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F (musical note)

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F is a musical note, the fourth above C or fifth below C. It is the fourth note and the sixth semitone of the solfège. It is also known as fa in fixed-do solfège.[1] It is enharmonic equivalent with E (E-sharp)[2] and Gdouble flat (G-double flat),[3] amongst others.

When calculated in equal temperament with a reference of A above middle C as 440 Hz, the frequency of Middle F (F4) is approximately 349.228 Hz.[4] See pitch (music) for a discussion of historical variations in frequency.

Designation by octave

Scientific designation Helmholtz designation Octave name Frequency (Hz) MIDI note number
F−1 F͵͵͵ or ͵͵͵F or FFFF Octocontra 10.913 5
F0 F͵͵ or ͵͵F or FFF Subcontra 21.827 17
F1 F͵ or ͵F or FF Contra 43.654 29
F2 F Great 87.307 41
F3 f Small 174.614 53
F4 f One-lined 349.228 65
F5 f Two-lined 698.456 77
F6 f Three-lined 1396.913 89
F7 f Four-lined 2793.826 101
F8 f Five-lined 5587.652 113
F9 f Six-lined 11175.303 125
F10 f Seven-lined 22350.607 N/A

Scales

Common scales beginning on F

Diatonic scales

  • F Ionian: F G A B C D E F
  • F Dorian: F G A B C D E F
  • F Phrygian: F G A B C D E F
  • F Lydian: F G A B C D E F
  • F Mixolydian: F G A B C D E F
  • F Aeolian: F G A B C D E F
  • F Locrian: F G A B C D E F

Jazz melodic minor

E-sharp

E (Script error: The function "langx" does not exist.)[5] is a common enharmonic equivalent of F, but is not regarded as the same note. E is commonly found before F in the same measure in pieces where F is in the key signature, in order to represent a diatonic, rather than a chromatic semitone; writing an F with a following F is regarded as a chromatic alteration of one scale degree. Though E and F sound the same in any 12-tone temperament, other tunings may define them as distinct pitches.

References

  1. Demorest (2001, p. 46)
  2. Griffiths (2004, p. 617)
  3. Zundel (1848, p. 24)
  4. Suits, B. H. (1998). "Physics of Music Notes - Scales: Just vs Equal Temperament". MTU.edu. Michigan Technological University. Archived from the original on 27 November 2023. Retrieved 5 February 2024. Unknown parameter |url-status= ignored (help)
  5. Griffiths (2004, p. 399)

Sources

See also


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