Db1 in Just / Pure

In Just Intonation referenced to C as the tonic, Db1 is tuned to 34.883 Hz (+11.70 cents from equal temperament). Just intonation is key-center-dependent — all ratios are applied from C as tonic, not from Db1 directly.

This system was used for Renaissance a cappella choral music and barbershop quartet.

Chromatic Scale at Octave 1 in Just / Pure

The table below shows all 12 chromatic notes at octave 1 in Just / Pure. Frequencies use A=440 Hz as the concert pitch reference.

Note Equal Temp (Hz) Just Pure (Hz) Deviation (cents)
C1 32.703 32.703 0.00
Db1 34.648 34.883 +11.70
D1 36.708 36.791 +3.91
Eb1 38.891 39.244 +15.64
E1 41.203 40.879 -13.67
F1 43.654 43.604 -1.98
Gb1 46.249 45.989 -9.76
G1 48.999 49.055 +1.98
Ab1 51.913 52.325 +13.69
A1 55.000 54.505 -15.65
Bb1 58.270 58.866 +17.62
B1 61.735 61.318 -11.73

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

Just / Pure: Mathematical Formula

Just intonation (major) uses small-integer ratios from the harmonic series to tune each pitch class relative to C as the tonic. The major triad on C is built from ratios 1:1, 5:4, and 3:2 — the three purest consonances. A4 is assigned the ratio 5:3 from C4, which gives 261.626 × (5/3) = 436.043 Hz rather than 440.000 Hz. This 7.72-cent flat deviation relative to equal temperament reflects the C-centric nature of the data: just intonation is key-center-dependent. An A-tonic just intonation scale would assign A4 = 1:1 = 440.000 Hz, but all other pitches would then shift accordingly.

Formula type: Just intonation ratios (5-limit)

How Just / Pure Sounds

Just intonation (major) produces the purest chords in the diatonic C-major context — the major third (5:4) and perfect fifth (3:2) beat at zero, creating an almost electronic stillness in held chords. The effect is striking in close-position vocal harmony, where singers can lock resonance and feel the notes "snap" into alignment. However, melodic passages can feel slightly unequal, since whole tones alternate between 9:8 (203.9 cents) and 10:9 (182.4 cents). Modulation to other key centers exposes the system's C-centric structure, making chromatic music impractical without retuning.

Historical Context

Just intonation in the major mode flourished in Renaissance Italy, particularly in the a cappella sacred music of Josquin des Prez, Palestrina, and their contemporaries. Theorist Gioseffo Zarlino codified the system in his 1558 treatise Le istitutioni harmoniche, arguing that only ratios derived from the first six integers (senario) produce true consonance. The system was practical for voices and unfretted strings, which can adjust intonation in real time, but problematic for fixed-pitch instruments. Keyboard builders experimented with split keys to accommodate multiple pure thirds, but the advent of well temperament eventually made such mechanical solutions unnecessary for ensemble practice.

Other Tuning Systems for Db1

See Db1 in all temperaments →

For a full deep dive into Just / Pure, see the Tunable guide to Just / Pure.

Tune in Just / Pure with precision — Get Tunable.

Tunable supports 15+ historical tuning systems. Switch between equal temperament, Pythagorean, just intonation, and well temperaments in real time as you play.

15+ Temperaments Metronome + Device Sync Tone Generator Practice Recording Ear Training Practice Score Vibrato Analysis