Perfect Pitch, and why almost nobody is tone deaf.

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  • čas přidán 1. 05. 2024
  • Support my channel and receive special perks by joining! / @bradharrison
    Perfect Pitch is the ability to recognize and produce notes by name on command. You probably can't develop perfect pitch if you don't already have it, but you can get pretty close with relative pitch and pitch memorization.
    Check out my other videos here:
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    Intervals Part I - • Intervals: Part I - Ha...
    Intervals Part II - • Intervals: Part II - T...
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    www.BradHarrison.ca
    www.patreon.com/bradharrison

Komentáře • 2K

  • @BradHarrison
    @BradHarrison  Před 7 měsíci +6

    Take private lessons online with me! Trumpet, brass, theory, composition & arranging, improvisation, or whatever musical/life coaching you’d like to work on. More information at www.bradharrison.ca/lessons

    • @MelodiesUnheard
      @MelodiesUnheard Před 4 měsíci

      Awesome video man! I have perfect pitch and i always love to do research on it
      Also, it's a little unrelated to the topic but still pretty close to it, i'm an audio engineer and i struggle with hearing frequencies in the mix as much as non-perfect pitch people struggle with hearing notes. I guess there's no "perfect EQ pitch" :D
      /Nevertheless, i still have to say that your voice in the video is really "booming" with low frequencies, and it's a little annoying to listen, especially in headphones. So i'll leave a kind suggestion for you to mix the audio track more precisely. Thanks!

  • @EmiPianoMX
    @EmiPianoMX Před 2 lety +6270

    Pitch memorization: - Never gonna give you up, never gonna let you down.

    • @shahaffiq5860
      @shahaffiq5860 Před 2 lety +156

      When you train yourself, you probably can be better.

    • @clarksubingsubing5515
      @clarksubingsubing5515 Před 2 lety +186

      I also heard the drum intro thingy on this one 🥲

    • @opbnl9871
      @opbnl9871 Před 2 lety +54

      Never gonna run around, and Hurt you

    • @TheaMidnight
      @TheaMidnight Před 2 lety +29

      That’s lyric memorization:)

    • @zepheriyah
      @zepheriyah Před 2 lety +11

      @@clarksubingsubing5515 drum intro thingy..

  • @sansundertalefrommegalovania
    @sansundertalefrommegalovania Před 2 lety +2138

    Very interesting and educational video that doesn't hate perfect pitch or think that people without it are worse musicians. And your examples were perfect, congratulations!

  • @xscarbeats6617
    @xscarbeats6617 Před 2 lety +1049

    I am norwegian and “gift” is actually poison in norwegian aswell, just like in german. So “gift” can mean married AND poison, it just depends on the context of how it’s used in a sentence. Don’t ask me if there’s a reason for why…

    • @FartMart...
      @FartMart... Před 2 lety +117

      If that’s the case, then I’d assume the antidote would be divorce

    • @Someone-zq6mg
      @Someone-zq6mg Před 2 lety +54

      I was laughing until I realized it's a really similar thing in Russian, the same word stands for "marriage" and "defect". I wonder what's up with our languages...

    • @asadviel
      @asadviel Před 2 lety +4

      @@Someone-zq6mg wait, what word stands for marriage and defect?

    • @Someone-zq6mg
      @Someone-zq6mg Před 2 lety

      @@asadviel Брак

    • @asadviel
      @asadviel Před 2 lety +8

      @@Someone-zq6mg аа, вспомнила. И вправду, пхпх

  • @meeserbaker
    @meeserbaker Před 2 lety +291

    Pretty crazy how every comment ive read has had perfect pitch. Its like youve managed to gather every perfect pitch person that can speak english under one video

    • @batlin
      @batlin Před 2 lety +63

      Or... a lot of people on the Internet like to make up stories about themselves that aren't true.

    • @dailycomplaintsanimationst837
      @dailycomplaintsanimationst837 Před 2 lety +4

      @@batlin lmao

    • @solideomusical
      @solideomusical Před 2 lety +9

      Perhaps the title drew lots of people with perfect pitch in so the percentage is higher than in the real world.

    • @user-yd8kz3do5r
      @user-yd8kz3do5r Před 2 lety

      Is perfect pitch really that uncommon? I didn't know it was something people didn't have until watching this.

