Category: Prince

  • PRINCE SAYS HIS NAME ON EVP – HAVING A BREAKTHROUGH MOMENT

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  • PRINCE EVP – HE’S MAKING CRICKET SOUNDS

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  • PRINCE ROGERS NELSON EVP – FEB 17, 2018

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  • THE 432 VS. 444 HZ CONFUSION

    We are currently busy working on many different projects at once, so blogging has taken a bit of a backseat. However, if you do want to follow me on my Facebook page, there you will find the latest in regards to my Prince communications and links I think you should see. It has taken me longer to write this post, as I wanted to verify some information before sharing.

    As you will know if you are a follower of my blog, I have been doing research in the area of music tuning in the standard of 432 hz. I recently retuned my piano to 432. P has been telling me to keep exploring. I came across people who are talking about the 444 hz tuning with reference to the 528 hz frequency. You will often see it referred to as 528 hz, but really, it is talking about 444 tuning. I was somewhat baffled by this finding. So which tuning is beneficial for humanity? It seems that there is backlash coming from the 432 camp, and yet their arguments against it seems weak and unfounded. I tried out 444 tuning on a keyboard and I felt its energy was also harmonious, similar to 432. 444 and 432 are 12 hertz in difference, which is still following the coherence of the “magical” 3, 6, 9 universal pattern that Tesla talked about.

    People researching the numbers behind 432 have pointed out many fascinating numerical synchronicities. But here is what I found in 444 tuning that is interesting numerically. 111, 222, 333, 444, 555, 666, 777, etc (there is slight difference off for a few notes in the official scientific standards, but this is the same with 432 as well). In Numerology, we call these double or triple sets of the same numbers, Master Numbers. They are considered powerful and many people see them as divine signs from the universe. I discovered that these triple set numbers are all evenly divisible by 3. Go check with a calculator! You will see it’s true!

    I heard an interview with Leonard Horowitz, who is the main proponent of 528 hz, and I heard somewhere that the song, Imagine by John Lennon is recorded at 444 hz tuning. I found this to be quite an interesting discovery. I decided to test out thIs claim.

    To test it, I used an app on my iPad called Free Chromatic Tuner. In this app, it allows you to select what tuning standard you want to use. So I tested it with all 3 tuning standards, 432, 440, and 444. It certainly dud not resonate with 440. But I found it resonated with both 432 and 444. I found this rather confusing. So I took a second iPad and set one to 432 and the other to 444, and measured the song simultaneously. I found that it resonated more to 444. I tested the entire Imagine album and it very clearly resonated to 444.

    I have been testing Prince songs as well, especially his early work from For You, and Prince. I found that in some cases, like Imagine, that it resonated with both 432 and 444 simultaneously, but not 440.

    ©2018 by Andrea Mai. All rights reserved.

    Perhaps this is why P insisted that I learn to tune my own piano, so that I could learn to measure his songs, have a greater musical understanding, and prove to some degree, scientifically, what he did in his music that made it so extraordinary. Not to just make a claim about it, like others who have written on the 432 subject. In which case, if you are supposedly “converting”  your Prince music to 432, you are wasting your time. (Please note, pitching your music down in computer software is not a true conversion!). P has guided me on technical aspects in my research. As you know, he produced all of his own albums and for many others as well. He is very technically minded.

    So where does this all lead? The evidence suggests that both 432 and 444 are compatible tuning standards. They resonate harmoniously with each other. I think perhaps they are like different channels, gateways. Like how there are different brain waves states; alpha, beta, theta, etc. Neither are bad, just different states that produce a different effect. 432 and 444 produce different effects. It would be interesting if any of you out there would like to contribute to this research by investigating my findings and reporting back. And of course, I would like to encourage all musicians to explore these two turnings in their music.

    Image above: “Soul Song” by Prince in spirit.

    ©2018 by Andrea Mai. All rights reserved.

     

  • THE LOOK – NEW WORKS BY ANDREA MAI

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  • MY EXPERIENCE IN RETUNING MY PIANO TO 432 HZ

    After researching 432 hz tuning, I decided to tune my own piano. I had seen some videos on YouTube about how to tune a piano. So I ordered some tools.

    When the tools arrived, I started to work on tuning. It was harder than I thought it was going to be. The pins are really tight, and I could barely get it to move. And sometimes I would get it to move too much. I messed up the  string I was working on and all I could hear was this horrible dissonant sound. I was ready to give up and call a professional tuner. I had even gotten quotes about the cost.

    ©2017 by Andrea Mai. All rights reserved.

    But then I heard P talking to me. Telling me not to give up. The exact phrase he whispered to me, “I believe in you. You can do it”. He urged me to keep trying, and I was like, “Are you sure? Maybe you’re crazy! I can’t do this!” There was something that he wanted for me to gain from this experience of tuning my own piano. Somehow, despite all my feeling down about it, I was determined to find out what I was doing wrong. I watched some more videos and realized some things.

    ©2017 by Andrea Mai. All rights reserved.

    First of all, the tool I had was all wrong. It was from a cheap little kit I got off Ebay. The most important tool, the tuning hammer, was just bad. The pros in the videos warned against using such tools. The size of it was very small and gave no leverage. The pins are tight, so you need a large tool to work it.

