D♭1 34.648 Hz

D♭1 (D-flat 1) is 34.648 Hz in standard equal temperament at A=440 Hz. It is MIDI note number 25. This is the flat spelling of this pitch — see also C♯1.

D♭ is the tonic of D♭ major (5 flats) and appears as a scale degree in several flat keys.

D♭1 Frequency in All Tuning Systems

Temperament Frequency (Hz) Cents from Equal Common Usage
Equal Temperament 34.648 Hz 0.00 Modern standard; piano, fretted instruments
Pythagorean Tuning 34.805 Hz +7.83 Medieval/early music; string ensemble open fifths
Just / Pure 34.883 Hz +11.70 A cappella vocal, barbershop, Renaissance
Meantone 1/3 Comma 34.298 Hz -17.58 Renaissance vocal music in minor keys
Meantone 1/4 Comma 34.375 Hz -13.69 Renaissance keyboard, early Baroque organ
1/6 SC - Attenuated 34.455 Hz -9.67 Baroque orchestral ensemble compromise
Kellner's Bach 34.687 Hz +1.95 Bach keyboard reconstruction
Kirnberger III 34.658 Hz +0.50 Classical-era keyboard, keys near C major
Vallotti 34.687 Hz +1.95 Baroque/Classical orchestral tuning
Werckmeister III 34.687 Hz +1.95 Baroque keyboard; Bach contemporaries
Werckmeister IV 34.531 Hz -5.86 Baroque keyboard, strong key contrast
Werckmeister V 34.687 Hz +1.95 Specialized Baroque keyboard

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

D♭1 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) 34.648 Hz US, UK, and most modern ensembles worldwide
A = 442 Hz 34.805 Hz Many European orchestras; France, Germany
A = 443 Hz 34.884 Hz Berlin Philharmonic; some US orchestras
A = 432 Hz 34.018 Hz Alternative tuning; Baroque revival
A = 415 Hz (Baroque) 32.679 Hz Historically-informed Baroque performance

f = f_at_A440 × (concert_pitch / 440)

Instruments That Play D♭1

D♭1 (34.648 Hz) falls within the comfortable playing range of 3 instruments.

D♭1 and C♯1 — Enharmonic Equivalents

D♭1 and C♯1 are enharmonic equivalents — they sound identical at 34.648 Hz but are written differently depending on the musical context.

When to Write D♭1

D♭ is the tonic of D♭ major (5 flats) and appears as a scale degree in several flat keys.

Composers write D♭ when the harmonic context involves flat keys — for instance, as the tonic in D♭ major or as the 4th degree in A♭ major. In descending passages within flat keys, D♭ reads more naturally than C♯.

Major scales containing D♭1: D♭ major (tonic), G♭ major (5th), A♭ major (4th).

Minor scales containing D♭1: B♭ minor (3rd), F minor (6th), E♭ minor (7th).

D♭1 in Instrument Literature

Wind and brass players encounter D♭ frequently. B♭ instruments (clarinet, trumpet) read it in their common flat-side keys, and French horn parts in flat keys use it regularly.

In fixed-do solfège, D♭ is sung as "ra" (♭2). In D♭ major with moveable do, it is "do" (the tonic).

How C♯1 Differs in Context

While C♯1 sounds identical to D♭1, it belongs to a different set of keys and carries different harmonic implications.

C♯1: C♯ is the leading tone in D major and a key-signature accidental in all sharp keys from D major onward.

Major scales: D major (7th / leading tone), A major (3rd), E major (6th), B major (2nd), F♯ major (5th), C♯ major (tonic).

Minor scales: F♯ minor (5th), C♯ minor (tonic), G♯ minor (4th), B minor (2nd).

String instruments (violin, viola, cello) encounter C♯ frequently in sharp keys like D major and A major, which are natural keys for bowed strings. Guitarists use C♯ in keys like A and E major.

Enharmonic equivalents share the same frequency in equal temperament. In historical temperaments like Pythagorean or meantone, they may differ slightly — see the temperament comparison table above for this note's exact deviations.

Why D♭1 Varies Across Tuning Systems

D♭1 shows a maximum deviation of -17.58 cents in Meantone 1/3 Comma compared to equal temperament. This 18-cent difference is clearly audible to trained musicians and reflects how different tuning philosophies prioritize interval purity over equal distribution.

In Meantone 1/3 Comma, D♭1 is tuned flatter than equal temperament, reflecting this system's approach to distributing the Pythagorean comma across the chromatic scale.

3 of the 15 non-equal temperaments deviate by more than 10 cents for D♭1, making this note one where tuning system choice has a meaningful impact on pitch.

D♭1 Across All Tuning Systems

Explore how D♭1 is tuned in each historical temperament system. Each tuning system gives D♭1 a slightly different frequency, affecting the harmonic character of chords and melodies.

D♭1 in Historical Temperament Systems

Explore how D♭1 (34.648 Hz in equal temperament) is tuned in each of the 15 historical non-equal temperament systems. Each system places D♭1 at a slightly different frequency based on its mathematical basis.

Tune D♭1 with precision — Get Tunable.

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