    • @solideomusical
      @solideomusical Před 2 lety +2

      @@user-yd8kz3do5r Not sure I buy the 'one in ten thousand' stuff.

  • @steamedbryce
    @steamedbryce Před 2 lety +3515

    The graphics were hilarious and the explanations were very well done so that any level of music experience could understand. Subscribed!

    • @BradHarrison
      @BradHarrison  Před 2 lety +84

      Thanks so much for the feedback! That was the exact goal!

    • @adelereoluwatobiloba2298
      @adelereoluwatobiloba2298 Před 2 lety +11

      I agree 💯

    • @ObjectShowStudio
      @ObjectShowStudio Před 2 lety +5

      O

    • @youreverydaylemonfriend560
      @youreverydaylemonfriend560 Před 2 lety +2

      Very useful

    • @ojsojs6004
      @ojsojs6004 Před 2 lety

      @@BradHarrison Is this a perfect pitch? My 6 years old son did not try that much and did it after a few try. He does not have piano lessons. On rare occasion he just try to imitate what he hears.
      Coffin dance
      czcams.com/users/shorts2xsAE7HHcRw?feature=share

  • @EnnLL
    @EnnLL Před 2 lety +2658

    As someone with perfect pitch, I just wanna say that sometimes, it’s better not to have it. This is just my personal opinion. And through my personal experiences, sometimes perfect pitch can be quite annoying. Whenever I hear a song, I usually hear the notes themselves instead of the actual tune and melody. Like instead of just being able to listen and enjoy, I am saying what note each note is in my head, and I can’t control it. :(. So don’t worry if u\you don’t have perfect pitch, it is not necessary if you want to become a great musician or anything!

    • @nvtc
      @nvtc Před 2 lety +207

      Thanks for sharing. I used to want to achive perfect pitch. Now I know being a superhero isn't always rosy

    • @BradHarrison
      @BradHarrison  Před 2 lety +500

      As someone without perfect pitch, I also sometimes find it hard to just listen. So often you’re analyzing and wondering what you can learn, how you can apply it, etc. The flip side is when you hear some thing that surprises you and blows your mind.

    • @hesh1491
      @hesh1491 Před 2 lety +154

      Just turn your perfect pitch off when you wanna enjoy lol

    • @lululyric
      @lululyric Před 2 lety +59

      YES, exactly, having perfect pitch is honestly a blessing and a curse

    • @isaacnuta7052
      @isaacnuta7052 Před 2 lety +52

      I don't have perfect pitch and i haven't memorised a specific pitch, but I have almost perfect relative pich and I do the same thing. Im not hearing the notes in the right key, but im singing the notes in my head as if the song key was C (again, if the song key is not c, then im not singing the right notes, im just transposing them to c)
      Does anybody relate?

  • @DrSamE
    @DrSamE Před 2 lety +350

    My ex is definitely that UNM(untrained natural musician) category. Its really a phenomenom to witness that. Its like something else. Could harmonize, make whole songs in her head, every part, and every single detail just in her head! Not jealous, not jealous at all :D

    • @BradHarrison
      @BradHarrison  Před 2 lety +73

      Yeah! Why would we be jealous? Pssssh.

    • @Blueyzachary
      @Blueyzachary Před 2 lety +11

      I didn’t know that people didn’t have all of the parts in their head going that fit ig

    • @DrSamE
      @DrSamE Před 2 lety +8

      @@Blueyzachary Might be silly, but I dont quite get what you mean by this :)

    • @nooneknows9218
      @nooneknows9218 Před rokem +3

      Why does it kinda resonate with me🥲 I always produce songs only in my head, and I even have some “finished” songs, but I never try to actually produce them…

    • @icecreamAddictedAngelDevil
      @icecreamAddictedAngelDevil Před 4 měsíci

      People can sing?