    Second,  the videos I watched in the first place, were not created by professional tuners. Just amateurs, who although they did explain the process, they were not comprehensive enough to explain the technique to do it properly.  I watched the videos that came from professionals and though they seem long winded and boring, they explain it clearly, and its very necessary to know the small ins and outs of tuning.

    I went back tot he piano and fixed my mistakes. I ordered the proper tool, and I managed to retune the piano over the next couple days. It is still a work in progress though, as this piano has never been tuned at all since its purchase in the 80s. The strings keep trying to revert back to its old way. I’ve been told by tuners that if I were to hire them to tune it, it would requite two tunings done back to back. And even then, as I discovered, the strings still shift over time. It will require continuous maintenance.

    ©2017 by Andrea Mai. All rights reserved.

    I’ve tried out many tuning apps, and truly the best I found was, Free Chromatic Tuner: Pano Tuner. You can set the tuning standard in the settings to whatever you want. It is also useful for anyone wanting to tune their guitar to 432 hz, as I did not find any funders with that option.

    P and I, we are the type that are self-taught. He was self-taught from the start of playing piano. I learned quite a bit from tuning my piano, gaining an understanding of music that I never had before. All of which I will be able to apply to my research in sound and frequency.

    Image above: “Inside My Piano” by Andrea Mai.

    ©2017 by Andrea Mai. All rights reserved.

  • 4EVER IN MY HEART – NEW WORKS BY ANDREA MAI

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  • GETTING SOME THINGS OFF MY CHEST

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  • 432 HZ TUNING – A TOOL FOR HEALING AND ASCESNION

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  • HOW TO TUNE YOUR GUITAR, BASS & UKULELE TO 432 HZ – TUTORIAL

    As promised in my last post, I’m posting the instructions on how to tune your guitar to 432 tuning. This article is solely covering on the technicality of tuning, not the reasons why you should use it. See my last post for info on why you should consider using it.

    Please note, I am no music expert, I just do my research, and I am guided by musicians from “the great beyond”.

    First, a little bit of music theory. What is 432 hz referring to? It is the frequency that the A note in the middle C octave (on the piano) resonates at. So what you’ll see it noted like this: A=432, or what the moderns standard is, A=440. If you want to check what tuning you have on the piano, then play the A note in middle C (A4) and measure it with a tuner app that tells you the hz. On a guitar, the equivalent A note is on the fifth fret on the first string. Although there is 8 hz difference between 432 and 440, it does not mean that you lower each string by 8 hz. Each note has its own incremental difference, and what you must do to use 432 tuning is follow a chart that outlines the frequency for each key or string. Here is the chart to refer to so that you can retune for piano. This article is for guitars, but if you want to do it for piano, it is the same theory.


    To tune your guitar to 432, download a chromatic tuner app for your smartphone or tablet. Any one should do, as long as it measures the hertz (hz) that your guitar string is making. The app I am using on my iPad is called Chromatic Guitar Tuner (by Gismart). For Android devices, go here.

    This particular app has a setting that allows you to set the tuning standard to whatever you want. So press the setting button and change it to 432 by typing it in where it says “A=”. Then you can use the gauge indicator to tell you if you are in tune with the selected tuning standard, in this case, 432. It is really simple. And you can use the reference numbers below to make sure you are doing it right. This app is meant for pianos, but it’s great for guitars too. I used this app to tune my piano to 432 as well.

    Screenshot of Settings function from the tuning app.

    The other, more hands on way is this if you are not using the app I recommended above:

    Switch it on and measure the hz on each of your guitar strings. You can ignore everything else on the tuner. Compare the hz of each string to the chart below, and adjust it accordingly to match. (And obviously, go slow, don’t want you to break any strings.) I have also provided the measurements for bass guitar.

    Guitar Tuning
    A=432
    E – 81 hz (6th string)
    A – 108 hz (5th string)
    D – 144 hz (4th string)
    G – 193 hz (3rd string)
    B – 242 hz (2nd string)
    E – 323 hz (1st string)

    Bass Guitar Tuning
    A=432
    E – 41 hz (4th string)
    A –  54 hz (3rd string)
    D – 72 hz (2nd string)
    G – 96 hz (1st string)

    Ukulele Tuning
    A=432
    G4 – 385 hz for high G,  G3 – 192 hz  for low G (4th string)
    C4 – 257 hz (3rd string)
    E4 – 324 hz (2nd string)
    A4 – 432 hz (1st string)

    If you want to hear what the 432 hz frequency sounds like on your guitar, place your finger on the fifth fret of the first string, that is A. You can measure it and it will be at 432 hz, more or less. Please note that there can be some variation, as every guitar is a bit different.

    These numbers are based on what I measured from the tuning videos I found on YouTube, and comparing it with this chart. The numbers are rounded off.

    Update: A reader has sent me a tuning chart for different guitar tunings based on the information I shared. Here you can download the chart: 432 Hz Tuning Frequencies.

    Updated on February 6, 2022 .

    Image above: “Me, playing bass” by Prince in spirit.

    ©2017 by Andrea Mai. All rights reserved.