Werckmeister V

Even-handed key color distribution — more uniform than Werckmeister III.

Quick Facts

Creator
Andreas Werckmeister (1691)
Historical Era
Baroque
Formula Type
cent-offsets
Key Advantage
Even-handed key color distribution — more uniform than Werckmeister III.
Key Limitation
Less key color contrast; some find it insufficiently distinctive for Baroque repertoire.
Typical Use
Baroque keyboard music where a milder well-temperament character is preferred.

Mathematical Basis

This well temperament distributes the Pythagorean comma unevenly across the circle of fifths, giving pure or near-pure intervals in closely-related keys while making distant keys progressively more tempered.

Sound Character

Well temperaments feature varied key color: keys near C major sound purer and more consonant, while distant keys (many sharps or flats) have more harmonic tension and a brighter, more chromatic character. This gives each key a distinctive musical affect, making well temperaments particularly suited to multi-key keyboard repertoire.

Werckmeister V Frequency Table — All 12 Notes at A4=440Hz

Note Equal Temp. (Hz) Werckmeister V (Hz) Cents from Equal
C4 261.626 262.515 +5.87
Db4 277.183 277.497 +1.96
D4 293.665 294.994 +7.82
Eb4 311.127 311.830 +3.91
E4 329.628 329.255 -1.96
F4 349.228 350.018 +3.91
Gb4 369.994 369.994 0.00
G4 391.995 393.770 +7.82
Ab4 415.305 414.835 -1.96
A4 440.000 440.000 0.00
Bb4 466.164 467.218 +3.91
B4 493.883 494.442 +1.96

Frequencies in Hz at A4=440Hz. Positive cents = sharper than equal temperament. Negative = flatter. Formula: f = f_equal × 2(cents/1200)

Historical Context

Werckmeister V originates from the Baroque era, developed by Andreas Werckmeister (1691). It was primarily used for Baroque keyboard music where a milder well-temperament character is preferred..

Well temperaments emerged in the Baroque era as practical compromises between meantone purity and equal temperament flexibility. J.S. Bach's Well-Tempered Clavier (1722) may have been composed with a specific well temperament in mind.

Who Uses Werckmeister V Today

Well temperaments are used today by harpsichordists, fortepiano players, and historically-informed keyboard performers. Many period instrument specialists choose specific well temperaments to match the repertoire being performed.

Tune with Werckmeister V — Get Tunable.

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

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