  • @selfloathinggameing
    @selfloathinggameing Před 2 lety +303

    I'm a violinist and that part about tuning pitch memorization is so true, I can easily pick out E5, A4, D4, and G3 and relative pitch to pretty much any note I need. It's so nice to finally get an in depth explanation to this

    • @mandy2917
      @mandy2917 Před 2 lety +2

      XDD i love this lmao i use A4 all the time when i need to go up or down using my relative pitch

    • @truscorpio13
      @truscorpio13 Před 2 lety +4

      That’s cool that you have all 4 notes down! I can identify an A from any instrument/timbre but I can only identify G,D,E when played as an open string on a violin

    • @Aqua_247
      @Aqua_247 Před 2 lety +2

      I play cello so i basically have c, g, d, and a engraved into my head by now

    • @angrydoodle8919
      @angrydoodle8919 Před 2 lety +2

      I can recognize when my violin is tuned right or not, but I struggle more to tune it by ear when it’s not already tuned. I should train myself because tuning by ear feels like such a flex to me

    • @wyattstevens8574
      @wyattstevens8574 Před 11 měsíci +1

      I play ukulele, so I (sort of) have middle C and the E, G, and A directly above them burned into my head because I've played it for over 10 years.

  • @Shadowie
    @Shadowie Před 2 lety +549

    Finally something that talks about the spectrum between having good ears and having perfect pitch! I have memorized the notes C, D, E, G, and A, but when asked if I have perfect pitch in the past, I have had no idea how to respond. Thank you for this in-depth and easily-relatable description about this topic!

    • @BradHarrison
      @BradHarrison  Před 2 lety +31

      My pleasure! Glad you enjoyed!

    • @selfloathinggameing
      @selfloathinggameing Před 2 lety +15

      This is a certified Strings Moment

    • @sleepingegg1719
      @sleepingegg1719 Před 2 lety +19

      Yup, having synesthesia (mine is associating colors with notes/key signatures) means I'm able to identify certain pitches - all the notes in a C major scale are easy for me to identify, plus a B flat, because they all have distinct colors. But most flats/sharps sound blue or purple to me and I have to rely on their natural counterparts to identify them most of the time. I'm still able to tell whether someone's singing something in a different key signature, though. In all honesty, I'm still not sure exactly what this classifies as

    • @kevinpham8693
      @kevinpham8693 Před 2 lety +10

      Certified pentatonic moment

    • @user-lo2li4kp2w
      @user-lo2li4kp2w Před 2 lety

      how to memorize notes?

  • @ForlebTF
    @ForlebTF Před 2 lety +236

    I was never musically inclined as a kid. I started taking band in middle school for the easy grades, and after a few years I started to develop an "early stage" of perfect pitch, where I could tell you what a played note was most of the time & sing an instructed note less often. Jump to today, and I have the curse of total perfect pitch; I call it a curse because _everything_ has a pitch that my brain now automatically tries to listen for. Even after stepping back from band & choir entirely, some friends still want me to "do the note thing" as a party trick, and that's honestly the only enjoyable part of it right now.

    • @BradHarrison
      @BradHarrison  Před 2 lety +57

      Come back to music! Use your powers for good! The Perfect Pitch Squad needs you!

    • @jeromem.evardome10_kr15
      @jeromem.evardome10_kr15 Před 6 měsíci

      Holy damn I relate to you bud. I am too, was never musically inclined when I was a kid. But when my music teacher taught us back in grade 1 what C D E F G A B sounds like, the first time I heard it, it never faded away and still to this day my brain analyzes each sound produced in my environment like "how do I make it stop?!"
      Can't focus clearly sometimes because of this blessing(curse)

  • @kirjian
    @kirjian Před 2 lety +512

    I rarely ever talk about my absolute pitch or even demonstrate it at rehearsals because I know it's socially a touchy subject; even when, for example, I know the key a singer's in and the other musicians are trying to find it, I've learned to keep quiet because it can come off as being pedantic, which I guess is understandable. There's also a lot of misinformation online.
    Something to add to this great video is that you can improve your AP with practice: you can learn to recognize microtones and all the notes in really complex chords for instance :)

    • @cjgreen4331
      @cjgreen4331 Před 2 lety +2

      awwwwww

    • @guitarsandcars2586
      @guitarsandcars2586 Před 2 lety +30

      Sad you have to tone down your great ability so you don't offend someone or make them jealous. People need to accept that some people are a lot better than them at some stuff.

    • @JaqueZacher
      @JaqueZacher Před 2 lety +71

      @@guitarsandcars2586 Imagine you're trying to solve a puzzle or crosswords, and someone beside you keeps saying all the answers/how to solve it before you even have time to start trying yourself. I think it's probably the same. Some people do that all the time, only to show off, and he don't want to be that annoying person who ruins other people's fun, that's why he keeps quiet about it.

