I discovered the Rockefeller musical tuning scam (to make us sick) a few years ago. Looking forward to more awakening so we can go back to the original. Good to find at least some music tune to 432 and 528 hz these days! It REALLY helps EVERYTHING to listen to music that is not engineered to make us sick;-)
Have you heard 432hz music? I'm sad to say I have and for some reason it sounds discordant and awful to me. Gives me an anxiety attack. I've heard others say the same. I wonder why. I don't have issues with monks singing though. I heard it is tuned to heavenly healing sounds.
WOW! I found this right now (link below). Part way down a guy plays a guitar in both frequencies and I LOVE 432hz. So maybe it's the artists ruining it for me and has nothing to do with 432. I'm not sure.
I noticed something similar as I tried to play the Killers "Read My Mind" (a song I enjoy and know by heart). Something annoyed me about it, though it may have been that I knew the song so well that it just didn't sound quite normal. I've been on a Schumann Resonance and something happened after listening (all instrumental) for a full two hours, mostly just in the background. I started feeling this weird sensation in my neck on one side, around where my thyroid gland is. It wasn't painful. It was just weird, like nothing I'd ever felt before. A tingling sensation. Was it trying to heal some problem I didn't even know I had? Or something else?
Find the songs you already like that have been retuned. Search "432 hz" plus "______" (hit song title that you already love)
Here's an old but VERY good one: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YBzYBGsnnb4 - Great musicians, and the song builds, has spectacular crescendos with more instruments and harmonies. It's sort of a "Be still and know that I am God" moment.
Its beautiful but it still distresses me. I have a feeling of annoyance. It borders the beauty of the cranberries voice, how the note falls off at the end of the verse but I feel like it's too off, and the length of the notes drawn out strange. Like they are trying to distract me from how off key it all is. I feel like it's preventing me from breathing correctly. Even though the few songs I have heard are technically "relaxing" they are not relaxing to me. I'm not sure I'm describing it correctly.
CHANGE is always uncomfortable. We have been listening to the "Devil 's Interval" for our entire lives. We have been programmed to be comfortable with it, much the way a person raised in the ghetto might be comfortable with (familiar with) the smell of rotting garbage.
I have actually witnessed this phenom, where a person who moved into a very nice clean environment actually preferred to leave rotting garbage in his home, even fighting to prevent someone else removing it for them. Whenever he was in a NICE circumstance with beauty and love around him, he was NERVOUS (with his leg shaking, looking around in fear). It was just too unfamiliar. He never got used to it, and he went on to sabotage every good thing around him so that he ended up back on skid row. He's never nervous or uncomfortable around trashy things and trashy people.
Listening to the Devil's Interval is familiar, even though it's yucky and bad for us. When we change on the inside, it gets harder to listen to the music that makes us sick.
I agree 100%. But I still dislike that song. 🤣 I think for reasons other than 432. Listening to the guitar play 432 and I loved it showed me some people may just be aiming for a whole new song genre which I am not fond of. And I like almost all music- religious, country, heavy metal, rock, hip hop, big band, orchestra, classical, alternative, jazz, even some rap.
It's saying a lot for me to not like something. I think it's the way she sings, the rythm/tempo is discordant and she is closer to rap singing to me which is my least favorite, like someone who speaks the song instead of singing and takes too long to.get the words out. Too many pauses in the wrong places where they end up losing you. It actually made me dislike the lyrics. I felt like she was codependent know it all saying she is inside the other person and knows them, is becoming part of them. The whole thing turned me off... and usually I like songs which make me feel like I am one with others. Really strange.
Not everyone has perfect pitch;-) Find music you like, but that has been retuned out of the Devil's Interval. More and more people are retuning music (some of my favorites) and posting it on Youtube. A growing selection of songs we already enjoy (big hits) but with the tuning corrected. SEEK and ye shall find.
A quick google search (factchecked as false) says yes! Apparently some Beatles songs were played at the 440 hz Rockerfeller mentioned above but then were slowed down to 432 hz to make them easier to listen to...
