What interesting frequencies do you know of? (ie resonance of water, the brown noise, etc)
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- KVRist
- 44 posts since 5 Oct, 2016
What are some cool frequencies you know of?
220Hz is cool because it's the A note below middle C, and it seems to be the note from which all other note's are derived.
I don't think the brown noise is real, but if anyone knows that one please post an audio clip.
220Hz is cool because it's the A note below middle C, and it seems to be the note from which all other note's are derived.
I don't think the brown noise is real, but if anyone knows that one please post an audio clip.
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- KVRist
- Topic Starter
- 44 posts since 5 Oct, 2016
Just found this one:
432Hz is a multiple of 8Hz which is apparently "the key to the full and sovereign activation potential of our brain."
Check it out: https://attunedvibrations.com/432hz-healing/
432Hz is a multiple of 8Hz which is apparently "the key to the full and sovereign activation potential of our brain."
Check it out: https://attunedvibrations.com/432hz-healing/
- KVRAF
- 1724 posts since 31 Dec, 2004 from betwixt
- KVRAF
- 44134 posts since 11 Aug, 2008 from clown world
Farting with frequency = The brown noise.
''post an audio clip''
No.
''post an audio clip''
No.
This is the same method MJ used when he was working on Anthony Marinelli's Thriller.
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- Banned
- 12367 posts since 30 Apr, 2002 from i might peeramid
having a relatively demonstrable history of audio synthesis practice,
at several points (including earlier this year) i have built things with tuning options, eg. if you research "concert A" there are ...more than a few... alternates to 440hz.
being a hoary old bastard, i also strongly advise retaining some of your own sensibility instead of buying into whatever appealing claptrap tavistock posts on the internet, about how this frequency or that frequency will open your yarbles et al.
eg. the schumann resonance is not static, but changes. our relation to it changes.
60 Hz is fairly reliable (....) in the united states. do you want to harmonise with your infrastructure?
i profess, that experientiality... be approached with appreciation of relativity. things change. if you spend the rest of your life believing that 428.64Hz is the correct tuning because of some appealing jpg on facebook with a crystal on it, well, good luck to you.
if you see a video where someone does amazing things to water with a certain frequency, remember, that video capture devices *also* introduce a frequency (frame rate).
isn't it better to be undecided, so that if something occurs, you can observe it, instead of deny it?
btw, the "brown note" et al is to appeal to the sensibilities of silly little boys. sure, loud noises can do things. whether, everywhere in the universe, they always do the same thing, i find highly questionable. the universe is divers.
of all the concert A tunings, i would say, 420Hz is preferable
at several points (including earlier this year) i have built things with tuning options, eg. if you research "concert A" there are ...more than a few... alternates to 440hz.
being a hoary old bastard, i also strongly advise retaining some of your own sensibility instead of buying into whatever appealing claptrap tavistock posts on the internet, about how this frequency or that frequency will open your yarbles et al.
eg. the schumann resonance is not static, but changes. our relation to it changes.
60 Hz is fairly reliable (....) in the united states. do you want to harmonise with your infrastructure?
i profess, that experientiality... be approached with appreciation of relativity. things change. if you spend the rest of your life believing that 428.64Hz is the correct tuning because of some appealing jpg on facebook with a crystal on it, well, good luck to you.
if you see a video where someone does amazing things to water with a certain frequency, remember, that video capture devices *also* introduce a frequency (frame rate).
isn't it better to be undecided, so that if something occurs, you can observe it, instead of deny it?
btw, the "brown note" et al is to appeal to the sensibilities of silly little boys. sure, loud noises can do things. whether, everywhere in the universe, they always do the same thing, i find highly questionable. the universe is divers.
of all the concert A tunings, i would say, 420Hz is preferable
you come and go, you come and go. amitabha neither a follower nor a leader be tagore "where roads are made i lose my way" where there is certainty, consideration is absent.
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- KVRist
- Topic Starter
- 44 posts since 5 Oct, 2016
I suppose intentional aloofness might come off as unintentional on the internet. I've never really been a mystic. Still, I find the idea of special frequencies interesting, should there actually be any.
Here's a cool one:
Bloop. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bloop
It's not really a frequency, but it probably has some sort of root tone.
Here's a cool one:
Bloop. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bloop
It's not really a frequency, but it probably has some sort of root tone.
- KVRAF
- 1724 posts since 31 Dec, 2004 from betwixt
YES! The Bloop phenomenon is fascinating, I love the idea of unspeakable horrors lurking in the depths beyond the limits of Human knowledge (or even cognitive capacity).
I have certain scales and notes I prefer and find myself using as "home base" a lot... and I used to wonder if they were mystical and, as xoxos says, could "open my yarbles"
E (minor, major, doesn't matter), A, D...
(Stares at guitar accusingly).
I spend a lot of time throat singing lately. Trying to harmonize with the tinnitus in my head. You know, when life tries to soul f**k you spread your soul cheeks and have fun, right? Why not? Anyway, when I analyze the tinnitus and try to match it, I find it sounds like extremely loud aliasing. Sometimes. Other times it sounds like an old CRT right after you turn it off.
Did you ever do that? Turn off the TV and then put your hands on the screen, playing with the static electricity?
