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49 - Absolute Pitch

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 July 2011

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Summary

At the present time the question of absolute pitch is attracting attention in consequence of the discrepancy between König's scale and the numbers determined by Appunn's tonometer. This instrument is founded upon the same idea as Scheibler's fork tonometer, and consists of a series of sixty-five harmonium reeds, bridging over an entire octave, and so tuned that each reed gives with its immediate neighbours four beats per second. The application to determine absolute pitch, however, does not require precision of tuning, all that is necessary being to count with sufficient accuracy the number of beats per second between each pair of consecutive reeds. The sum of all these numbers gives the difference of frequencies of vibration between the first reed and its octave, which is, of course, the same as the frequency of the first reed itself.

The whole question of musical pitch has recently been discussed with great care by Mr Ellis, in a paper read before the Society of Arts (May 23, 1877). He finds by original observation with Appunn's instrument 258.4 as the actual frequency of a König's 256 fork, and Prof. Preyer, of Jena, has arrived at a similar result (258.2). On the other hand, Prof. Mayer in America, and Prof. Macleod in this country, using other methods, have obtained numbers not differing materially from König's. The discrepancy is so considerable that it cannot well be attributed to casual errors of experiment; it seems rather to point to some defect in principle in the method employed. Now it appears to me that there is such a theoretical defect in the reed tonometer, arising from a sensible mutual action of the reeds.

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Scientific Papers , pp. 331 - 335
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2009
First published in: 1899

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