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How to convert music to 432hz???

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  • drjenkins
    replied
    Re: How to convert music to 432hz???

    Audacity is free and can do what you want. Here's an example tutorial:

    Re-Mastering to A=432 Hz


    Google 432 HZ Audacity for more examples:

    Leave a comment:


  • aaliya
    replied
    Re: How to convert music to 432hz???

    whether u got how to do it?

    Leave a comment:


  • lilrainbowheron
    replied
    Re: How to convert music to 432hz???

    hI aLL, i HAVE BEEN LISTENING TO only SPIRITUAL music like: john Lennon song IMAGINE, Judy Collins version FROM A DISTANCE, Tracy Chapman, etc in 432 true tone= sound,= frequency, and it has changed my life! It takes a lot of practice, to actually match your own vocals to the TRUE SOFEGELO noted, do, re, me, fa, so la, ti , do, since we changed the 432 to 440 when we capyured German scientists, who used 440 hz to under power the people they would eventually ...kill. The west adopted this one secret tech from hundreds of other secret high tech from the Germans, who had vast knowledge, due to thier campaign to send out archeology teams world wide in search of: the ARK, the HOLY GRAIL, ancient tech from the stories of Lemuria, Atlantis, etc, and they had MORE than our Vatican! Great new movie coming out starring: George Clooney, Matt Damon, The guy from Rozzane comedy ( Dan ) about on how the USA sent a team of 7 into Germany right b/f it's fall, to steal the stolen art, artifacts, tech etc. It comes out in May 2014? This is a good one, but they were under the impression it was to save ancient art, not that the USA was going to take the tech and turn it into the Military Industrial war machine, for sinister work. On you tube, one man is engrossed in demanding, the 432 be brought back, ASAP!. Just search a bit, and his 3 SCIENTIFIC based videos explain this FLAT tone of the universe better than I can right now.
    PROBLEM: GWEN towers, all over the world, extra low EMF's underground as well as ground hugging waves. I can no longer ground myself to my 12 foot deep grounding rod from my home, for the GWEN can go 300 miles deep, and 400 miles wide circumfrance. Anyone know how to ground when you have a GWEN tower just 1/2 mile away, at a Home land security NEW tower? I secretly watched 3/4 of the construction, it is insane! I even talked to the main electrician, who I developed a mild aquaintance with, and he ...read through the sentence gaps said.." move the hell away from here, like everyone else has". Sure enough, the families / people had deserted the homes, now on closed state property. SOUTHBURY TRAINING SCHOOL, Purchase Brook Road, Southbury CT. The new tower comes up as a mere cell phone tower. 17 diff arrays!? My secret videos, wiped by EMF's, so pissed! I only have what my own eyes say and what's in my memory, and they are after that via the MK- ultra that never stopped despite congress banning it way back. HELP!

    Leave a comment:


  • Porcus
    replied
    Re: How to convert music to 432hz???

    Originally posted by Sobaixu
    unfortunately, I've come to the conclusion that the music has to be performed and recorded in 432hz to begin with..
    Yes, if a violin plays an F and you wanted an E, then a DSP can only do its best to make it sound like "if it were" played an E.

    By the way, I think "convert" is a bad search word for this. You do not really want to convert music from one format to another,.

    Leave a comment:


  • Sobaixu
    replied
    Re: How to convert music to 432hz???

    Mville - I thank you for your kind and expert assistance.

    Thexfile - Thanks for that link, it looks like an interesting music player even if it won't do what I want it to. And it's Free. Can't beat that. I'll check it out. Thanks again!

    Leave a comment:


  • thexfile
    replied
    Re: How to convert music to 432hz???

    This may do it.
    Code:
    http://impulsemediaplayer.codeplex.com
    Last edited by thexfile; August 20, 2013, 11:35 AM. Reason: type-o

    Leave a comment:


  • mville
    replied
    Re: How to convert music to 432hz???