It's funny my grandfather couldn't stand modern music. And when I say modern music I mean basically anything after the 1940's. They played records and CDs for grandma sometimes: of Beethoven and Strauss. Nothing was even the remotest bit modern...
I fell in love with Judy Garland singing "Somewhere Over The Rainbow" when I was four years old. Then when I was 12 I fell in love with "It's Only Make Believe" by Conway Twitty. The difference the effect those two songs (and songs similar to them) have had on my whole experience of being alive is like the difference between day and night. I'm not kidding. Any music that really touches me is, for better or worse, always like a hand on my heart or a punch in the gut. Music is visceral to me. It hits me where I live.
Hey Amy. After watching the Book of 528 vid, I opened these two 528hz links and played them simultaneously. You can adjust the volumes to suit your tastes. So cool...
Anyway, I have been in tomorrowland for about an hour, and I have Mass to attend at 12 noon, and a one hour dog walk before that. So, cheers and prayers.
It's a great amount of effort to look like that. Maybe they are among us... I have a close friend that lived in Thailand in the early 2000's with family. Commercial airline pilot. They have so many great memories! Take care and keep us posted. And is still Saturday here at the edge...
I'm willing to believe that certain frequencies by themselves can have various effects, however, when we talk about music in 432hz or 440hz, or whatever, we are not talking about just one frequency, we are talking about a collection of frequencies; obviously, the music has many more frequencies playing that just 432hz.
In musical terms, what is important is not any absolute frequency value, but rather the *relationship* between two (or more) pitches, called an "interval".
If we could go back to indigenous societies, or early Western (i.e. church) music, we would find that basically all of the intervals they used could be described using small whole numbers. That is to say, maybe someone sang a pitch at 262hz, and another joined them at, say 393hz, then 393/262 = 3/2...called a "just perfect fifth", the simplest and most foundational interval of a large variety of music.
On a modern piano, however, only octaves will have a ratio with small whole numbers, that ratio being 2/1, because the frequency of one octave higher vibrates twice as fast, e.g., 524hz is an octave above 262hz (524/262 = 2/1).
All of the other intervals on the modern piano are given by the relationship of one half-step being equal to 2^(1/12) (2 to the 1/12 power, i.e., a number x such that x^12=2). This tuning system is called "equal temperment". In the video, he says that if A=440hz, then F# (9 half-steps above A) is 741hz...sort of, actually it is 440hz*(2^(9/12)) = 739.9888454232688...maybe that seems nitpicky, but he says it is "precisely" 741hz, when clearly it is not.
Now, regardless of whether you tune a piano's A4 to 432hz, or 440hz, if you then tune the rest of the piano in equal temperment with respect to that A, all of the *relationships* between all of the notes are going to be the same. I honestly doubt that without perfect pitch, or extensive musical experience, a casual music listener would notice a difference between an equal tempered piano at A=432hz or A=440hz if they heard them on a different day. (OK, maybe if you played them side-by-side, i.e. in context, but out of context, without a reference, I doubt it.)
In my opinion, the real issue is equal temperment, because equal temperment is literally "out of tune". Just Intonation is what we call it in the West when we are actually playing in tune. Many musicians have a joy in playing in just intonation...I personally dislike pianos in general, because I just don't think they sound good...because they are actually out of tune! As Terry Riley said, Western music is fast because it's out of tune.
So this is a whole world of music/frequency that not many people know about. I myself went to music school for a semester in university and didn't learn about this until many years later!
So, concerning the video, I didn't watch the whole thing, because it honestly doesn't make sense based on what I know of music. The issue of temperment is extremely important. 432hz, or 440hz, these are just reference pitches which are used to construct a whole system of pitches...therein lies the real choice in my opinion. He has taken equal temperment for granted, which basically everyone does because no one knows that our tuning system is called equal temperment, or that there are different ways of tuning -- by which I mean, different ways of relating two notes, regardless of absolute pitch frequency. The hymn he mentions, if it were sung centuries ago, would have been sung in Just Intonation, and I sincerely doubt that anyone knew the Hz values back then.
