Mozart 432 hz

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DrFrank124c

Chessplayers may find this interesting. Whilst randomly browsing YouTube I came across some interesting videos, famous music composers whose works were recorded at 432 hz. This audio frequency is supposedly beneficial to the brain so I decided to try it out. I find Mozart's music to be really nice at this frequency. While playing a chess game on chess.com I found myself in a difficult position and so I tried to continue the game while listening to Mozart 432 and the game suddenly turned for the better and I eventually won. I would like to know if anyone out there in chess.comland knows anything about this. What is the normal frequency of classical music and by slowing it down does it make it sound better or worse in your opinion? It sounds better to me but I am no music expert. Are there actually any benefits or is this just another line of youknowwhat? At least they're not charging me anything for it.       

Almost foregot. The address is:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A7xYccLlO3g&list=RDQMAIU0x5OXq8I

DrFrank124c
kaynight wrote:

I always hire cars from Hertz.

LOL--Now be quiet while the grown-ups talk. 

UnderDog_Chess_closed
Normal orchestral pitch is 440-442 hz. Playing at 432 hz is significantly flatter. I'm so used to 440 that it just sounds flat to me!
UnderDog_Chess_closed
I'll give you a more derailed answer in the morning when I'm not trying to type on the annoying phone
DrFrank124c
UnderDog_Chess wrote:
I'll give you a more derailed answer in the morning when I'm not trying to type on the annoying phone

Please do give me a more detailed answer. I am interested in knowing if this really works. I have been listening to these videos while playing chess and they do seem to be working--my playing seems to be improved and then when I go to bed I seem to be sleeping better--but is this just me or have others noticed it also.