Periphery - Racecar edited to A4=432Hz Edit with Audacity Animation : Magic Music Visuals Original track found on Periphery's Periphery album (2010) www.periphery.net/
This song was way before its time. And everytime I listen to it. I sometimes find something new I love about it. And it's super old now. Lol. Love how that works. This song is def a journey/proggy master piece
5 years late to the party but absolutely love this, everything from the the breathy parts of the vocals to the way to the palm-mutes chug is so much more pleasing at 432hz somehow.
This is a weird experience. I feel like I can hear all the little nuances that I never picked up on in the 440hz version. I find it so trippy that literally 8hz can do that to a song. I don’t know if it has anything to do with the resonant frequency of the earth but music always sounds better in this tuning
If you guys think this is crazy, RU-vid has a funny glitch if you use a Custom playback speed of 0.95 wherein the pitch drops by another semitone or two. You can really hear some funny vocal qualities on the lower sung notes Spencer does, pitch wise, but if you were to speed it back up it would sound pretty cool! This same glitch applies to 1.05 playback speed as well.
@@UnafraidCookie Yes I tried it many times. This algorithm chops sound and moves pieces further for lower speed and closer for higher speed. Pitch stays exactly the same.
@@poixone "Lol not everyone has dedicated their life to this extremely niche thing I'm into, what a bunch of retards." Ok, pseud. Instead of having an attitude, you should try to educate people normally instead of being pretentious.
@@MrCholoPants3415 first off, it was pretty clear i was using sarcasm, second off, i never said anything pretentious, you're just jumping to conclusions
playing this and the original together makes for a cool effect lol. Seriously tho, i find myself hearing tones and nuances that i dont hear in the original
The standard for tuning in music is usually A4=440Hz, which means that octave 4 "A" is set to the frequency of 440Hz, in which all of the notes are then based. There has been research that 432Hz is more natural, relating to the wavelengths of earth, etc. Thus, songs set in A4= 432Hz have been pitched down 8Hz to supposedly sound "better" and resonate better with the body and earth's natural vibrations. It is all speculation, with evidence going back and forth on its truth (or at least what I've heard). Some people find it more relaxing, easier to listen to... all that :)
@@CCtheDrummer so wait a minute, would that subtle of a transformation really be so noticable? considering when i listen to the original track it pretty much sounds the same, i mean, the breakdowns are in the same rhythm and seemingly the same pitch, meaning when i hear the original compared to this, it really just sounds the same to me. Both of which are still amazing songs. This song is what really got Periphery on the map before they got with their current vocalist, Spencer Sotelo, in Periphery II: This Time, Its Personal. If you listen to the two albums back to back, you will notice a drastic change in the sound of the vocals. I think Spencer has a better range with his cleans/singing voice and honestly, a better sound with it too. He is much more capable of a vocalist than their first one. Although, I did notice some of the "masculinity" leave the bands overall sound when he came along. For example, in the song "Lune" on Periphery III, the line that goes "Damn Im melting in the rays of this love" the part where he sings "this love" sounds a bit feminine to me. Please, correct me if I am wrong here, but metal IS meant to be a testosterone-oriented music, so the less estrogenic sounds, the better, in my opinion. I mean, that is why I love metal so much, as a man, It allows me to almost feel my testosterone flowing through me as though it were a drug.
@@johnmclean5411 Sponce joined before Periphery II. This is him on this album, their debut. Chris Barretto was kicked out after recording most of the album and Spencer Sotelo re-recorded all of it, but it still does feature vocal melodies and harmonies from Casey Sabol and Chris Barretto. Also, hormones don't make sounds. Listening to music you enjoy does make your brain release dopamine, however. That's probably what you're feeling, dopamine, not testosterone.