The Endless Staircase of Sound
The Shepard tone uses octave-spaced frequencies. Each octave doubles the frequency, creating harmonically related tones that our brain blends together.
The Shepard tone exploits how our brain processes pitch by stacking multiple sine waves an octave apart, each with carefully controlled volume levels.
Multiple sine waves play simultaneously, each exactly one octave apart (×2 frequency). For example: 55 Hz, 110 Hz, 220 Hz, 440 Hz, 880 Hz, 1760 Hz.
Middle frequencies are loudest. Lower and higher frequencies fade out using a bell-shaped (Gaussian) curve. This masks the "wraparound."
As tones ascend, the highest fades out while a new low tone fades in. The cycle repeats seamlessly—your brain perceives endless rising.
Even stranger: play two Shepard tones exactly 6 semitones apart (a tritone). Some people hear it as ascending, others as descending! Your perception depends on your native language and listening experience.
Did you hear it as rising or falling?
Hans Zimmer's score creates unrelenting tension
Batpod sound design uses rising Shepard tones
Endless Stairs sequence matches infinite staircase
"Dream is Collapsing" builds with endless descent
"Echoes" features a Shepard-like rising tone
Risers and downers in trailers and transitions
The Shepard tone exploits a fundamental ambiguity in how we perceive pitch:
Our auditory system has two separate mechanisms for pitch perception:
The Shepard tone keeps the chroma cycling while giving the illusion of continuously changing height. It's the audio equivalent of the barber pole optical illusion or M.C. Escher's impossible staircases.