    • @bunchesofmusic6751
      @bunchesofmusic6751 Před 2 lety +11

      In my freshmen year of high school, my chorus teacher made such a big deal out of my AP that I sang the starting note for every song we sang in class for the full year. The fact that I had AP became normalized among my peers and most people never bring it up now because I’m just kinda the “pitch guy”. I’m glad I can speak somewhat openly about it in my school and people treat it normally. After that year, I never gave pitches as often because I felt a little used so I spoke to my teacher about it and I’ve never had to give pitches often since, but my friends aren’t judgemental about it still :)

    • @kirjian
      @kirjian Před 2 lety +24

      @@guitarsandcars2586 haha, I'm not sure if you're sarcastic lol
      Imagine walking up to a person who sees in black and white and telling them the colors you can see. It may be cool at first, but it gets understandably annoying even if the person who can see in color has good intentions, it has nothing to do with jealousy.

  • @seanellis5410
    @seanellis5410 Před 2 lety +9

    9:34 I saw what you did there with your John Mulaney reference sir, well played.

  • @alexgood4015
    @alexgood4015 Před 2 lety +10

    "This is an f, just kidding, it's an e flat" a joke that sadly not many people would get 😂

  • @karencolon5152
    @karencolon5152 Před 2 lety +82

    I learned piano when I was ten, on an old piano that had not been tuned in years, so it had been tuned to itself, but nearly one semi-tone lower than A-440. This messed with my sense of pitch.

    • @BradHarrison
      @BradHarrison  Před 2 lety +10

      That would!

    • @karencolon5152
      @karencolon5152 Před 2 lety +10

      @@BradHarrison Not to mention that so many popular recordings are sharp or flat to A-440, like "Strawberry Fields", which doesn't hardly have a key at all.

    • @LovednLoving
      @LovednLoving Před 2 lety +1

      bro same

    • @makemoneyjourney7864
      @makemoneyjourney7864 Před rokem +1

      Playing a piano with a different tuning from 440 would not mess your sense of pitch or cause anything. because a particular one single note has no meaning by itself. why? because even 440 was what they decided one day everyone should use. it used to be 432hz or whatever. so don't say one is wrong or messed up because of anything.
      Music is RELATIVE and always relative. a note by itself is not music. or is one single note, music by itself? even when you recognize it's exact pitch? A sound is not music nor identifying single sounds one at a times is not at all music. Let that sink people. So don't just worry.
      But there is also big inaccuracy about perfect pitch because what you now think is A is out of tune if when the standard was not 440HZ is fish a poison? you answer that question.
      If you think about it you see the problem. nothing is perfect in that sense nor even absolute.
      Just the word POISON IS NOT ABSOLUTELY ONE THING. Until context and in relations to other things - ie - people and languages plus context. But on it's own it's not at all perfect nor absolute. For Absolute and perfection never drifts nor changes.

    • @karencolon5152
      @karencolon5152 Před rokem

      @@makemoneyjourney7864 When I was kid, I went to my music teacher's house for lessons, and he asked me to sing out a C. I imagined a piece I played that started with C, and the note I sang out was B on his piano, which was properly tuned. I do agree with you absolutely that pitch is relative. What I was so used to being C, was actually C-flat at A440, but I was playing in the key of C.

  • @derbar7051
    @derbar7051 Před 2 lety +40

    As someone with perfect pitch, that wasn’t born with it, thank you for this video. I firmly believe that perfect pitch can be developed during childhood and adolescence. It is a complete MYTH that musicians cannot develop perfect pitch, if they are not born with it.
    Context: I’m in my late 20’s, and developed perfect pitch when I was in my teens. Also work as a professional musician.

    • @Weeping-Angel
      @Weeping-Angel Před 2 lety +5

      Your comment is giving me hope.

    • @derbar7051
      @derbar7051 Před 2 lety +3

      @@Weeping-Angel scales are your best friends honestly! That’s how I developed it.