Most Indian music, if accompanied only by a tanpura, and not by a harmonium, is in just intonation. I actually don't know for sure, I've been curious about this, but I think Indian musicians who don't use a harmonium (which is tuned is ET like a piano) probably don't use a certain reference pitch...as long as you have as base pitch, any pitch, you just tune everything justly to that.
Amy...your meme game is so strong.
These meme posts are highlights in my week.
Thank you.
Thanks. Sometimes I'm struggling for inspiration but right now I have too many good ones! Ebbs and flows I suppose...
AWESOME Amy!
I discovered the Rockefeller musical tuning scam (to make us sick) a few years ago. Looking forward to more awakening so we can go back to the original. Good to find at least some music tune to 432 and 528 hz these days! It REALLY helps EVERYTHING to listen to music that is not engineered to make us sick;-)
Have you heard 432hz music? I'm sad to say I have and for some reason it sounds discordant and awful to me. Gives me an anxiety attack. I've heard others say the same. I wonder why. I don't have issues with monks singing though. I heard it is tuned to heavenly healing sounds.
I'd never heard much regarding 432 hz I've listened to some things on 417 hz. Some could be related to the harmonic of the specific song...
Here's a cool one at 432 hz: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zZqBzDSVhbw
528 is better, but there are more cool songs available at 432.
Search Youtube "432 hz 528 hz hit songs" and see what you find. Here's a great one: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zZqBzDSVhbw
WOW! I found this right now (link below). Part way down a guy plays a guitar in both frequencies and I LOVE 432hz. So maybe it's the artists ruining it for me and has nothing to do with 432. I'm not sure.
https://creativetechlab.com/the-truth-about-432hz-music-not-as-special-as-people-think/
I noticed something similar as I tried to play the Killers "Read My Mind" (a song I enjoy and know by heart). Something annoyed me about it, though it may have been that I knew the song so well that it just didn't sound quite normal. I've been on a Schumann Resonance and something happened after listening (all instrumental) for a full two hours, mostly just in the background. I started feeling this weird sensation in my neck on one side, around where my thyroid gland is. It wasn't painful. It was just weird, like nothing I'd ever felt before. A tingling sensation. Was it trying to heal some problem I didn't even know I had? Or something else?
Find the songs you already like that have been retuned. Search "432 hz" plus "______" (hit song title that you already love)
Here's an old but VERY good one: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YBzYBGsnnb4 - Great musicians, and the song builds, has spectacular crescendos with more instruments and harmonies. It's sort of a "Be still and know that I am God" moment.
Beautiful!!!! 😍❤🌹
Thank you for sharing this.
Its beautiful but it still distresses me. I have a feeling of annoyance. It borders the beauty of the cranberries voice, how the note falls off at the end of the verse but I feel like it's too off, and the length of the notes drawn out strange. Like they are trying to distract me from how off key it all is. I feel like it's preventing me from breathing correctly. Even though the few songs I have heard are technically "relaxing" they are not relaxing to me. I'm not sure I'm describing it correctly.
The Cranberries. Yes that's exactly the vibe. Or perhaps Amy Winehouse...
CHANGE is always uncomfortable. We have been listening to the "Devil 's Interval" for our entire lives. We have been programmed to be comfortable with it, much the way a person raised in the ghetto might be comfortable with (familiar with) the smell of rotting garbage.
I have actually witnessed this phenom, where a person who moved into a very nice clean environment actually preferred to leave rotting garbage in his home, even fighting to prevent someone else removing it for them. Whenever he was in a NICE circumstance with beauty and love around him, he was NERVOUS (with his leg shaking, looking around in fear). It was just too unfamiliar. He never got used to it, and he went on to sabotage every good thing around him so that he ended up back on skid row. He's never nervous or uncomfortable around trashy things and trashy people.
