Scientific pitch notation


Scientific pitch notation and international pitch notation ) is a method of specifying musical pitch by combining a musical note name and a number identifying the pitch's octave.
Although scientific pitch notation was originally designed as a companion to scientific pitch, the two are not synonymous. Scientific pitch is a pitch standard—a system that defines the specific frequencies of particular pitches. Scientific pitch notation concerns only how pitch names are notated, that is, how they are designated in printed and written text, and does not inherently specify actual frequencies. Thus, the use of scientific pitch notation to distinguish octaves does not depend on the pitch standard used.

Nomenclature

The notation makes use of the traditional tone names which are followed by numbers showing which octave they are part of.
The system begins at a frequency of 16.352 Hz, which is assigned the value C0.
The octave 0 of the scientific pitch notation is traditionally called the sub-contra octave, and the tone marked C0 in SPN is written as ,,C or C,, or CCC in traditional systems. Octave 0 of SPN marks the low end of what humans can actually perceive, with the average person being able to hear frequencies no lower than 20 Hz as pitches.
The octave number increases by 1 upon an ascension from B to C. Thus, A0 refers to the first A above C0 and middle C is denoted as C4 in SPN.
The octave number is tied to the alphabetic character used to describe the pitch, thus:

Use

Scientific pitch notation is often used to specify the range of an instrument. It provides an unambiguous means of identifying a note in terms of textual notation rather than frequency, while at the same time avoiding the transposition conventions that are used in writing the music for instruments such as the clarinet and guitar. It is also easily translated into staff notation, as needed. In describing musical pitches, nominally enharmonic spellings can give rise to anomalies where, for example in meantone temperaments C is a lower frequency than B; but such paradoxes usually do not arise in a scientific context.
Scientific pitch notation avoids possible confusion between various derivatives of Helmholtz notation which use similar symbols to refer to different notes. For example, "c" in Helmholtz's original notation refers to the C below middle C, whereas "C" in ABC Notation refers to middle C itself. With scientific pitch notation, middle C is always C, and C is never any note but middle C. This notation system also avoids the "fussiness" of having to visually distinguish between four and five primes, as well as the typographic issues involved in producing acceptable subscripts or substitutes for them. C is much easier to quickly distinguish visually from C, than is, for example, ' from ', and the use of simple integers makes subscripts unnecessary altogether.
Although pitch notation is intended to describe sounds audibly perceptible as pitches, it can also be used to specify the frequency of non-pitch phenomena. Notes below E or higher than E are outside most humans' hearing range, although notes slightly outside the hearing range on the low end may still be indirectly perceptible as pitches due to their overtones falling within the hearing range. For an example of truly inaudible frequencies, when the Chandra X-ray Observatory observed the waves of pressure fronts propagating away from a black hole, their one oscillation every 10 million years was described by NASA as corresponding to the B fifty-seven octaves below middle C.

Similar systems

There are pitch-octave notation conventions that appear similar to scientific pitch notation but are based on an alternative octave convention that differs from scientific pitch notation, usually by one octave. For example, middle C appears in some MIDI software as "C5". This convention is probably related to a similar convention in sample-based trackers, where C5 is the basic pitch at which a sample plays, forcing the musician to treat samples at any other pitch as transposing instruments when using them in songs. Alternately, both Yamaha and the software MaxMSP define middle C as C3. Apple's GarageBand also defines middle C as C3.
Using scientific pitch notation consistently, the MIDI NoteOn message assigns MIDI note 0 to C−1, MIDI note 21 to A0, MIDI note 60 to C4, MIDI note 69 to A4, MIDI note 108 to C8, and MIDI note 127 to G9.
This creates a linear pitch space in which an octave spans 12 semitones, where each semitone is the distance between adjacent keys of the piano keyboard. Distance in this space corresponds to musical pitch distance in an equal-tempered scale, 2 semitones being a whole step, and 1 semitone being a half step. An equal-tempered semitone can also be subdivided further into 100 cents. Each cent is semitone or octave. This measure of pitch allows the expression of microtones not found on standard piano keyboards.

Meantone temperament

The notation is sometimes used in the context of meantone temperament, and does not always assume equal temperament nor the standard concert A4 of 440 Hz; this is particularly the case in connection with earlier music.
The standard proposed to the Acoustical Society of America explicitly states a logarithmic scale for frequency, which excludes meantone temperament, and the base frequency it uses gives A4 a frequency of exactly 440 Hz. However, when dealing with earlier music that did not use equal temperament, it is understandably easier to simply refer to notes by their closest modern equivalent, as opposed to specifying the difference using cents every time.

Table of note frequencies

The table below gives notation for pitches based on standard piano key frequencies, in other words, standard concert pitch and twelve-tone equal temperament). When a piano is tuned to just intonation, C4 refers to the same key on the keyboard, but a slightly different frequency.
−1012345678910
C8.1758 16.352 32.703 65.406 130.81 261.63 523.25 1046.5 2093.0 4186.0 8372.0 16744
C/D8.6620 17.324 34.648 69.296 138.59 277.18 554.37 1108.7 2217.5 4434.9 8869.8 17740
D9.1770 18.354 36.708 73.416 146.83 293.66 587.33 1174.7 2349.3 4698.6 9397.3 18795
E/D9.7227 19.445 38.891 77.782 155.56 311.13 622.25 1244.5 2489.0 4978.0 9956.1 19912
E10.301 20.602 41.203 82.407 164.81 329.63 659.26 1318.5 2637.0 5274.0 10548 21096
F10.914 21.827 43.654 87.307 174.61 349.23 698.46 1396.9 2793.8 5587.7 11175 22351
F/G11.563 23.125 46.249 92.499 185.00 369.99 739.99 1480.0 2960.0 5919.9 11840 23680
G12.250 24.500 48.999 97.999 196.00 392.00 783.99 1568.0 3136.0 6271.9 12544 25088
A/G12.979 25.957 51.913 103.83 207.65 415.30 830.61 1661.2 3322.4 6644.9 13290 26580
A13.750 27.500 55.000 110.00 220.00 440.00 880.00 1760.0 3520.0 7040.0 14080 28160
B/A14.568 29.135 58.270 116.54 233.08 466.16 932.33 1864.7 3729.3 7458.6 14917 29834
B15.434 30.868 61.735 123.47 246.94 493.88 987.77 1975.5 3951.1 7902.1 15804 31609

Mathematically, given the number of semitones above middle C, the fundamental frequency in hertz is given by . Given the MIDI NoteOn number, the frequency of the note is normally Hz, using standard tuning.

Scientific pitch versus scientific pitch ''notation''

is an absolute pitch standard, first proposed in 1713 by French physicist Joseph Sauveur. It was defined so that all Cs are integer powers of 2, with middle C at 256 hertz. As already noted, it is not dependent upon, nor a part of scientific pitch notation described here. To avoid the confusion in names, scientific pitch is sometimes also called "Verdi tuning" or "philosophical pitch".
The current international pitch standard, using A4 as exactly 440 Hz, had been informally adopted by the music industry as far back as 1926, and A440 became the official international pitch standard in 1955. SPN is routinely used to designate pitch in this system. A4 may be tuned to other frequencies under different tuning standards, and SPN octave designations still apply.
With changes in concert pitch and the widespread adoption of A440 as a musical standard, new scientific frequency tables were published by the Acoustical Society of America in 1939, and adopted by the International Organization for Standardization in 1955. C0, which was exactly 16 Hz under the scientific pitch standard, is now 16.352 Hz under the current international standard system.

Footnotes