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About 432 Hz

432 Hz, otherwise known as Verdi’s A, was the music tuning standard prior to
today’s tuning of 440 Hz. 432 Hz is widely considered a superior tuning that
makes music more pleasant to listen to and has a positive influence on the
human mind and body. 432 Hz also has interesting relationships with our
planet and history.
Different music invokes different emotions. We all know that.

Crooning love ballads make us feel romantic (or sick). Trashing metal songs
inspire intense head banging and fist pumping. Blues leave us reminiscing
about times past and old relationships. And an orchestral work by Mozart can
sometimes seem to move our very being.

We know there’s something to the style, the tempo, the melody, and the lyrics
of our favorite songs that affects how we feel.

But what if I told you there’s another factor at play, one you don’t even notice?

There is, and it’s called frequency.

Whether you realize it or not, the frequency music is tuned to has a profound
effect on you. And unfortunately, the “standard” frequency used in most
modern music may not be a positive one, or least not as positive as it could
be.

Modern Music Tuning – 440 Hz


From concert halls to your favorite streaming service, most music you hear
today is tuned to 440 Hz. Yet this tuning is barely a hundred years old.

For thousands of years, from Egypt to Greek, a different frequency was used.

As shown by musician Brian T. Collins, the Schiller Institute, and even


physicists and scientists, the 440 Hz frequency not only lacks mathematical or
scientific significance, it’s actually out of tune with the natural world and
greater universe.
For this reason, many believe that this 440 Hz pitch doesn’t just make music
less pleasant and enjoyable, but it actually has a negative effect on our mind,
our consciousness, our natural energies and vibrations, and our spirituality.

It is argued that the 440 Hz tuning keeps us closed off from a higher sense of
meaning and disconnected from our surroundings.

If that’s the case, then why is 440 Hz the modern standard?

Well, it all started in the late 19th century with a man named J.C. Deagan.
Using his wealthy connections, he not only began manufacturing musical
instruments in 440 Hz, he began lobbying in Europe and the United States to
adopt the frequency as the standard concert pitch.

Deagan’s first success came in 1917, when the American Federation of Music
adopted 440 Hz. By 1922, it was the standard pitch through the United States.

In the 1940s, it began spreading throughout the rest of the world, and in 1953
the International Organization of Standardization established it as the
international, or ISO 16, standard.

It remains the music standard around the world to this day.

Why would a manufacturer of musical instruments want to establish a new


standard pitch?

Because in most cases, you can’t simply change the tuning on an instrument
to 440 Hz when it was designed to be played at another frequency. It’s
possible, but it won’t sound right – and can even be damaging to the
instrument.

In short, the change in pitch would have forced thousands, if not millions, of
new instruments to be purchased. And you can bet this was very lucrative for
Deagan.

While some claim 440 Hz was introduced for more conspiratorial reasons, like
as a form of government propaganda and mind control (and this is certainly
possible), it’s just as likely that it was simply a way for a businessman, namely
J.C. Deagan, to make more money.
The Ancient Tuning – 432 Hz
But what tuning was used before 440 Hz became the standard?

It was 432 Hz.

In fact, researcher and musician Ananda Bosman has shown that instruments
uncovered from ancient Egypt used this tuning.

Then there are the Stradivarius violins, which were built throughout the late
17th and early 18th centuries and today are worth millions, owing to their
superior construction and sound.

These wonderful instruments were tuned to 432 Hz, and scientists have now
found out why. Using software normally reserved for speech
analysis, researchers found that violins from the two Cremonese luthiers
mimic aspects of the human voice, a feature they argue adds to the
instruments’ exceptional musical quality.

This gives credence to the fact that 432 Hz resonates with humans and the
world around us; something we will explore in greater detail in the next
section.

The natural 432 Hz vibration was used by Mozart and Italian opera composer,
Giuseppe Fortunino Francesco Verdi.

In fact, Verdi once wrote to the Congress of Italian Musicians to suggest 432
Hz as the concert standard.

Since France has adopted a standard pitch, I advised that the example should
also be followed by us; and I formally requested that the orchestras of various
cities of Italy, among them that of the Scala [Milan], to lower the tuning fork to
conform to the standard French one. If the musical commission instituted by
our government believes, for mathematical exigencies, that we should reduce
the 435 vibrations of French tuning fork to 432, the difference is so small,
almost imperceptible to the ear, that I associate myself most willingly with this.

