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- The Notes in an Octave - Raag Hindustani
In Hindustani (North Indian) classical music, an octave is called saptak and has seven notes called swara These notes are sa, re, ga, ma, pa, dha, ni (similar to the Western do re mi fa so la ti) The first and fifth notes (sa and pa) have only one variant The other five notes (re, ga, ma, dha, and ni) have two variants each
- Article: Derivation of the frequencies of the 12 notes
There are twelve notes to an octave, namely Sa (S), komal Re (r), shuddha Re (R), komal Ga (g), shuddha Ga (G), shuddha Ma (m), teevra Ma (M), Pa (P), komal Dha (d), shuddha Dha (D), komal Ni (n), and shudha Ni (N) Out of these, we know the frequencies of only three notes as a result of the experiment described above
- What are the frequencies of musical notes ‘sa’, ’re’, ‘ga . . .
[Note: The diatonic scale: Such a simple fraction is pleasing to the ear and is called a musical interval Frequency ratios 2 : 1, 3 : 2, 4 : 3 are examples of musical interval
- 12 Notes - Stanford University
The point is that the Indian notes correspond to the intervals - P1, m2, M2 , , M7 - rather than to absolute pitches frequencies The artist can choose Sa the tonic to be any frequency he or she desires at the beginning of a performance
- 1) How are the frequencies of notes sa, re, ga, ma, pa, dha . . .
The frequency of the note sa is considered the "tonic" or "root" note, and the other notes are related to it through a specific ratio The frequency of re is 9 8 times the frequency of sa, ga is 5 4 times the frequency of sa, ma is 4 3 times the frequency of sa, pa is 3 2 times the frequency of sa, dha is 5 3 times the frequency of sa, and ni
- Music Theory Indian Ṣaḍja - Wikibooks, open books for an open . . .
The frequencies of the 7 svaras are also given below: Sa 240 Hz, Re 270 Hz, Ga 300 Hz, Ma 320 Hz, Pa 360 Hz, Dha 400 Hz, and Ni 450 Hz, Sa 480 Hz (Taar Saptak) (and so on) Consequently the Sa after the Ni of 450Hz has a frequency of 480 Hz i e the double of the Lower octave Sa
- Frequencies Symbols - OMENAD
The Frequencies The following tables list various mathematical aspects of classical music scales, both Indian and Western The 'Multiplier' values are fractions which, when multiplied to the frequency of the first note ( Sa or C ), give the value of frequency of specified note
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