    Originally posted by Sobaixu
    I'm not here to argue about semantics and play the "who knows more shit game"... I just wanted a straightforward answer without attitude from someone who knows what the hell i'm talking about.
    I think analog recordings would work fine, but not sure about digital recordings. Or am I confusing myself here??? Sometimes I wish I were a sound engineer..
    Well... as it happens, I am a sound engineer. I don't help out in this forum to play games or exert attitude, just to share knowledge and advise where I can.

    What you need is professional sound editing software for accurate pitch shifting, not digital audio converter software which is what dBpoweramp is.
    Last edited by mville; August 20, 2013, 12:50 AM. Reason: removed the term 'abuse', which I shamefully added in anger.

    Leave a comment:


  • Sobaixu
    replied
    Re: How to convert music to 432hz???

    I am familiar with Foobar and audacity, and several other methods of shifting the pitch and speed, which gives the illusion of 432hz tuning. However, for some reason when you try to convert music from 440hz to 432hz with these programs, the notes get distorted ever so slightly. Not even audibly, you need an Oscilloscope to actually see the changes, but it's significant in the waveforms of the notes. Like non-alcoholic beer. It sounds right, but doesn't have the same effect.

    Thus, unfortunately, I've come to the conclusion that the music has to be performed and recorded in 432hz to begin with..

    But even then, a friend on another forum brought up the fact that as soon as it's recorded, it's encoded and played back at 440hz to be played through cd players, etc, because of the 44.1khz sampling rate the world uses. So even if you do record a performance in 432hz, when it's digitized, will it still sound right, or will it be off?...

    I think analog recordings would work fine, but not sure about digital recordings. Or am I confusing myself here??? Sometimes I wish I were a sound engineer.. lol

    Leave a comment:


  • Porcus
    replied
    Re: How to convert music to 432hz???

    OK, what you want is tune your music files down a slight bit?

    There is the easy way: slow down the music to a speed of 432/440 of the original (this assuming that 440 is what they tune to, and 435 is what you want! "440" means a little more in many orchestras). But 432/440 is down 1.8 percent, approximately.

    Then there are processors that pitch down without slowing down.

    If any if those is what you want, my suggestion is to use the foobar2000 music player with the additional component http://www.foobar2000.org/components...foo_dsp_effect . You can apply these effects on-the-fly while playing, so you do not have to alter your files.


    Now, to be clear: this has nothing to do with the sample rate of 44.1 kHz. That is unrelated to how you tune the "A". The sample rate is at forty-something kiloherz in order to cover the audible range.

    Leave a comment:


  • Sobaixu
    replied
    Re: How to convert music to 432hz???

    Well I can't help how people interpret what i say. Spoon certainly didn't seem offended by my reply to him. Everything I said was intended in a friendly manner; not meant to be rude or offensive.. I am simply a matter-of-fact person.. Regardless, thanks for somewhat confirming my conclusion.

    Leave a comment:


  • BrodyBoy
    replied
    Re: How to convert music to 432hz???

    Originally posted by Sobaixu
    Thus you need to actually tune the instruments to 432hz and record them in that tuning. So I guess i'll be waiting until artists start releasing performing their music in this tuning.

    If anyone knows what i'm talking about, and can correct any of that, please feel free. As I said, I don't know everything, Just piecing together what I can from various forums and youtube, etc...
    That is my understanding as well.....it's a kind of instrument tuning, not something you'd want to do after the fact.

    I'm not here to argue about semantics and play the "who knows more shit game"... I just wanted a straightforward answer without attitude from someone who knows what the hell i'm talking about.
    I respectfully suggest you take your own advice to heart.....there are a lot of people on this forum, indeed all over the internet, who are knowledgeable about all sorts of things and happy to share that and use it to help others. They do so in a spirit of generosity and good will.

    It is you who brought the "attitude." You now admit you don't know all that much about this stuff. Okay fine....you want to learn. But you presumed the topic should be known to everyone ("432hz is simply shortform slang, I assumed that was rather obvious"), and you were rude and insulting when it wasn't ("...if you've never heard of it.. where have you been???"). That approach is not likely to get you much help on any forum.