    • @BradHarrison
      @BradHarrison  Před 2 lety +12

      I wouldn’t be so bold as to say that it’s impossible to develop perfect pitch later in life, since there seem to be people who have done it. But it’s clearly not a common. Perfect pitch is already pretty rare and developing it in adolescence or adulthood seems even rarer. So so many musicians, the vast overwhelming majority of pros and amateurs, never develop it despite thousands of hours of exposure and practice. Every musician would benefit from more ear training practice but it’s good to have realistic expectations - sadly, not everybody is capable of developing perfect pitch.

    • @derbar7051
      @derbar7051 Před 2 lety +8

      @@BradHarrison Thanks for the comment. However, I still think it’s a myth. People say the same for language learning and yet there’s a whole community of polyglots who have the capacity to be fluent.
      I think perfect pitch is largely misunderstood by musicians on a whole. I still think everyone has the capability of LEARNING the develop the skill; because that’s what it is: a skill set. Learning to hear music comes from a wide range of learned skills, it took me years to hear tonality properly.

    • @soywho9837
      @soywho9837 Před rokem

      @@derbar7051 what do you mean by "developed perfect pitch in teens"? How strong is it and how fast can you identify notes and stuff?

  • @kennylux
    @kennylux Před 2 lety +3

    7:44 "and I'm super not jealous of these people at all, why would I be jealous"
    so trueee💀

  • @oscarmalistee7303
    @oscarmalistee7303 Před 2 lety +65

    back in elementary school, when we had music class, i used to practice scales on melodica and recorder. it's so repetitive to the point where it's engraved inside my brain. i can identify any pitch on different instruments too. now my friends think i have perfect pitch, but in reality, i don't have it. i can't tell if the note is exactly on pitch or not.

  • @QuwapaQuwapus
    @QuwapaQuwapus Před 2 lety +3

    "And figure out if you have any notes burned into your memory to use as a reference"
    Me, humming a G note: when I was, a young boy~

  • @peteroselador6132
    @peteroselador6132 Před 2 lety +201

    My freshman music theory professor memorized what a G was from binge-watching The Office and not skipping the intro. No perfect pitch, but now he can find stuff pretty well without it.
    As for me, I have perfect pitch (or “the curse” as I call it) and learning B-flat trumpet years after starting piano was well…a trip and a half. Also, American music schools emphasize relative pitch over absolute, so in sight-singing and dictation classes the examples would almost always be transposed some amount
    Edit: Should also mention, a lot of people with perfect pitch (especially untrained) don’t hear key relationships well. For the longest time, I could sing a song in a different key just fine, as long as there wasn’t a key change. It took years to be able to mentally transpose key changes. Also, for me, hearing something in a different key changes the meaning, so if there’s a song I like, being sung by someone who’s voice I like, but in a key that I feel isn’t amicable to the song, I can’t listen.

    • @bunchesofmusic6751
      @bunchesofmusic6751 Před 2 lety +8

      What my theory teacher has done for me specifically is have me write melodic dictations (transcribing melodies), except he plays them in a different key than I write them down in. It really helps me with recognizing more relationships and helps me rely less on my perfect pitch to correctly identify every individual note.
      I’ve also been singing for 7 years so I’m pretty used to moving around the tonic. Even with perfect pitch, although songs are colored differently in different keys I don’t really struggle to believe they’re the same song, because the note relationships are the same. Relative pitch is definitely a skill learned separately from perfect pitch and it takes time to master so I get what you mean

    • @brianlee8866
      @brianlee8866 Před 2 lety +1

      I literally have the same problem with hearing songs in different keys it sucks

    • @LiviaBrash
      @LiviaBrash Před 2 lety +5

      As an Office fan with decent pitch memory, thank you for pointing out that’s a G! 😍 storing that one away in my noggin! 😁

    • @truscorpio13
      @truscorpio13 Před 2 lety

      I’ve always thought about how dramatic a song in a different key could sound to somebody with perfect pitch. Like for us normies, it’s just something different and sounds kind of cool to switch it up but somebody with perfect pitch may think a lot more in depth to it. Kind of like if my room color changed from white walls to yellow all of a sudden

    • @wyattstevens8574
      @wyattstevens8574 Před rokem

      Another one your theory professor could have used is "Hey Jude" because Paul says "hey" on middle C!

