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Comments
They only tested 20 mins exposure on people who have probably been programmed at 440hz all of their lives. We can only imagine what years of exposure would change.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31031095/
She performed this live just a week ago in SF:
https://www.kqed.org/arts/13952983/suzanne-ciani-grace-cathedral-san-francisco-review
Up until music was digital, the chances of any music I played on my tape deck or record player at home being close to the same pitch they were recorded at were zero. The pitch of music I listened to on my tape deck depended on how flat the batteries were. And I can guarantee no two record players spun at the same speed. I’m sure my cheap piece of crap record player was nowhere near 33 rpm. And when I recorded it to tape god knows what pitch it ended up as.
In any case many commercial records were sped up or slowed down on the master tape for various reasons. (Strawberry fields is out of tune. The two halves don’t even match each other).
Hardly any of the tracks on Highway to hell were even tuned to concert pitch. If you try to play along to a song off highway to hell you have to retune the guitar to match each song.
In my fairly worthless opinion, perfect tuning doesn’t matter. And people that think it does are over thinking things.
If it did violins would have frets. And guitar strings wouldn’t bend.
Our best way to judge things for ourselves is by our own feeling (not emotions). Things dont have to be exact for that. And I know when something feels better or worse. Most of the music we listen to don’t have exact notes that ring out at their main frequency all the way anyway. That makes it sound organic and alive (‘imperfect’).
People who know how to feel with their hearts and don’t live fully in their heads (like western science does) will know for themselves. I wouldn’t be surprised if every deviation from A=440hz in 12 TET is one step closer to a harmonious feeling.
Also most people see music purely as a form of entertainment. This already shows us how misinformed we are as a society. For instance we know that our moods can influence our physical health and the music we listen to can influence our moods. So there’s the first obvious effect related to our health.
I’m confident that in the future we will have advanced medical equipment that will cure diseases with sound that we can’t cure with current western medicine (we wouldn’t be the first civilization on earth either).
And we haven’t even started to talk about the vibration of our consciousness and how it can be programmed/manipulated through sound. But I think I will keep that topic for another place and/or time.
Giuseppe Verdi wrote in 432Hz and tried to institutionalize it in 1884. I don’t really care what is more calming or if my chakras are tickled, what I do know is that Verdi operas would be 1000000000% easier to sing at 432Hz.
who cares about 432hz 440hz , its the intervals and modulation of keys which matter.
for me 432 is somewhat more convenient because it's evenly divisible by 2 AND by 3 (unlike 440) – but that's all.