Author Archives: bpeck

Nazis!!!!!! — The Interesting History of A440hz, Nazi Germany and the British Standard Institution

This article briefly details the history of A440hz and its status as the internationally excepted frequency of tuning.  A440hz was never a legally-agreed upon, institutionalized tuning, rather, the frequency  has permeated society through wide reaching sources such as the radio industry, the military industry and through the instrument building process (the most effective method.)

As late as 1940 but especially in the 17-1800’s, the frequencies of  A430hz, C256hz (A444hz) and A432hz were consciously agreed upon as the optimum universal tuning for our music.

All music lovers and human beings should, at the very least, be concerned with the history and origins of A440hz.  Any cultural implementation birthing from Berlin propaganda outlets circa 1939 can be safely considered suspect.

The sad truth is reversing this ship will be a slow process due to the overwhelming number of musical instruments designed to be calibrated to A440hz.  Very few instruments are still built with the frequency of A432hz in mind.  They would include Tibetan monk bowls, Native American flutes and drums, the Didgeridoo, Chinese Bamboo and other tribal instruments.  

All western instruments, especially those making up marching bands and symphony orchestras are constructed to be tuned to a higher, more damaging frequency.  

Lets not even get started with Autotune… 

More posts will come out about the history of “concert pitch” (A440hz).  The truth will be revealed so that true change can occur.  Information, to this day, remains the most effective tool we have as humans beings to instill positive revolutionary change.  Progression forward is all that matters.  Take nothing for granted and question everything for even seemingly mundane topics, like pitch frequency, can rekindle themselves into blazing new fires of rejuvenated truth.   

-B

  A Brief History of Musical Tuning

Joeseph Goebbels

The first explicit reference to the tuning of middle C at 256 oscillations per second was probably made by a contemporary of J.S. Bach. It was at that time that precise technical methods developed making it possible to determine the exact pitch of a given note in cycles per second. The first person said to have accomplished this wasJoseph Sauveur (1653-1716), called the father of musical acoustics measured the pitches of organ pipes and vibrating strings, and defined the musical scale at 256 cycles per second.

In fact, A=440 has never been the international standard pitch, and the first international conference to impose A=440, which failed, was organized by Nazi Propaganda Minister Joseph Goebbels in 1939. Throughout the seventeeth, eighteenth, and nineteenth centuries, and in fact into the 1940s, all standard U.S. and European text books on physics, sound, and music took as a given the “physical pitch” or “scientific pitch” of C=256, including Helmholtz’s own texts themselves. Figures 13 and 14 show pages from two standard modern American textbooks, a 1931 standard phonetics text, and the official 1944 physics manual of the U.S. War Department, which begin with the standard definition of musical pitch as C=256.[1]J.S.

Bach, as is well known, was an expert in organ construction and master of acoustics, and was in constant contact with instrument builders, scientists, and musicians all over Europe. So we can safely assume that he was familiar with Sauveur’s work. In Beethoven’s time, the leading acoustician was Ernst Chladni (1756-1827), whose textbook on the theory of music explicitly defined C=256 as the scientific tuning.Up through the middle of the present century, C=256 was widely recognized as the standard “scientific” or “physical” pitch (see Figures 13 and 14).

Ludwig Van Beethoven

Regarding composers, all “early music” scholars agree that Mozart tuned at precisely at C=256, as his A was in the range of A=427-430. Christopher Hogwood, Roger Norrington, and dozens of other directors of orginal-instrument orchestras’ established the practice during the 1980’s of recording all Mozart works at precisely A=430, as well as most of Beethoven’s symphonies and piano concertos. Hogwood, Norrington, and others have stated in dozens of interviews and record jackets, the pragmatic reason: German instruments of the period 1780-1827, and even replicas of those instruments, can only be tuned at A=430.

The demand by Czar Alexander, at the 1815 Congress of Vienna, for a “brighter” sound, began the demand for a higher pitch from all the crowned heads of Europe. While Classical musicians resisted, the Romantic school, led by Friedrich Liszt and his son-in law Richard Wagner, championed the higher pitch during the 1830’s and 1840’s. Wagner even had the bassoon and many other instruments redesigned so as to be able to play only at A=440 and above. By 1850, chaos reigned, with major European theatres at pitches varying from A=420 to A=460, and even higher at Venice.

