December 10, 200817 yr I dont have it, and can't sing worth a damn, but I can tune a geetar lickety-split.
December 10, 200817 yr I've heard that alot of musicians with perfect pitch are actually negatively affected by it when they have to do stuff like recognizing intervals or transposing to different keys for some reason. Dunno how true that is though.
December 10, 200817 yr I've heard that alot of musicians with perfect pitch are actually negatively affected by it when they have to do stuff like recognizing intervals or transposing to different keys for some reason. Dunno how true that is though. It might be like those weird people with insanely good memories, but very little comprehension of what the numbers mean. For example, there are people that could remember the number sequence 122, 124, 126, 128, 130...... 3406. But they completely misunderstand the simplicity of the sequence as just adding 2 each time.
December 10, 200817 yr It might be like those weird people with insanely good memories, but very little comprehension of what the numbers mean. For example, there are people that could remember the number sequence 122, 124, 126, 128, 130...... 3406. But they completely misunderstand the simplicity of the sequence as just adding 2 each time. Like a sevant?
December 11, 200817 yr Like a sevant? You mean savant? Yeah, kind of like that. Ties up with a whole range of personality/learning disorders like autism. or an engineer
December 11, 200817 yr I have perfect pitch. It was trained into me when I was really young and learning to compose and improvise. The only time it interferes with music enjoyment is when I hear a vocalist that's unintentionally off-key, which, unfortunately, happens all too often, or other instruments whose pitch is variable and up to the performer. It doesn't bother me when the vocals are intentionally off-key (i.e. Happy Mondays). The vast majority of musicians have relative pitch as opposed to perfect pitch, and need to "tune" themselves by hearing a note before they are able to play in key. Relative pitch is a requirement for being a good musician. Perfect pitch isn't, though it sure does help.
December 11, 200817 yr I guess perfect pitch would handy for knowing if your turntable has speed problems, but other than that I doubt it's too useful.
December 11, 200817 yr My relative pitch is pretty good..... LIAR!!!!!! My gift CD is ready to ship. I want to give my Christmas exchange partner a taste of good Quebec music... Amicalement
December 11, 200817 yr LIAR!!!!!! Amicalement Is Ms. Dion a relative of Guillaume? Is that why he's pitching her?
December 11, 200817 yr Author LIAR!!!!!! Amicalement Stabbed in the back by a fellow Quebecer. Is Ms. Dion a relative of Guillaume? Is that why he's pitching her? Nope, keep her in Vegas and we'll be very happy.
December 11, 200817 yr Unless of course, one is not playing that kind of music. I mean, do you really think Les Claypool would be improved with perfect pitch, or would he be so busy obsessing with pitch, that he'd forget to be creative. (And I pick Les Claypool arbitrarily, but I think you see my point.)
December 11, 200817 yr Stabbed in the back by a fellow Quebecer. Go easy on the blood I'm aware of your search for our ultimate local artist's CD... Stabbed twice in one day.... Amicalement
December 11, 200817 yr Author Go easy on the blood I'm aware of your search for our ultimate local artist's CD... Stabbed twice in one day.... Amicalement Continue like this and I'll send you the best of Michel Louvain and a compilation of Helmut Lotti greatest hits for Christmas.
December 11, 200817 yr I have read that people with aspergers range of autism spectrum disorder who are also musicly inclined always have the ability to know what note is being played. There is a lot of debate to whether Mozart had Aspergers syndrome.
December 11, 200817 yr Ooopss I didn't get the quote as I wanted. This is a reply to GPH I think in the first page: Not necessarily so (about the need of having perfect pitch to enjoy and understand sounds). Can you name all the different colors and their slight variations and assigning them their frequency value? Probably not, and not a single painter, movie director, photographer... in the world can do it. Does that take any value to their art or the people enjoying it? As I see it not being able to assign a frequency value to a note, and therefore a "name", doesn't equal not being able to differentiate a 410Hz tone from a 415Hz one, and knowing for sure which is higher. They're different things.
December 11, 200817 yr As I see it not being able to assign a frequency value to a note, and therefore a "name", doesn't equal not being able to differentiate a 410Hz tone from a 415Hz one, and knowing for sure which is higher. They're different things. That is essentially my argument. I'm not musically trained, so I don't even know if I posses this perfect pitch. So let's say I have it, does that mean I cannot enjoy music? Does the fact that I CAN enjoy music then mean that I cannot possibly have the perfect pitch? That is essentially the argument made.
December 11, 200817 yr ...so I don't even know if I posses this perfect pitch. That means you dont have it.
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