  • @IUGjygkhabakKUH
    @IUGjygkhabakKUH Před 2 lety +10

    i never understand how someone doesn’t like having perfect pitch lol i love it sm

    • @thomasbourne4203
      @thomasbourne4203 Před 2 lety +2

      What if you’re singing in a group a capella and everyone is migrating flat? Chords are tuned and sound nice, but all the pitches are wrong.

  • @EvilRubberBiscuit
    @EvilRubberBiscuit Před 2 lety +99

    Having perfect pitch because of my synesthesia means that transposed instruments can drive me nuts!!! I had such a hard time with it in music education classes for band in college, (but my musical “color” perception made theory and aural skills a breeze). I certainly understand why people with perfect pitch would prefer to go with instruments and ensembles that are already concert pitch or in octaves (chorale and guitar ensemble for me).
    I remember going on a chorale music tour in Europe and the conductor’s pitch pipe broke right before we had to sing in Leipzig at Bach’s tomb. The conductor looked at me and said “Would you give starting pitches?” Talk about nerves…
    Wait, does that mean I was the concert master? 😁

    • @bunchesofmusic6751
      @bunchesofmusic6751 Před 2 lety +2

      Ah yes being a singer I’ve definitely had to give pitches on the fly

    • @Platinum_XYZ
      @Platinum_XYZ Před 2 lety +3

      Seriously! Miscolored music? Who asked for this?? Actually that part doesn't even annoy, because it's the fact that I'm the only one experiencing it that really hits me. Well, until I found you of course!

  • @seththemage6029
    @seththemage6029 Před 2 lety +171

    As a singer, my perfect pitch gets in the way when I listen to or sing with a harmony that is in Baroque tuning. I was in a chorale that was performing a Bach piece with a keyboard tuned to A440, but the practice recordings for my tenor part were in Baroque (likely A415) tuning. It became painfully obvious that my relative pitch was lacking because I could not get any meaningful practice with the recording.
    I also get completely lost if the song I've been practicing is suddenly played in a different key that I haven't practiced with. If I have sheet music, I would have to transpose to the new key in my head, which is exhausting and much slower than using relative pitch and thinking in intervals. Sort of like translating to a different language on the fly.

    • @lonelittlejerry917
      @lonelittlejerry917 Před 2 lety

      @@bradejensen that's your takeaway? lmfao

    • @lonelittlejerry917
      @lonelittlejerry917 Před 2 lety +1

      @@bradejensen That their ears were trained for A = 415hz for the piece but they were performing it in A = 440hz

    • @infinity0077
      @infinity0077 Před 2 lety +5

      back when i played guitar, i couldn’t retune at all because i associated the finger positions with the specific pitches, so every time i retuned and played it felt like every note was wrong and i just couldn’t do it. every single note threw me off and learning how to play like that was kind of going against everything i knew

    • @LiviaBrash
      @LiviaBrash Před 2 lety +2

      This is interesting! I experience something very similar to what you describe (only the listening to something in a different tuning/key part, not reading sheet music part), but I’m a singer *without* perfect pitch. I have relative pitch with decent pitch memory, and I think it’s the pitch memory aspect that makes adapting difficult for me.

    • @CoolGirl34567
      @CoolGirl34567 Před 2 lety +2

      Yes this, I had to really fine-tune (no pun intended) my relative pitch skills since I was so reliant on my perfect pitch. To train it, I usually learn a song in the original key, then I’ll pick a random key signature and try to play from there.

  • @vee_emm_jay_ess
    @vee_emm_jay_ess Před rokem +2

    I am the UNM. When I was a toddler, my parents knew the love I had for music so they provided me with stereo systems groing up and basic low quality instruments. During middle school, they tried getting me into learning guitar, but I quit after a couple of months because my fingers couldn't handle it. Decades go by... I still have a love for music and I got into DJing and music production using drum machines. While making drum grooves, I needed to add rhythms and melodies, so i purchased a midi keyboard and some sound modules. I started playing around with the keys and I blew my mind own what type of grooves I came up with with no prior experience. Later on, I needed bass lines, so I bought a bass guitar and blew my mind once again when I was able to identify the pitches I was looking for. Today, I am able to play bass lines and follow along to songs I've never heard before. I still can't read music, but my friends who are experienced musicians were blown away at what I could do because they require sheet music in order to play. They told me that if I was able to read music, I would be a musical genius. I agree, I should havenever stopped learning the guitar.

