D♭ (musical note)

D (D-flat) is a musical note lying a diatonic semitone above C and a chromatic semitone below D. It is thus enharmonic to C. In the French solfège it is known as re bémol. It is the second semitone of the solfège.

When calculated in equal temperament with a reference of A above middle C as 440 Hz, the frequency of middle D (or D4) is approximately 277.183 Hz.[1] See pitch (music) for a discussion of historical variations in frequency.

Designation by octave

Scientific designation Helmholtz designation Octave name Frequency (Hz)
D−1D͵͵͵ or ͵͵͵D or DDDDSubsubcontra8.662
D0D͵͵ or ͵͵D or DDDSubcontra17.324
D1D͵ or ͵D or DDContra34.648
D2DGreat69.296
D3dSmall138.591
D4dOne-lined277.183
D5dTwo-lined554.365
D6dThree-lined1108.731
D7dFour-lined2217.461
D8dFive-lined4434.922
D9dSix-lined8869.844
D10dSeven-lined17739.688

Scales

Common scales beginning on D

  • D major: D E F G A B C D
  • D natural minor: D E F G A B C D
  • D harmonic minor: D E F G A B C D
  • D melodic minor ascending: D E F G A B C D
  • D melodic minor descending: D C B A G F E D

Diatonic scales

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

Jazz melodic minor

References

  1. Suits, B. H. (1998). "Physics of Music Notes - Scales: Just vs Equal Temperament". MTU.edu. Michigan Technological University. Retrieved 5 February 2024.

See also


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.