How retuning a musical scale actually works
The standard tuning of music to A4 = 440 Hz became widely adopted in the mid-20th century, with the International Organization for Standardization formalizing it in 1955 as ISO 16. Before this, tuning varied by region and by instrument maker — many orchestras used A4 anywhere between 435 Hz and 445 Hz. The "concert pitch" you've heard your entire life is, historically, a fairly recent convention.
Switching a track from 440 Hz to 432 Hz lowers the pitch of every note slightly. Crucially, it lowers them *proportionally*: the relationships between notes (the intervals) are preserved, so the music remains musically intact. What changes is the absolute reference. Middle C, for example, drops from approximately 261.63 Hz at 440 Hz tuning to about 256 Hz at 432 Hz tuning. The chord progressions still work, the harmonies still resolve — the whole scale just sits 8 cycles per second lower.
That eight-cycle difference is small in numerical terms but readily audible to most listeners. People describe 432 Hz tuning as "warmer," "rounder," or simply "more relaxed" than 440 Hz tuning of the same track. Whether that's a measurable physical effect or a matter of personal acoustic preference depends on who you ask, and we're genuinely agnostic about the metaphysical claims you'll find elsewhere on the internet about 432 Hz being the "frequency of the universe." What we can say with confidence is that some music sounds noticeably better at 432 Hz, and that you should be able to hear it for yourself.
The conversion table
Here is how each major alternative tuning relates to A4. These are the references our app uses internally:
| Tuning | A4 reference | Anchor note |
|---|---|---|
| 440 Hz (standard) | 440.00 Hz | A4 = 440 |
| 432 Hz | 432.00 Hz | A4 = 432 |
| 174 Hz | 438.40 Hz | F3 = 174 |
| 285 Hz | 452.51 Hz | C#4 = 285 |
| 396 Hz | 444.49 Hz | G4 = 396 |
| 417 Hz | 441.74 Hz | G#4 = 417 |
| 528 Hz | 444.04 Hz | C5 = 528 |
| 639 Hz | 451.74 Hz | D#5 = 639 |
| 741 Hz | 415.87 Hz | G5 = 741 |
| 852 Hz | 426.00 Hz | A5 = 852 |
| 963 Hz | 428.94 Hz | B5 = 963 |
What we don't do to your music
When 432 Player Plus retunes a track, that's all that happens. There is no equalizer in the signal path. There is no compression. There is no psychoacoustic "enhancement". Nothing is added, removed, or coloured. The pitch is shifted with absolute lossless precision and the result is what reaches your headphones.
We took this stance deliberately because most consumer audio software does the opposite — it stacks effects, compresses, normalizes, and applies "improvements" that the user can't easily turn off. We believe the freedom to listen to your own music at the tuning of your choice is a fundamental right, which is why the underlying engine is covered by US Patent 11,836,330: so that no other party can patent it later and put that right behind their paywall.