Traumwandler-Music-Projekt Posted September 26, 2020 Share Posted September 26, 2020 (edited) Hello Friends! Until i am working with some old analouge instruments there ist always the same problem: the tuning... Temperature and humidity changes while working and tuning is sweeping away. Well, what about a 440Hz Reference-tone-button included in Cakewalk by BandLab (maybe installe d in the Metronome-Tab)? One click generates a sinusodial 440 Hz reference tone to tune all analouge equipment manually and one click again stop it --> Now ready to record a well tuned track... I think, that could coded very simple and would be sooo useful... Thanx! Edited October 31, 2020 by Traumwandler-Music-Projekt Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jim Fogle Posted September 27, 2020 Share Posted September 27, 2020 @Traumwandler-Music-Projekt, welcome to the forum and to Cakewalk by BandLab (CbB). There have been requests for multiple types of tuners to be built into CbB; everything from chromatic tuners to guitar tuners to reference tone tuners. Thanks for adding your voice. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
steve@baselines.com Posted September 27, 2020 Share Posted September 27, 2020 Slightly off topic, but I read this interesting article a while back about 440hz vs 432hz as standard. https://baselines.com/?p=5725 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Heinz Hupfer Posted September 29, 2020 Share Posted September 29, 2020 Hi? The most of this 432 Hz article is not true! For example Mozarts Tuneforque had 426 Hz, not 432. Every Composer had a differe t tuning , raising up to 456 Hz for Richard Wagner. Phytagoras tunes his instrument in perfect fifths, which doesn't work well for our ears, cause it produces a small frequency difference with the last fifth to the starting note. There' s nothing known about his tuning! Si I'm pretty sure it wasn't 432 Hz for an A or what he called it..... So forget about this, it doesn't even sound better, just deeper with less overtones. This esoteric discussion is just bullsh.... Bassman Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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