Listening to the Devil's Interval is familiar, even though it's yucky and bad for us. When we change on the inside, it gets harder to listen to the music that makes us sick.
I agree 100%. But I still dislike that song. 🤣 I think for reasons other than 432. Listening to the guitar play 432 and I loved it showed me some people may just be aiming for a whole new song genre which I am not fond of. And I like almost all music- religious, country, heavy metal, rock, hip hop, big band, orchestra, classical, alternative, jazz, even some rap.
It's saying a lot for me to not like something. I think it's the way she sings, the rythm/tempo is discordant and she is closer to rap singing to me which is my least favorite, like someone who speaks the song instead of singing and takes too long to.get the words out. Too many pauses in the wrong places where they end up losing you. It actually made me dislike the lyrics. I felt like she was codependent know it all saying she is inside the other person and knows them, is becoming part of them. The whole thing turned me off... and usually I like songs which make me feel like I am one with others. Really strange.
I am not particularly fond of the lyrics either. It was a hit and it's just nice to find things that are tuned correctly.
Here's a great video on this subject, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LSDxWvEXyhw
The Beatles had some questionable images together, but they DID want to return to correct tuning, particularly John Lennon.
I listened again. It keeps getting worse. I feel like she isnt even singing shes just talking in a few off-key notes.
On a happy note, this could mean I sing well since this sounds a bit like my off key caterwauling
I want to try to match tones on a few of the Solfeggio resonance that have vocals or are in a pitch I can do. They're hard to match!
Our habit is to sing along to the Devil's Interval;-) We must start singing along to the good stuff to get good at it.
Not everyone has perfect pitch;-) Find music you like, but that has been retuned out of the Devil's Interval. More and more people are retuning music (some of my favorites) and posting it on Youtube. A growing selection of songs we already enjoy (big hits) but with the tuning corrected. SEEK and ye shall find.
❤❤❤❤❤
Sometimes I wonder if I would survive substack without your memes Amy. ❤🌹
::Thank you::
Does the Devil's Interval explain my aversion to The Beatles?
A quick google search (factchecked as false) says yes! Apparently some Beatles songs were played at the 440 hz Rockerfeller mentioned above but then were slowed down to 432 hz to make them easier to listen to...
Or it could be because...
It's been a hard day's night
And I've been workin' like a dog
It's been a hard day's night
I should be sleepin' like a log 😜
Agggghhhhhhhhhh....kill it with fire! 😹
I used to play a CD at the Siam Bar called #1 on repeat. It was all of the Beatles Number One Hits...
The Alien one is totally awesome! Is that real? This dude is my new folk hero.
Those types of motorbikes are displayed in some places in Thailand. Is the alien guy real? Hmmm...
The 528 awesome. Green energy why of course!
Pilots wtf?
Best memes yet!!
Thanks Amy!
Amy, the document in this link was written by the man who produced "The Devil's Interval" video. He explains a lot. https://steemit.com/440hzconcertpitch/@tonefreqhz/musical-cult-control-the-rockefeller-foundation-s-war-on-consciousness-through-the-imposition-of-a-440hz-standard-tuning-pt2
It's funny my grandfather couldn't stand modern music. And when I say modern music I mean basically anything after the 1940's. They played records and CDs for grandma sometimes: of Beethoven and Strauss. Nothing was even the remotest bit modern...
I fell in love with Judy Garland singing "Somewhere Over The Rainbow" when I was four years old. Then when I was 12 I fell in love with "It's Only Make Believe" by Conway Twitty. The difference the effect those two songs (and songs similar to them) have had on my whole experience of being alive is like the difference between day and night. I'm not kidding. Any music that really touches me is, for better or worse, always like a hand on my heart or a punch in the gut. Music is visceral to me. It hits me where I live.
So many good ones! Thank you
Love the predator in Thailand 🇹🇭
Hey Amy. After watching the Book of 528 vid, I opened these two 528hz links and played them simultaneously. You can adjust the volumes to suit your tastes. So cool...
