Quick ? about vinyl
Forum rules
By using this "Production" sub-forum, you acknowledge that you have read, understood and agreed with our terms of use for this site. Click HERE to read them. If you do not agree to our terms of use, you must exit this site immediately. We do not accept any responsibility for the content, submissions, information or links contained herein. Users posting content here, do so completely at their own risk.
Quick Link to Feedback Forum
By using this "Production" sub-forum, you acknowledge that you have read, understood and agreed with our terms of use for this site. Click HERE to read them. If you do not agree to our terms of use, you must exit this site immediately. We do not accept any responsibility for the content, submissions, information or links contained herein. Users posting content here, do so completely at their own risk.
Quick Link to Feedback Forum
Quick ? about vinyl
Does anybody know how many semitones higher a 33 will be if you play it on a 45 speed? My turntable is busted, or else I would try it. I'm not really going to use this for anything, just curious and google didn't furnish any answers.
Re: Quick ? about vinyl
About 350
Re: Quick ? about vinyl
More than you can afford, pal.
Re: Quick ? about vinyl
Well, thanks anyway for the obviously, completely accurate information man
Was kind of a stupid question I guess, curiosity just overwhelms one sometimes
Was kind of a stupid question I guess, curiosity just overwhelms one sometimes
Re: Quick ? about vinyl
Okay, serious answer;
A pitch change of ~3% would be a semitone shift either way. So 33 to 45 is an increase of 36%, so ~9 semitones.
A pitch change of ~3% would be a semitone shift either way. So 33 to 45 is an increase of 36%, so ~9 semitones.
Re: Quick ? about vinyl
i was curious too so i tested this out, played a side of one of my records on 33 then 45 and listened for the synths... it's a difference of a perfect fourth aka C to F, F to Bb etc. aka 5 semitones difference, approximately. Dunno where 9 could've come from haha
Re: Quick ? about vinyl
i don't really know anything about music theory, so sorry if i'm thinking of it the wrong way: from my understanding the speed of the record affects the frequency of the note. and since the difference in frequency between two notes differ from case to case, the key change should depend on the original note (= is not always the same). am i talking bullshit?
Re: Quick ? about vinyl
I don't really think that would matter, I'm pretty sure it would translate the same from a record with a song in E flat major as it would one in C major etc.baddis98 wrote:i don't really know anything about music theory, so sorry if i'm thinking of it the wrong way: from my understanding the speed of the record affects the frequency of the note. and since the difference in frequency between two notes differ from case to case, the key change should depend on the original note (= is not always the same). am i talking bullshit?
- magnetron_sputtering
- Posts: 184
- Joined: Tue Apr 21, 2009 7:38 pm
Re: Quick ? about vinyl
Well double the frequency is an octave higher. You're increasing the frequency by (45/33)x100=36% (approx.), so that's just over a third of an octave higher or a bit more than four semitones. To get to five semitones you'd need to go to about 33+(5/12)*33=46.75rpm.
Feedback wanted.
Soundcloud
Soundcloud
Re: Quick ? about vinyl
It would appear my maths is slightly off.
Re: Quick ? about vinyl
i did say approximately haha i was doing it by earmagnetron, sputtering wrote:Well double the frequency is an octave higher. You're increasing the frequency by (45/33)x100=36% (approx.), so that's just over a third of an octave higher or a bit more than four semitones. To get to five semitones you'd need to go to about 33+(5/12)*33=46.75rpm.
-
firstboyonthemoon
- Posts: 55
- Joined: Sun Feb 26, 2012 1:31 am
Re: Quick ? about vinyl
That's not quite how it works though. A just perfect fourth has a ratio of 4:3 to its fundamental or to put it another way, 33.3% higher. (A 12-tet perfect fourth is a couple cents different, but we're close enough for jazz here.) So a 33 1/3 record played at 45 rpm is going to be a little more than a perfect fourth higher than the original recording.magnetron, sputtering wrote:Well double the frequency is an octave higher. You're increasing the frequency by (45/33)x100=36% (approx.), so that's just over a third of an octave higher or a bit more than four semitones. To get to five semitones you'd need to go to about 33+(5/12)*33=46.75rpm.
