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  2. Piano tuning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piano_tuning

    Frequent and hard playing can also cause a piano to go out of tune. [2] For these reasons, many piano manufacturers recommend that new pianos be tuned four times during the first year and twice a year thereafter. [3] An out-of-tune piano can often be identified by the characteristic "honky tonk" or beating sound it produces. This fluctuation in ...

  3. Musipedia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Musipedia

    The latter can identify short snippets of audio (a few seconds taken from a recording), even if it is transmitted over a phone connection. Shazam uses Audio Fingerprinting for that, a technique that makes it possible to identify recordings. Musipedia, on the other hand, can identify pieces of music that contain a given melody.

  4. Absolute pitch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Absolute_pitch

    Identify by name individual pitches played on various instruments. Name the key of a given piece of tonal music. Identify and name all the tones of a given chord or other tonal mass. Name the pitches of common everyday sounds such as car horns and alarms. Absolute pitch is distinct from relative pitch.

  5. Musical tuning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Musical_tuning

    The pitches of open strings on a violin. Play ⓘ. In music, the term open string refers to the fundamental note of the unstopped, full string.. The strings of a guitar are normally tuned to fourths (excepting the G and B strings in standard tuning, which are tuned to a third), as are the strings of the bass guitar and double bass.

  6. Relative pitch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Relative_pitch

    Relative pitch is the ability of a person to identify or re-create a given musical note by comparing it to a reference note and identifying the interval between those two notes. For example, if the notes Do and Fa are played on a piano, a person with relative pitch would, without looking, be able to identify the second note from the first note ...

  7. Piano key frequencies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piano_key_frequencies

    This is a list of the fundamental frequencies in hertz (cycles per second) of the keys of a modern 88-key standard or 108-key extended piano in twelve-tone equal temperament, with the 49th key, the fifth A (called A 4), tuned to 440 Hz (referred to as A440). [1] [2] Every octave is made of twelve steps called semitones.

  8. How to turn on haptic typing in iOS 16 and tickle your fingertips

    www.aol.com/turn-haptic-typing-ios-16-153535313.html

    It’s called the haptic keyboard and I love it. Let me walk you through how to turn it on. SEE ALSO: iPhone 14 Pro and Pro Max review: Apple's Dynamic Island is worth the visit First, a brief.

  9. Stretched tuning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stretched_tuning

    In most musical instruments, the tone-generating component (a string or resonant column of air) vibrates at many frequencies simultaneously: a fundamental frequency that is usually perceived as the pitch of the note, and harmonics or overtones that are multiples of the fundamental frequency and whose wavelengths therefore divide the tone-generating region into simple fractional segments (1/2 ...