In the late 1850’s, the French government, under the influence of a committee of composers led by bel canto proponent Giacomo Rossini, called for the first standardization of the pitch in modern times. France consequently passed a law in 1859 establishing A at 435, the lowest of the ranges of pitches (from A=434 to A=456) then in common use in France, and the highest possible pitch at which the soprano register shifts may be maintained close to their disposition at C=256. It was this French A to which Verdi later referred, in objecting to higher tunings then prevalent in Italy, under which circumstance “we call A in Rome, what is B-flat in Paris.”

Following Verdi’s 1884 efforts to insitutitionalize A=432 in Italy, a British-dominated conference in Vienna in 1885 ruled that no such pitch could be standardized. The French, the New York Metropolitan Opera, and many theatres in Europe and the U.S., continued to maintain their A at 432-435, until World War II.

The first effort to institutionalize A=440 in fact was a conference organized by Joseph Goebbels in 1939, who had standardized A=440 as the official German pitch. Professor Robert Dussaut of the National Conservatory of Paris told the French press that: “By September 1938, the Accoustic Committee of Radio Berlin requested the British Standard Association to organize a congress in London to adopt internationally the German Radio tuning of 440 periods. This congress did in fact occur in London, a very short time before the war, in May-June 1939. No French composer was invited. The decision to raise the pitch was thus taken without consulting French musicians, and against their will.’‘ The Anglo-Nazi agreement, given the outbreak of war, did not last, so that still A=440 did not stick as a standard pitch.

London International Standardizing Organization (BSI)

A second congress in London of the International Standardizing Organization met in October 1953, to again attempt to impose A=440 internationally. This conference passed such a resolution; again no Continental musicians who opposed the rise in pitch were invited, and the resolution was widelyInternational Standardizing Organizationignored. Professor Dussaut of the Paris Conservatory wrote that British instrument makers catering to the U.S. jazz trade, which played at A=440 and above, had demanded the higher pitch, “and it is shocking to me that our orchestra members and singers should thus be dependent upon jazz players.” A referendum by Professor Dussaut of 23,000 French musicians voted overwhelmingly for A=432.

As recently as 1971, the European Community passed a recommendation calling for the still non-existent international pitch standard. The action was reported in “The Pitch Game,” Time magazine, Aug. 9, 1971. The article states that A=440, “this supposedly international standard, is widely ignored.” Lower tuning is common, including in Moscow, Time reported, “where orchestras revel in a plushy, warm tone achieved by a larynx-relaxing A=435 cycles,” and at a performance in London “a few years ago,” British church organs were still tuned a half-tone lower, about A=425, than the visiting Vienna Philharmonic, at A=450.

http://www.schillerinstitute.org/music/rev_tuning_hist.html

Digital Drugs – New Technology Uses the Power of Sound to Perform Drug-Like Effects on Mind

Uses binaural beats to create opiate-like effect in your brain.

Tried this for the full 30 minutes, it definitely had an effect on me.  I started to get really heavy after about the 8 minute mark.  Your mind becomes very fixed on the subtle discrepancies in vibration. 

At the 15 minute mark I began to have really heavy eyes and by 22 minutes I started going in and out of dream like states, completely awake but nodding in and out.

By the end my eyelids were very heavy and my arms were like jelly.  I had a slight but very noticeable nausea.  Afterwards I listened to my Moonlight Sonata recording in A432hz just to give my ears a comfortable adjustment.

Certainly an interesting notion.  Using sound-waves and frequencies to alter brain patterns and consciousness.  I would be very curious to see what this binaural effect would have on the mind utilized in a more musical way, with melody and rhythm.

-B

An Open Letter to Venues That Exploit Their Musicians

***Great article highlighting the extremely difficult  battle new musicians face to gain exposure.  New approaches will be needed to promote live music and stimulate the creative flow once again.

-B

The below post has earned quite alot of attention over the last seven weeks.  Full-time saxophonist, Dave Goldberg, wrote an honest letter to venue owners addressing their disregard and exploitation of the working musicians.  The post is powerful and I asked David if I could republish this article on Grassrootsy. I’m hoping that you’ll read this and think about what part you play. Venues can take advantage of you, but only if you let them. [original post]

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http://www.grassrootsy.com/2012/02/22/an-open-letter-to-venues-that-exploit-their-musicians/

As Ive been looking for gigs lately, I’ve never seen so many free and low paying gigs. Well the economy is bad, so I can understand that a little bit. However, it is no longer good enough for the musician to be willing to perform for little compensation. Now we are expected to also be the venue promoter? The expectations are that the band will not only provide great music, but also bring lots of people to their venue. It is now the band’sresponsibility to make this happen, not the club owner.