He was unsuccessful.
432 Hz wasn't just something reserved for Western composers either. Sound
researcher Jamie Buturff, with the help of a Korg tuner, found that the singing
bowls and other instruments of Tibetan monks are tuned to 432 Hz.

It is also said that the instruments of the ancient Greek god of


music, Orpheus, were tuned to this harmonic frequency.

Why exactly did this frequency have such long reach, stretching through time
and around the globe?

Perhaps it’s due to the mathematical consistency 432 Hz has with the
vibrations of the natural universe.

After all, Verdi’s endorsement of 432 Hz was also backed by physicists and
scientists Felix Savart, Joseph Sauveur, and Bartolomeo Grassi Landi.

It’s relation to the Schumann Resonance is just one example of the


significance of 432 Hz, so let's have a look at that.

432 Hz: The Heartbeat of the Planet


Named after Winfried Otto Schumann, the German physicist who first
discovered it, the Schumann Resonance refers to the electromagnetic
frequencies between 7.86 and 8 Hz activated by lightning in the area between
the ionosphere and the surface of the Earth.

These resonances are essentially our planet’s heartbeat.

By working from 8 Hz, we find note C at either 128 or 256 Hz, depending on
the scale we use.

And note A? We'd find that at 432 Hz, otherwise known as “Verdi’s A”.

In short, 432 Hz is in tune with the Earth itself.

We don’t find any such significance with 440 Hz.


432 continues to show up wherever we look, including at ancient sites, like the
Great Pyramid of Giza, Stonehenge, and Sri Yantra.

As noted by Scottish born composer Brian T. Collins:

From my own observations, some of the harmonic overtone partials of


A=432hz 12T5 appear to line up to natural patterns and also the resonance of
solitons.

Solitons need a specific range to form into the realm of density and span from
the micro to the macro cosmos. Solitons are not only found in water
mechanics, but also in the ion-acoustic breath between electrons and protons.

Brian has also documented 432 Hz’s relation to the golden mean, Phi, as it
vibrates in tune with nature, our biology and DNA, and even our
consciousness.

432 Hz is considered to have the potential to synchronize both hemispheres


of our brain – the logical and analytical left brain and the creative and intuitive
right brain – creating what scientists call “whole brain synchronization”,
maximizing our potential as thinkers, artists, and spiritual beings.

Other music scholars have revealed further compelling evidence that 440 Hz
is not ideal:

In her book, Intervals Scales Tones and the Concert Pitch C=128hz, Maria
Reynolds showed that pitches higher than the scientific C prime of 128 Hz,
which coincides with an A of 432 Hz, creates a disconnect between our
bodies and consciousness, as well as social friction with the people around
us.

That means 440 Hz is potentially contributing to the internal and external strife
of the modern world. Unbeknown to us, it is smothering our intuition, hindering
our creativity, cutting us off from our spirituality, and making us more
antisocial.
How Can We Return to 432 Hz?
Between 432 Hz’s mathematic and scientific significance and its positive
effects on our minds, bodies, and consciousness, it may seem obvious that
we should go back to this ancient tuning and ditch the modern 440 Hz.

And many are advocating for this change. Indeed, to paraphrase Richard
Huisken, Founder of the ‘Back to 432 Hz' Committee:

Music at 432 Hz is nicer for hearing, softer, brighter and more beautiful than
music in 440 Hz. Though the untrained ear may not hear this difference; it can
be felt.

But changing the standard tuning isn’t that easy.

In principle, most instruments could be retuned. But some couldn't be, and this
would mean buying a whole lot of new instruments. Not to mention all of the
red tape and bureaucratic nonsense there is to cut through with music
academies and composers.

Fortunately, that doesn’t mean you can’t introduce more 432 Hz music to your
own life.

And why wouldn’t you?

It has the power to bring you more in harmony with nature. And after all, as
humans, we are a part of nature.

Over time, listening to our beautiful music created at 432 Hz tuning increases
your sense of well-being and connectedness to wider world. You might find it
engaging your intuition, increasing your creativity, sharpening your intellect,
and even expanding your consciousness.

Many describe 432 Hz music as more of an interior experience that fills your
body, as opposed to the external sensation felt with 440 Hz. It is an all-
consuming, innate connection, a more enjoyable, pleasant listening
experience.

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