Also, this has come up before: http://www.dubstepforum.com/forum/viewt ... 3#p2090652
- magnetron_sputtering
- Posts: 184
- Joined: Tue Apr 21, 2009 7:38 pm
Re: Quick ? about vinyl
That's what I said.firstboyonthemoon wrote:That's not quite how it works though. A just perfect fourth has a ratio of 4:3 to its fundamental or to put it another way, 33.3% higher. (A 12-tet perfect fourth is a couple cents different, but we're close enough for jazz here.) So a 33 1/3 record played at 45 rpm is going to be a little more than a perfect fourth higher than the original recording.magnetron, sputtering wrote:Well double the frequency is an octave higher. You're increasing the frequency by (45/33)x100=36% (approx.), so that's just over a third of an octave higher or a bit more than four semitones. To get to five semitones you'd need to go to about 33+(5/12)*33=46.75rpm.
Also, this has come up before: http://www.dubstepforum.com/forum/viewt ... 3#p2090652
Feedback wanted.
Soundcloud
Soundcloud
Re: Quick ? about vinyl
no you didn't, you said it'd be ~4 semitones higher, a perfect fourth is 5 semitones.magnetron, sputtering wrote:That's what I said.firstboyonthemoon wrote:That's not quite how it works though. A just perfect fourth has a ratio of 4:3 to its fundamental or to put it another way, 33.3% higher. (A 12-tet perfect fourth is a couple cents different, but we're close enough for jazz here.) So a 33 1/3 record played at 45 rpm is going to be a little more than a perfect fourth higher than the original recording.magnetron, sputtering wrote:Well double the frequency is an octave higher. You're increasing the frequency by (45/33)x100=36% (approx.), so that's just over a third of an octave higher or a bit more than four semitones. To get to five semitones you'd need to go to about 33+(5/12)*33=46.75rpm.
Also, this has come up before: http://www.dubstepforum.com/forum/viewt ... 3#p2090652
- magnetron_sputtering
- Posts: 184
- Joined: Tue Apr 21, 2009 7:38 pm
Re: Quick ? about vinyl
You're right. I came back to edit my post but I'll leave it. It's not as simple as I thought. I assumed a perfect fourth was four semitones but it's not for some reason. I'll be on wikipedia if anyone needs me.Scherou wrote:no you didn't, you said it'd be ~4 semitones higher, a perfect fourth is 5 semitones.magnetron, sputtering wrote:That's what I said.firstboyonthemoon wrote:That's not quite how it works though. A just perfect fourth has a ratio of 4:3 to its fundamental or to put it another way, 33.3% higher. (A 12-tet perfect fourth is a couple cents different, but we're close enough for jazz here.) So a 33 1/3 record played at 45 rpm is going to be a little more than a perfect fourth higher than the original recording.magnetron, sputtering wrote:Well double the frequency is an octave higher. You're increasing the frequency by (45/33)x100=36% (approx.), so that's just over a third of an octave higher or a bit more than four semitones. To get to five semitones you'd need to go to about 33+(5/12)*33=46.75rpm.
Also, this has come up before: http://www.dubstepforum.com/forum/viewt ... 3#p2090652
Feedback wanted.
Soundcloud
Soundcloud
Re: Quick ? about vinyl
haha well its just because a perfect 'fourth' refers to the melodic interval in the context of a major/minor scale, as in up 4 notes of the scale, not 4 semitonesmagnetron, sputtering wrote:You're right. I came back to edit my post but I'll leave it. It's not as simple as I thought. I assumed a perfect fourth was four semitones but it's not for some reason. I'll be on wikipedia if anyone needs me.Scherou wrote:no you didn't, you said it'd be ~4 semitones higher, a perfect fourth is 5 semitones.magnetron, sputtering wrote:That's what I said.firstboyonthemoon wrote:That's not quite how it works though. A just perfect fourth has a ratio of 4:3 to its fundamental or to put it another way, 33.3% higher. (A 12-tet perfect fourth is a couple cents different, but we're close enough for jazz here.) So a 33 1/3 record played at 45 rpm is going to be a little more than a perfect fourth higher than the original recording.magnetron, sputtering wrote:Well double the frequency is an octave higher. You're increasing the frequency by (45/33)x100=36% (approx.), so that's just over a third of an octave higher or a bit more than four semitones. To get to five semitones you'd need to go to about 33+(5/12)*33=46.75rpm.
Also, this has come up before: http://www.dubstepforum.com/forum/viewt ... 3#p2090652
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 0 guests