Just the other day I was told by someone who owned a wine bar that they really liked our music and would love for us to play at their place. She then told me the gig paid $75 for a trio. Now $75 used to be bad money per person, let alone $75 for the whole band. It had to be a joke, right? No, she was serious. But it didn’t end there. She then informed us we had to bring 25 people minimum. Didn’t even offer us extra money if we brought 25 people. I would have laughed other than it’s not the first time I’ve gotten this proposal from club owners. But are there musicians really doing this? Yes. They are so desperate to play, they will do anything. But let’s think about this for a second and turn this around a little bit…

Read the rest of the article here…

Waves Inside Waves

Vibrations encompass the world you live in and with them, their waveforms.  The entire universe constructed out of soundwaves, bending and gliding about the cosmos, undetected but kinetically experienced.  The waves are real and we churn about them, lost in a sea of consciousness.

The waters of human consciousness are currently choppy but we have the ability to change that.

Observe the waves of epiphany.

Observe the waves of history.

Experience the vibrations of the earth; the crack of thunder, the pattering of rain, the dull rumbling earthquake.

Experience the vibrations.

We live on a planet constructed by frequency and all frequency interacts.  This cacophony of sound vibrates into the human ear and rumbles its way to the seashell-shaped, Fibonacci spiral that is the Cochlea.  The cochlea then remixes these vibrations to become the surround sound audio you hear inside your head.

This is vitally important information because the sounds that vibrate inside our head dictate our entire state of being, vibration and mood level at that very moment.

Our personal display of vibration is constantly connecting, reconnecting and adjusting as it dances about the beautiful symphony of life.

As history flows in waves, human consciousness flows in waves; Always discovering; The endless ocean of vibrating consciousness, that connects all life together as one.

Our waters are beginning to calm.  As a mass we are growing, learning from our mistakes, making new ones, falling down and getting back up because this is what we do.  This is our waveform.

Every story has a waveform.  Every life has a waveform, and as our lives intersect, we seamlessly connected to all other waveforms in the universe to formulate a harmony.  This is what we experience as the state of the world.  This state of the universe.

The state currently is not good.  But it is in our power to change that.

We are all virtuosos of our own instrument.  We must come together and end this dress rehearsal.

Take note of the waves around you. The waves inside waves, inside waves; perceiving your surroundings and tuning in to your own state of frequency.  Treat others the way you would want to be treated.  Raise your vibration and help raise the vibration of others.

That is how great harmony works.  Feeding and flowing; Communicating, acknowledging, respecting; Through the vibration of love.

All you need is love.

Remember that as we continue to construct the completely beautiful soundwave that is the story of our lives.  The greatest story of all time.  The story of human consciousness.

-B

Rachmaninoff Prelude in C# Minor at A432hz!!!

Performed by: Brian Deegan Peck

Composed by: Sergei Rachmaninoff

Mixed by: Adrian Rhetoric

This is the famous Prelude in C# minor by Sergei Rachmaninoff played to the frequency of A432hz rather than A440hz. It is mixed with some minor effects. The effects are there to try and capture what it was like being in the room listening to the  vibrations live, however we are not professional sound engineers and the setup was very primitive.

This piece was recorded in a standard living room with a very basic two mic set up an AKG Perception 220 and and AKG Perception 440. It was captured in one take.

This is the first recording I have heard of this piece played at the frequency of A432hz.  I hope you enjoy.

Please listen on the best speaker/headphones possible for maximum effect!

-B

Revolution!!!

We are in the middle of a revolution.

It’s one we’ve never seen before; it’s one we’ve never felt before; but it’s stirring inside all of us at this very moment.  Isn’t it funny how life goes?  In waves.  The essence of nature is a wave, for it is in everything.  Our wave is breaking now.