    In any event, it should be clear, now that you understand you were confusing tuning and sampling rate, that dBpoweramp is completely unrelated to this topic. Best of luck to you in your study of the subject going forward.

    Leave a comment:


  • Sobaixu
    replied
    Re: How to convert music to 432hz???

    Originally posted by mville
    To confirm, you are talking about sound waves measured in herz (cycles per second), i.e. 432hz and is related to pitch/tuning. You say 44000hz is standard tuning. I don't think so. Concert A, in the UK and US, is 440Hz not 44000Hz.

    dBpoweramp deals with digital audio and sample rates, which is not the same as pitch/tuning. Are you getting analog sound waves confused with digital audio sample rates?
    Yeah Probably... I am not a scientist. I don't know everything. All I know is that A = 440hz (standard tuning) and A4 = 432hz tuning, which used to be the standard tuning, but the nazi's did research on subliminal messaging for propaganda and determined that the human brain is most susceptible to subliminal messaging when they used 440hz tuning. I don't really care about the conspiracy theory shite, i just wanna know how to utilize this tuning.

    I'm not here to argue about semantics and play the "who knows more shit game"... I just wanted a straightforward answer without attitude from someone who knows what the hell i'm talking about.

    Watch this: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QDRaCTVO67w

    After much reading of OTHER forums, i have kind of come to the conclusion that even if you tried to convert 440hz songs to 432hz, the waveforms of the notes will still be distorted because the scale is physically different. The computer can change the pitch but cannot properly convert the waveforms of each note. Thus you need to actually tune the instruments to 432hz and record them in that tuning. So I guess i'll be waiting until artists start releasing performing their music in this tuning.

    If anyone knows what i'm talking about, and can correct any of that, please feel free. As I said, I don't know everything, Just piecing together what I can from various forums and youtube, etc...

    Leave a comment:


  • mville
    replied
    Re: How to convert music to 432hz???

    Originally posted by Sobaixu
    I think you are confused, or just not familiar with it yet. But 432hz music is very beneficial to health, helps with meditation, and makes all music come alive.

    Mozart, Beethoven, Bach, they all performed their concerts in 432hz tuning, and i've also got many 432hz songs, all of which play fine through my pc, mp3 player, and cd player in my car.
    To confirm, you are talking about sound waves measured in herz (cycles per second), i.e. 432hz and is related to pitch/tuning. You say 44000hz is standard tuning. I don't think so. Concert A, in the UK and US, is 440Hz not 44000Hz.

    dBpoweramp deals with digital audio and sample rates, which is not the same as pitch/tuning. Are you getting analog sound waves confused with digital audio sample rates?

    Leave a comment:


  • Sobaixu
    replied
    Re: How to convert music to 432hz???

    Originally posted by BrodyBoy
    And I think you are in the wrong Forum.
    This forum is for dBPoweramp. Where else would I inquire about it's functions?

    I was asking if it could perform a simple operation. Audacity can do this but it is currently flawed and can only do it one track at a time. I know dbp can batch convert audio so I was hoping there might be a plug-in for this function.

    Leave a comment:


  • BrodyBoy
    replied
    Re: How to convert music to 432hz???

    Originally posted by Sobaixu
    .. I think you are confused....
    And I think you are in the wrong Forum.

    The purpose of dBp, and the objective for its users, is to create digital audio files as true & accurate to the original recording as possible. You are talking about applying digital processing that fundamentally alters the audio itself. That's not what dBp does.

    While I can't tell you how, as I've never wanted or needed to perform that kind of processing, I do suspect Audacity may still be your best bet. Because it performs all kinds of processing that modifies audio data (and of course that's something you want to get just right), it's got a zillion options and parameters....and therefore a rather steep learning curve. It's kind of like Photoshop for audio, but it sounds like that's what you need.

    Leave a comment:

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