  • @p3so375
    @p3so375 Před 2 lety +11

    I have relative pitch but can identify the notes being played in an absolute way. My band told me i had perfect pitch and i told them i use my guitar strings as reference. I am so relieved to find a video about it explaining what exactly makes me do this and i sent it to them.

  • @endpace
    @endpace Před 2 lety +5

    Literally one of the few informative videos I would consider heavily underrated

  • @DangerDthatsMi
    @DangerDthatsMi Před 2 lety +77

    The reason perfect pitch is more prominent in tone dependent languages is because people learn the subtle differences in tonalities from a very young age (as they speak and learn the language). Anyone can learn to speak those languages later in life, and so it is possible to learn perfect pitch (source: I am writing a masters thesis on the assimilation of tonal information). The sooner someone can connect their acute sense of pitch differentiation to the vocabulary, labelling, and organization of Western European music theory, the sooner they can start developing "perfect pitch". But what about someone who doesn't subscribe to that organization of musical sounds? Someone who speaks cantonese most likely says words and phrases over and over with the same pitch every time with no established key, but since it is not in a musical setting and deliberate, most people do not perceive this as someone with "perfect pitch". The numbers that I know off the top of my head are: around 2% of people have perfect pitch and around 80% of people with level 3 autism have perfect pitch.
    TL;DR more and more research is showing that perfect pitch is NOT about "automatically" labeling notes and more about training yourself to have the ability to differentiate micro-tonalities (possible for anyone without hearing damage to the hair cells in your ear). For some reason, we then require people to spell those out into traditional Western European music theory for it to count as "perfect pitch".

    • @DangerDthatsMi
      @DangerDthatsMi Před 2 lety +3

      I also must add, my old roommate who has perfect pitch was not able to achieve levels of relative pitch that I had mastered because of the way they learned to listen to music. With relative pitch, we are starting from the sum of all sound frequencies, then pulling information such as harmony quality, melody distance, and rhythmic impulse. Someone with perfect pitch might skip over those in favor of following the melody notes in their head. So using perfect pitch to assist you in music is absolutely not guaranteed, but Jacob Collier is probably one of the most successful. He has exercised and assimilated his ability to detect micro-frequencies continuously throughout his life and seems to be constantly unveiling connections between his perception and the work of great music theorists.

    • @aikotitilai3820
      @aikotitilai3820 Před 2 lety +1

      Thanks you for your explanation

    • @compwiz00
      @compwiz00 Před 2 lety +2

      Yeah, I'm pretty good at labeling tones in terms of hertz, but I don't know musical notation. I can tell you if the subwoofer down the street hit 40hz, 60hz, or 120hz, and what refresh rate your old CRT is set to... but I suspect all of this can be done with relative pitch since these frequencies have different physical propagation characteristics, and there are many reliable frequency references in the wild around these ranges.

    • @Kimmie6772
      @Kimmie6772 Před 2 lety +1

      Yeah, I have a feeling perfect pitch has a lot more to do with memory and visualization ability than people let on. There is definitely something intuitive going on with some people, but I think it's more of heightened learning ability with that specific subject than it is being born with innate ability to identify. Pitch is a sound like any other and I find it hard to believe that if the average person can pick apart negligible differences in a fake voice impression that the ability to learn perfect pitch is any different.

    • @Patrick-ryan-collins
      @Patrick-ryan-collins Před rokem

      Let us know when that thesis is out. Very compelling

  • @bunchesofmusic6751
    @bunchesofmusic6751 Před 2 lety +14

    Something that I really like is that you emphasized that you don’t have to have AP to be a good musician. I’m a singer, and most of my peers think they can never reach my level of musicianship BECAUSE of my AP, which is definitely not true. They also reduce my 7 years of experience in vocal practice and rehearsals and performances to having AP which is frustrating because I worked hard to become a better musician too! There’s so much more that goes into music besides reproducing “correct” notes. I haven’t finished the race by any means, I just have a head start. You can always improve your musicianship, even with AP.

    • @BradHarrison
      @BradHarrison  Před 2 lety +2

      Yes! I remember being in ear training class, working in identifying chords, and turned to a friend who had perfect pitch and said that it must be really easy for her. She said, not really. It takes too long to hear and identify every note individually and then mentally stack it and analyze the chord. She felt she still had to basically do what we had to do and just learn the “flavor” of each chord to identify the quality.