PURE TONE: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vRh04jz_30E
TONE WITH MELODY: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rsMnoMfJMbk
Thank you so much for everything you do dear girl. ~ Oaf
Anyway, I have been in tomorrowland for about an hour, and I have Mass to attend at 12 noon, and a one hour dog walk before that. So, cheers and prayers.
It's a great amount of effort to look like that. Maybe they are among us... I have a close friend that lived in Thailand in the early 2000's with family. Commercial airline pilot. They have so many great memories! Take care and keep us posted. And is still Saturday here at the edge...
Concerning music and tunings:
I'm willing to believe that certain frequencies by themselves can have various effects, however, when we talk about music in 432hz or 440hz, or whatever, we are not talking about just one frequency, we are talking about a collection of frequencies; obviously, the music has many more frequencies playing that just 432hz.
In musical terms, what is important is not any absolute frequency value, but rather the *relationship* between two (or more) pitches, called an "interval".
If we could go back to indigenous societies, or early Western (i.e. church) music, we would find that basically all of the intervals they used could be described using small whole numbers. That is to say, maybe someone sang a pitch at 262hz, and another joined them at, say 393hz, then 393/262 = 3/2...called a "just perfect fifth", the simplest and most foundational interval of a large variety of music.
On a modern piano, however, only octaves will have a ratio with small whole numbers, that ratio being 2/1, because the frequency of one octave higher vibrates twice as fast, e.g., 524hz is an octave above 262hz (524/262 = 2/1).
All of the other intervals on the modern piano are given by the relationship of one half-step being equal to 2^(1/12) (2 to the 1/12 power, i.e., a number x such that x^12=2). This tuning system is called "equal temperment". In the video, he says that if A=440hz, then F# (9 half-steps above A) is 741hz...sort of, actually it is 440hz*(2^(9/12)) = 739.9888454232688...maybe that seems nitpicky, but he says it is "precisely" 741hz, when clearly it is not.
Now, regardless of whether you tune a piano's A4 to 432hz, or 440hz, if you then tune the rest of the piano in equal temperment with respect to that A, all of the *relationships* between all of the notes are going to be the same. I honestly doubt that without perfect pitch, or extensive musical experience, a casual music listener would notice a difference between an equal tempered piano at A=432hz or A=440hz if they heard them on a different day. (OK, maybe if you played them side-by-side, i.e. in context, but out of context, without a reference, I doubt it.)
In my opinion, the real issue is equal temperment, because equal temperment is literally "out of tune". Just Intonation is what we call it in the West when we are actually playing in tune. Many musicians have a joy in playing in just intonation...I personally dislike pianos in general, because I just don't think they sound good...because they are actually out of tune! As Terry Riley said, Western music is fast because it's out of tune.
So this is a whole world of music/frequency that not many people know about. I myself went to music school for a semester in university and didn't learn about this until many years later!
Here's a good introduction to JI: https://www.kylegann.com/tuning.html
Here is a music YouTuber talking about this more in depth: https://youtu.be/ghUs-84NAAU
So, concerning the video, I didn't watch the whole thing, because it honestly doesn't make sense based on what I know of music. The issue of temperment is extremely important. 432hz, or 440hz, these are just reference pitches which are used to construct a whole system of pitches...therein lies the real choice in my opinion. He has taken equal temperment for granted, which basically everyone does because no one knows that our tuning system is called equal temperment, or that there are different ways of tuning -- by which I mean, different ways of relating two notes, regardless of absolute pitch frequency. The hymn he mentions, if it were sung centuries ago, would have been sung in Just Intonation, and I sincerely doubt that anyone knew the Hz values back then.
Most Indian music, if accompanied only by a tanpura, and not by a harmonium, is in just intonation. I actually don't know for sure, I've been curious about this, but I think Indian musicians who don't use a harmonium (which is tuned is ET like a piano) probably don't use a certain reference pitch...as long as you have as base pitch, any pitch, you just tune everything justly to that.