher for 40+ years, I can tell you first hand that when I switched from tuning my guitar/bass etc. to 432hz from 440 hz there was a definite change in how the music sounded. It just sounds more "real", "round", "pure" etc. When I hear my students playing in A=440hz, it sounds "sharp" "pointed", "harsh", etc.
I've been playing in 432hz for a few years now, and I have no intention of ever going back to 440hz. I always tune a student's instrument to 432hz so that they get used to how it is supposed to sound. I've even taught advanced players and teachers how much better it sounds and they have been experimenting with it trying to make the change over. However, usually they are met with "resistance" when trying it within a band, as the other players have become so accustomted to 440hz that 432hz sounds a bit "flat" and "out of tune" to their ears (which makes sense).
For those interested in the 432hz vs 440hz comparison, there are YouTube videos that do a comparison that shows the difference. I did a quick search and here's a video that I found that was short and did a side by side comparison... the guy hasn't played it enough to notice a difference, BUT, check out the comments!! Overwhelmingly they are in favor of 432hz!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dpV1ufAu8fQ
Yes and beautifully written. I cannot thank you enough. My wife and I both have seen videos like the one you shared and have thought the same thing. We have also got 432Hz players to convert the music we listen to. More calming in nature and just soothing, no matter the type. It's just better and so far as the 440Hz - yes, much more sharp and harsh. It's odd to me that they knowingly did this with the understanding that some changes (such as this) would affect our brains, ourselves at the cellular level. disturbing to say the least. I thank you again for all of what you've said here. I really appreciate it and I hope the other anons do as well. -many thanks Dragon'. cheers friend. 🍻
Hmmm... I never considered a 432hz player/converter! Thanks for the tip... I'm going to have to check them out! ;) ... and thank you for the kind words, friend!
any time friend. 👍🍻
I listen to Paraleven out of Atlanta (EDM). He publishes most of his music in 432hz. Also, he is a pure patriot and very awake to what is happening in the U.S. Artists like Paraleven need to be supported by the Patriot Community. In fact, I suspect he is on GA.
Is 440 vs 432 done at the track level, the audio renderer level, or the speaker level?
It is at the level of instrument tuning, when the music is created.
There is some discussion of converting music from 440Hz to 432Hz (search 432 or 432 Hz on GAW search bar), but for the most part anything created in 440Hz stays that way regardless of playback equipment.
Track, render and mastering.
per Grok:
The tuning of music to a specific frequency like 440Hz or 432Hz happens at the track level. This is determined during the creation or mastering of the music itself, where the instruments or audio sources are tuned to a reference pitch—typically A4 (the A above middle C) at 440Hz for standard tuning, or 432Hz for an alternative tuning some folks swear by for its supposed "natural" vibe.
The audio renderer (like your software or DAW) and the speaker don’t inherently "tune" the frequency unless you’re applying some real-time pitch-shifting effect. They just play back what’s in the track. So, if a song’s mastered at 432Hz, that’s baked into the recording, not adjusted by your speakers or renderer. That said, some fancy audio tools or plugins can shift pitch post-production, but that’s not the norm for how tuning is set.
good man. I saw this from him as well "I wanted to create a mix that was tuned to 432Hz (down from the normal 440Hz) so people could listen to music the way it should be heard."
thanks again for bringing this out for more attention. it's very much needed and more people should know just how far the evil runs in the country- music included. Now, if only more artists would start doing this. - cheers friend, and thank you again 🍻
u/#q4827
ABSOLUTELY YES! ✨
definitely an interesting watch and does make you wonder - if they know certain frequencies can hurt you more than help as in disrupt the behaviors of us at the cellular level, then why allow this in the first place? wait, .. I forgot. They're evil. I'll say it again, had I known all of everything we've been given these last years, it probably would've put me in the hospital. The level of evil is insane and how insidious it is, even worse! -many thanks for the reply JD' 🍻