A155.000 Hz

A1 (A1) is 55.000 Hz in standard equal temperament at A=440 Hz. It is MIDI note number 33.

A1 Frequency in All Tuning Systems

Temperament Frequency (Hz) Cents from Equal Common Usage
Equal Temperament 55.000 Hz 0.00 Modern standard; piano, fretted instruments
Pythagorean 55.000 Hz 0.00 Medieval/early music; string ensemble open fifths
Just Intonation (Major) 54.505 Hz -15.65 A cappella vocal, barbershop, Renaissance
Just Intonation (Minor) 54.505 Hz -15.65 Minor-key vocal music, string ensembles
Quarter-Comma Meantone 55.000 Hz 0.00 Renaissance keyboard, early Baroque organ
Third-Comma Meantone 55.000 Hz 0.00 Renaissance vocal music in minor keys
Sixth-Comma Meantone 55.000 Hz 0.00 Baroque orchestral ensemble compromise
Werckmeister III 55.000 Hz 0.00 Baroque keyboard; Bach contemporaries
Werckmeister IV 55.000 Hz 0.00 Baroque keyboard, strong key contrast
Werckmeister V 55.000 Hz 0.00 Specialized Baroque keyboard
Kirnberger III 55.000 Hz 0.00 Classical-era keyboard, keys near C major
Vallotti 55.000 Hz 0.00 Baroque/Classical orchestral tuning
Young (1799) 55.000 Hz 0.00 Classical-era keyboard
Bach/Lehman 55.000 Hz 0.00 Bach keyboard works, Well-Tempered Clavier
Neidhardt 55.000 Hz 0.00 18th century keyboard, near-equal alternative
Kellner (Bach) 55.000 Hz 0.00 Bach keyboard reconstruction

Positive cents = sharper than equal temperament. Negative cents = flatter. 100 cents = 1 semitone.

A1 at Different Concert Pitches

The same note varies in frequency depending on the concert pitch standard used by your ensemble.

Concert Pitch Frequency (Hz) Common Usage
A = 440 Hz (ISO standard) 55.000 Hz US, UK, and most modern ensembles worldwide
A = 442 Hz 55.250 Hz Many European orchestras; France, Germany
A = 443 Hz 55.375 Hz Berlin Philharmonic; some US orchestras
A = 432 Hz 54.000 Hz Alternative tuning; Baroque revival
A = 415 Hz (Baroque) 51.875 Hz Historically-informed Baroque performance

f = f_at_A440 × (concert_pitch / 440)

Instruments That Play A1

A1 (55.000 Hz) falls within the comfortable playing range of 11 instruments.

A1 and the Concert Pitch Standard

The note A in octave 1 is part of the A pitch class — the universal reference for tuning. A4 (440 Hz) is the ISO 16:1975 international standard, but concert pitch has varied across centuries and ensembles.

Era / Context A4 Frequency A1 Frequency Notes
Baroque (1700s) 415 Hz 51.875 Hz Approximately a semitone lower than modern pitch
Classical (late 1700s) ~422-430 Hz Mozart and Haydn era; pitch was rising but not standardized
Alternative standard 432 Hz 54.000 Hz Verdi's preference; popular in alternative tuning communities
ISO standard (1975) 440 Hz 55.000 Hz International standard used by most ensembles worldwide
European orchestras 442 Hz 55.250 Hz Common in France, Germany, and other European orchestras
High modern pitch 443 Hz 55.375 Hz Berlin Philharmonic; some US orchestras

For any concert pitch standard, A1 = A4_reference × 2-3. A1 is 3 octaves below A4.

Why A1 Varies Across Tuning Systems

A1 shows a maximum deviation of -15.65 cents in Just Intonation (Major) compared to equal temperament. This 16-cent difference is clearly audible to trained musicians and reflects how different tuning philosophies prioritize interval purity over equal distribution.

In Just Intonation (Major), A1 is tuned flatter than equal temperament, reflecting this system's approach to distributing the Pythagorean comma across the chromatic scale.

2 of the 15 non-equal temperaments deviate by more than 10 cents for A1, making this note one where tuning system choice has a meaningful impact on pitch.

A1 Across All Tuning Systems

Explore how A1 is tuned in each historical temperament system. Each tuning system gives A1 a slightly different frequency, affecting the harmonic character of chords and melodies.

Tune A1 with precision — Get Tunable.

Tunable supports 15+ tuning systems including equal temperament, Pythagorean, just intonation, and historical well-temperaments. See exact Hz values in real-time as you play.