Look around the physical world.  Changes are occurring.  Revolutions in Egypt, Turkey, Brazil, all around the world the greatest revolutions in human history are taking place and the shift has only just begun.  Currently all major aspects of society, locally and globally, are poised for significant change.

The revolution is big.

In preparation for what is in store we must look back to another moment when a spark in human consciousness detonated a powerful explosion of conscious change throughout Western Europe…  The French revolution of 1789.

This breakthrough brought forth some of the greatest artistic creations in mankind’s history.  The Raft of the Medusa by Théodore Géricault, The op.10 etudes by Chopin, Victor Hugo’s “Les Miserables”, amazing pieces of art that stemmed from the heart of pure human consciousness to soil a new way forward.

The vibration of post-revolution was palpable, flowing around the awakening energy source, in this case, was Germany and France circa 1850.

When the wave of revolution comes you can either be taken down with it or ride safely to shore.

I choose to ride.

Our current root-source of palpable, revolutionary energy is the entire planet.  Waves upon waves have been building to this single, climactic surge of power.   Europe’s renaissance period, giving birth to written music, harmony and folk melody.  The Romantic Era bringing some of the most creative, most forward-thinking minds to the conscious-grid of music.  Musicians like Chopin, Brahms, Verdi, Schumann, Liszt, Wagner.  These musicians quantified sound and took the abstraction as far as they could grow.

In their minds music was unlimited and their imaginations powerful.  Composers like Wagner who single-handedly, through sheer act of will, carved out the Opera “Das Rheingold” the three day behemoth that tells story of the ring of power and the fall of man.  Niccolo Paganini who hungered to transcend man’s instrumental capabilities by igniting the world on fire with his virtuosity on the violin.  And Liszt, who followed Paganini’s fervent dedication to his instrument and its possibilities.

This was a time of great stride in music.  The audience heard and saw things that they never imagined possible and the world was enthralled by the performances in Art, Dance, Theater and Music.  Their whole perception of their reality was changing on a daily, monthly, yearly basis.  This sensation is returning once again to humanity.

Now, in the beginnings of a new dawn, we look to Art as a beacon of truth.  Art is the beautiful mirror of the state of human consciousness.  Great works of Art display great depth of consciousness and we are attracted to great works because it displays the potential we all have as human beings.  Therefore it is in are best interest, during this revolution, to recalibrate our conscious focus away from the material possessions and back into Art.  There is much truth and beauty to be found in the creations that preceded us.  There is much for us to gain by studying them.

Let us come together at the beginning of this free, globally-aligned network of consciousness and create some new amazing pieces of Art.  The more we study, the more we discuss, the more we discover.  Nobody has the answer but we’re all on this search together.  Begin the revolution now.

-B

 

Physics teaches us that all of our senses have a vibrational aspect in one way or another.  Sound and light are the obvious examples as they correspond to the spectra of acoustical pressure and electromagnetic energy – we hear about 10 octaves and see about 1 octaverespectively, out of what are probably infinite spectra.  The other three senses of taste, smell and touch also (when analyzed in terms of the biochemistry involved) can be thought of in terms of vibratory phenomena, harmonics, overtones and phase relationships and amplitudes, just as our two primary senses are.” 

 

 

“Everything flows out and in; everything has its tides; all things rise and fall; the pendulum-swing is in everything; the measure of the swing to the right is the measure of the swing to the left; rhythm compensates.” – The Kybalion

 

Triangle-shaped heartcell, Wyss Institute

 

“If you want to find the secrets of the Universe, think in terms of energy, frequency, and vibration.” – Nickola Tesla

 

 

 

 

 

Beethoven’s Moonlight Sonata recorded at A432hz!

Performed by: Brian Deegan Peck

Composed by: Ludwig Van Beethoven

Mixed by: Adrian Rhetoric

The piano is a Schafer and Sons baby grand tuned to the frequency of A432hz.  The piano was very out of tune prior to being tuned to A432hz and the recording was captured in a living room setup using two AKG Perception mics, the 420 and the 220.

It would be best to listen to this rendition through a good pair of headphones or through a quality speaker system with the lights turned off and eyes closed.

If you are not used to listening to classical music don’t worry.  Simply relax and allow whatever thoughts or feelings that come through occur.  Instrumental music is abstract and is meant to communicate, through vibration, to the heart.  Simply take all of the sounds in and enjoy the ride.

-B