Sweeps emphasis across the whole field to reveal interference structure. Not a guitar effect.
Widens the field after the phaser. Mid/Side opens placed tones; Micro-Delay adds space to centered ones. Subtle by design.
Save your field, recall it, or share it as a link. Shared fields appear active but wait for Start Audio.
Low carriers. Lay one or two beneath your selected frequencies to establish the field.
Sixty-four tones aligned with the Gene Keys and I Ching sequence. Search by number or siddhi.
Combine with tones. The wah slowly opens and closes a moving filter — a breathing, shoreline quality.
This is not music. It is a ternary harmonic lattice built from 64 frequencies aligned with the Gene Keys and I Ching sequence. Each frequency may be explored individually or combined with others to create harmonic fields and interference patterns.
Many listeners report meditation support, relaxation, dream activity, altered perception of space, increased awareness of subtle body sensations, and emergent beat patterns.
There is no correct way to use the instrument. Experiment. Listen through the tones rather than to them.
Sine — Pure tone, no added harmonic content. Reveals the fundamental relationships and beat patterns between frequencies.
Triangle — Soft harmonic content. Smooth and spacious, introducing gentle overtone structure.
Sawtooth — Rich harmonic spectrum. Produces dense interference patterns and complex harmonic interaction.
Square — Strong harmonic character. Can emphasize rhythmic beating and standing-wave effects.
Sine waves reveal the lattice most directly. The other waveforms reveal how the lattice behaves as harmonic complexity increases.
Spark — 20.85 Hz. Low subharmonic field tone often used for deeper body and fascia entrainment. Works best with a good subwoofer or bass-capable headphones. Many headphones technically reach near twenty hertz, though quality varies significantly.
Anchor — 29.48 Hz. Low subharmonic tone corresponding to the coherence-anchor field. Useful as a centering carrier beneath selected Gene Key frequencies.
Aux Tone — 33.33 Hz. Auxiliary torsion tone. Not one of the primary mapped Gene Key frequencies. Included because it interacts strongly with the lattice field and can function as a moving canvas beneath the other tones.
Use one or two root tones beneath your selected frequencies. Many users find they help establish the harmonic field upon which the rest of the lattice unfolds.
White Noise — Equal energy across frequencies. Bright and airy.
Brown Noise — Emphasizes lower frequencies. Deep and grounding.
Noise may be combined with tones. The Wah controls slowly open and close a moving filter through the noise field. Many listeners find this creates a breathing or shoreline-like quality.
The master phaser operates across the entire harmonic field. Its purpose is exploration. By slowly shifting which frequencies are emphasized, different interference structures and harmonic relationships become more apparent.
Try no phaser, slow phaser, deep phaser, and wide stereo phaser — and notice how the field changes.
For best results, keep the page open and screen awake. This app will try to keep the screen awake while audio is active when your browser supports it.
For the best experience, keep the page open while listening. Mobile browsers may reduce audio quality, introduce clipping, or pause processing when the screen locks or when another app becomes active.
Make sure your phone is not in Silent Mode. Browser-based Web Audio is handled differently than apps like Spotify, YouTube, or Apple Music — even if other apps produce sound, this page may remain silent while the phone is muted.
Keep the page visible and active, and avoid switching to other apps while listening. If your screen turns off automatically, unlock the phone and return to the page. Some devices aggressively reduce browser processing in the background.
Performance depends on your device and processor. Older phones may experience occasional clipping, crackling, or dropouts when running large numbers of tones, noise generators, phasers, and visualizations together. If this occurs, try reducing the number of active tones.
Small phone speakers often cannot reproduce the lowest tones accurately. Root tones and lower archetypal frequencies may be difficult or impossible to hear through built-in phone speakers. Headphones are recommended, and a quality speaker system with a subwoofer provides the fullest experience — letting the lowest frequencies be felt as well as heard.
Close background apps; turn the visualizer off; set the phaser to fewer stages or off; and reduce the number of active tones.
If you continue experiencing issues, please share your device type, browser, and a description of what occurred. Feedback helps improve future versions of the console.
If this instrument supports your practice, meditation, exploration, or creative work, contributions are welcome.
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