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Friday, 30 September 2022

C♯ (musical note)


C♯ (musical note)

C (C-sharp) is a musical note lying a chromatic semitone above C and a diatonic semitone below D. C-sharp is thus enharmonic to D. It is the second semitone in the French solfège and is known there as do dièse. In some European notations, it is known as Cis. In equal temperament it is also enharmonic with B  (Hisis).

When calculated in equal temperament with a reference of Aabove middle C as 440 Hz, the frequency of C4 (the C above middle C) is about 277.18 Hz. See pitch (music) for a discussion of historical variations in frequency.

Designation by octave

ScientificdesignationHelmholtzdesignationOctave nameFrequency (Hz)
C−1C͵͵͵ or ͵͵͵C or CCCCSubsubcontra8.662
C0C͵͵ or ͵͵C or CCCSubcontra17.324
C1C͵ or ͵C or CCContra34.648
C2CGreat69.296
C3cSmall138.591
C4cOne-lined277.183
C5cTwo-lined554.365
C6cThree-lined1108.731
C7cFour-lined2217.461
C8cFive-lined4434.922
C9cSix-lined8869.844
C10cSeven-lined17739.688

Scales

Common scales beginning on C

  • C major: C D E FG A B C
  • C natural minor: C D E F G A B C
  • C harmonic minor: C D E F G A B C
  • C melodic minor Ascending: C D E F G A BC
  • C melodic minor descending: C B A G F E D C

Diatonic scales

  • C Ionian: C D E FG A B C
  • C Dorian: C D E F GA B C
  • C Phrygian: C D E F GA B C
  • C Lydian: C D E F G A B C
  • C Mixolydian: C D EF G A B C
  • C Aeolian: C D E F GA B C
  • C Locrian: C D E F G A B C

Jazz melodic minor

  • C ascending melodic minor: C D E F G A BC
  • C Dorian ♭2: C D E FG A B C
  • C Lydian augmented: C DE F  G  A B C
  • C Lydian dominant: C DE F  G A B C
  • C Mixolydian ♭6: C DE F G A B C
  • C Locrian ♮2: C D E FG A B C
  • C Altered: C D E F G A B C

C (musical note)


C (musical note)

C (Italian, French: Do) is the first note of the C major scale, the third note of the A minor scale (the relative minor of C major), and the fourth note (F, A, B, C) of the Guidonian hand, commonly pitchedaround 261.63 Hz. The actual frequency has depended on historical pitch standards, and for transposing instruments a distinction is made between written and sounding or concert pitch.




Middle C  Play 

In English the term Do is used interchangeably with C only by adherents of fixed-Do solfège; in the movable Do system Do refers to the tonic of the prevailing key.

Frequency

Historically, concert pitch has varied. For an instrument in equal temperament tuned to the A440 pitch standard widely adopted in 1939, middle C has a frequency around 261.63 Hz (for other notes see piano key frequencies). Scientific pitch was originally proposed in 1713 by French physicist Joseph Sauveur and based on the numerically convenient frequency of 256 Hz for middle C, all C's being powers of two. After the A440 pitch standard was adopted by musicians, the Acoustical Society of America published new frequency tables for scientific use. A movement to restore the older A435 standard has used the banners "Verdi tuning", "philosophical pitch" or the easily confused scientific pitch.

Octave nomenclature

Middle C

Middle C (the fourth C key from left on a standard 88-key pianokeyboard) is designated C4 in scientific pitch notation, the most commonly recognized in auditory science, while both C4 and the Helmholtz designation c′ are used in musical studies. Other note-octave systems, including those used by some makers of digital music keyboards, may refer to Middle C differently. In MIDI, Middle C is note number 60 which equates to C4.

While the expression Middle C is generally clear across instruments and clefs, some musicians naturally use the term to refer to the C note in the middle of their specific instrument's range. C4 may be called Low C by someone playing a Western concert flute, which has a higher and narrower playing range than the piano, while C5 (523.251 Hz) would be Middle C. This technically inaccurate practice has led some pedagogues to encourage standardizing on C4 as the definitive Middle C in instructional materials across all instruments.

On the Grand Staff, middle-C is notated with a ledger line above the top line of the bass clef or below the bottom line of the treble clef.

Other octaves

In vocal music, the term High C(sometimes less ambiguously called Top C) can refer to either the soprano's C6 (1046.502 Hz; c′′′ in Helmholtz notation) or the tenor's C5; both are written as the C two leger lines above the treble clef but the tenor voice sings an octave lower. The term Low C is sometimes used in vocal music to refer to C2 because this is considered the divide between true basses and bass-baritones: a basso can sing this note easily whereas other male voices, including bass-baritones, typically cannot.

Tenor C is an organ builder's term for small C or C3 (130.813 Hz), the note one octave below Middle C. In stoplists it usually means that a rank is not full compass, omitting the bottom octave.

Designation by octave

ScientificdesignationHelmholtzdesignationOctave nameFrequency (Hz)Other namesAudio
C−1C͵͵͵ or ͵͵͵C or CCCCOctocontra8.176 Play 
C0C͵͵ or ͵͵C or CCCSubcontra16.352 Play 
C1C͵ or ͵C or CCContra32.703 Play 
C2CGreat65.406Low C, cello C, 8' C (see organ pipe length) Play 
C3cSmall130.8134' C or tenor C (organ), viola C Play 
C4cOne-lined261.626Middle C Play 
C5cTwo-lined523.251Treble C, high C (written an octave higher for tenor voices) Play 
C6cThree-lined1,046.502High C (soprano) Play 
C7cFour-lined2,093.005Double high C Play 
C8cFive-lined4,186.009Eighth octave C, triple high C Play 
C9cSix-lined8,372.018Quadruple high C Play 
C10cSeven-lined16,744.036Quintuple high C Play 

(20,000 hertz is the start of the ultrasound in healthy young adults.)

Graphic presentation

Middle C in four clefs
Position of Middle C on a standard 88-key keyboard

Scales

Common scales beginning on C

  • C Major: C D E F G A B C
  • C Natural Minor: C D E F G A B C
  • Harmonic Minor: C D E F G A B C
  • Melodic Minor Ascending: C D E F G A B C
  • C Melodic Minor Descending: C B A G F E D C

Diatonic scales

Jazz melodic minor

  • Ascending Melodic Minor: C D E F G A B C
  • C Dorian ♭2: C D E F G A B C
  • Lydian Augmented: C D E FG A B C
  • Lydian Dominant: C D E F G A B C
  • C Mixolydian ♭6: C D E F G AB C
  • Locrian ♮2: C D E F GA B C
  • Altered: C D E F GA B C

B sharp

Comparison of notes derived from, or near, twelve perfect fifths (B )

Traversing the circle of fifths can result in a B that is higher than C by 23.46 cents, the ratio of twelve just perfect fifths (B) to seven octaves being 531,441 / 524,288, the Pythagorean comma. A Bthat is three just major thirds above C is lower than the octave by an interval called a diesis, 125:128 or 41.06 cents.

I Rejoice

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