When I was a kid I used to try to record it, but we had like no good equipment. Just this crappy little rectangular cassette box with one shitty speaker (like 500 hz to 5 khz, maybe) and a nasty built-in mic.
I love the idea of capturing other parts of the EM spectrum and transposing/-muting them into audible frequency (i.e. the "Sounds" of planets, stars, etc.)...
OK sorry rambling sorry, so sorry, please forgive my inhumanity, I'm trying...
I have certain scales and notes I prefer and find myself using as "home base" a lot... and I used to wonder if they were mystical and, as xoxos says, could "open my yarbles"
E (minor, major, doesn't matter), A, D...
(Stares at guitar accusingly).
I spend a lot of time throat singing lately. Trying to harmonize with the tinnitus in my head. You know, when life tries to soul f**k you spread your soul cheeks and have fun, right? Why not? Anyway, when I analyze the tinnitus and try to match it, I find it sounds like extremely loud aliasing. Sometimes. Other times it sounds like an old CRT right after you turn it off.
Did you ever do that? Turn off the TV and then put your hands on the screen, playing with the static electricity?
When I was a kid I used to try to record it, but we had like no good equipment. Just this crappy little rectangular cassette box with one shitty speaker (like 500 hz to 5 khz, maybe) and a nasty built-in mic.
I love the idea of capturing other parts of the EM spectrum and transposing/-muting them into audible frequency (i.e. the "Sounds" of planets, stars, etc.)...
OK sorry rambling sorry, so sorry, please forgive my inhumanity, I'm trying...
- KVRAF
- 8082 posts since 9 Jan, 2003 from Saint Louis MO
There's always this.
I kind of wonder who decided to translate a ridiculous "frequency" of 1.617E-15 Hz (which, unless I messed up somewhere, would be a wavelength of about 19.6 million light years) into musical frequency.
I kind of wonder who decided to translate a ridiculous "frequency" of 1.617E-15 Hz (which, unless I messed up somewhere, would be a wavelength of about 19.6 million light years) into musical frequency.
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- KVRAF
- 4727 posts since 25 Mar, 2006 from The city by the bay
xoxos wrote: being a hoary old bastard, i also strongly advise retaining some of your own sensibility instead of buying into whatever appealing claptrap tavistock posts on the internet, about how this frequency or that frequency will open your yarbles et al.
- Banned
- 6129 posts since 9 Oct, 2007 from an inharmonious society
When I worked for a sound company (live bands)
My boss told me that sitting atop the two high 18'in bass bin when hitting certain frequencies can make a person shit themselves.
Though I never tested it out, I'm wondering if it would work.
My boss told me that sitting atop the two high 18'in bass bin when hitting certain frequencies can make a person shit themselves.
Though I never tested it out, I'm wondering if it would work.
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- KVRAF
- 3086 posts since 4 May, 2012
Brown noise is definitely real -though, being noise, isn't restricted to a single frequency: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brownian_noiseSephReed wrote:I don't think the brown noise is real, but if anyone knows that one please post an audio clip.
One of my university lecturers once suggested that frequencies below 5Hz (or ambient frequencies) can potentially deform the shape of the eye and therefore cause vision to distort whilst subject to that frequency; thus potentially explaining some hauntings and other such phenomena.
I would imagine the resonant frequency of water as a body would be different to that of water molecules. I would expect the resonant frequency of a body of water to relate to the dimensions of its container and the volume of water contained within. Otherwise, water molecules would probably require quite the frequency shift to get them into audible hearing range.
- Rad Grandad
- 38041 posts since 6 Sep, 2003 from Downeast Maine
The highest form of knowledge is empathy, for it requires us to suspend our egos and live in another's world. It requires profound, purpose‐larger‐than‐the‐self kind of understanding.
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- Banned
- 12367 posts since 30 Apr, 2002 from i might peeramid
whatshisname at SRL (survival research laboratories for anyone who wasn't in the eighties or amok! bookstore et c.) mentioned that the huge dB levels produced by some mechanisms caused temporary blindness. all things, i think, are functions of particularities.. we are different. the rest of that paragraph was academic tossUnaspected wrote: One of my university lecturers once suggested that frequencies below 5Hz (or ambient frequencies) can potentially deform the shape of the eye and therefore cause vision to distort
should probably post a link to renegade soundwave women respond to bass. i'll delete the rest of that old thought there.
you come and go, you come and go. amitabha neither a follower nor a leader be tagore "where roads are made i lose my way" where there is certainty, consideration is absent.
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- KVRAF
- 2357 posts since 24 Nov, 2012
Everybody has an EEG brain frequency around 10Hz when they are resting with their eyes closed that has more energy than other frequencies of brain activity - it's often called alpha rhythm. The actual frequency moves around a bit within any individual (+/- a Hz or so) but the energy at that (moving) freq is the most reliable measure of brain activity that we have.
So... there is some process in the brain we do not fully understand that oscillates at a frequency of 10Hz plus or minus a bit. But that process gets a lot of energy allocated to it and that amount of energy is very consistent within an individual.
So... there is some process in the brain we do not fully understand that oscillates at a frequency of 10Hz plus or minus a bit. But that process gets a lot of energy allocated to it and that amount of energy is very consistent within an individual.