  • @EtherealBeing
    @EtherealBeing Před 2 lety +4

    Wow! The way you get information across is fluid and easy to follow. Happy to have found this channel. Thanks for your efforts!

  • @Lantanana
    @Lantanana Před 2 lety +23

    Even though I have played both piano & flute (both badly) in my youth, in my old age I am going to learn keyboard. Your channel is a godsend! I appreciate so much that I can learn from the bottom up from your videos. I have a lot to learn and you make everything crystal clear. Thank you very much !!!

    • @Tree85115
      @Tree85115 Před 2 lety +1

      Good luck with learning! Rooting for you!

  • @thaumaTurtles
    @thaumaTurtles Před 2 lety +1

    Wonderful video. I'm particularly glad you mentioned that perfect pitch drifts with time; that's a thing a lot of these videos miss

  • @emmett3994
    @emmett3994 Před 2 lety +2

    Wow. I am so happy that I actually do not need perfect pitch, because I turned out to have both relative pitch and pitch memorization! This was a great and informative video. Well done!

  • @GroovyDominoes
    @GroovyDominoes Před 2 lety +17

    12:30 Not sure if anyone has ever mentioned it yet before or if anyone can relate, but as someone who's ear is locked to 440Hz and can perfectly tune to that without any reference (or at least very close to that), having fevers can make everything sound flatter even though nothing changed and they are still at 440Hz. I've had a couple of moments where I was listening to music while I had fever and I thought my headphones were just broken because I was hearing everything at like 435Hz, but when I tried playing music on different devices and different headphones, speakers, earphones, they were all flatter than usual to my ears. It restores after a few days after getting cured so you don't have to manual adjust but It's kind of like losing your taste when you get COVID-19. Pretty disturbing.

    • @BradHarrison
      @BradHarrison  Před 2 lety +1

      Whoa! I’ve never heard that one before! Must have been pretty weird to experience.

    • @exq.707
      @exq.707 Před 2 lety +1

      hi groovy

    • @Naltrex
      @Naltrex Před 2 lety +2

      yeah, same thing happens to me exactly as you describe it. sometimes it happens in the morning when I'm waking up

  • @seliavlak
    @seliavlak Před 2 lety +4

    Loved the graphics, they made me laugh! The research and explanation is amazing. As a Dutch girl who learned how to speak Ewe (a Togolese language, as you showed) I can definitely say that it's possible to train your ears. Don't give up guys!

  • @alexm.6533
    @alexm.6533 Před 5 měsíci +2

    I actually didn’t even realize that I had perfect pitch until I was a junior in high school. And that was after I quit band after being in it since fifth grade-sophomore year. In band we used to play the Bb scale as a warm up. And sometimes and Eb but mostly Bb and I was able to tell which one was which by ear if it was a Bb or Eb scale.
    Once I realized I recognized F# in a video, I decided to try and train my musical ear on an online piano and now I can tell you any note on command whether natural or sharp and on any instrument. Very useful for tuning my guitar as well.
    For example when the card reader beeps I can instantly tell what note it is(most of the time it’s an F#) but when I was younger I would never be able to listen to songs in different keys, or when the drive thru beeps I picked up that note instantly.
    It always bothered me when I heard a cover of a song in a different key too.

  • @thomasmiller4710
    @thomasmiller4710 Před 2 lety

    Proud member of Perfect Pitch Gang here, and this guy had a great video. For all of you here trying to develop perfect pitch, start with pitch memory and go for it! It worked for me, and I have never gotten tired of showing my musical power!

  • @teamcongelator
    @teamcongelator Před 2 lety +5

    Best video ever on this subject. Your comparaisons are great to help understand this concept. Congratulations !

  • @tristanperciful6609
    @tristanperciful6609 Před 2 lety +28

    I've got pitch memory for G, Bb, A, F, and C but G is strongest. Years of choir have trained my ear. I can tell pretty quickly what key something is in if i have a moment to pick out a reference pitch.

    • @ashtoneichholtz9100
      @ashtoneichholtz9100 Před 2 lety +2

      I do the same, i’ve trained certain notes lol. it’s C, D, F and G for me

  • @IgorSilveira
    @IgorSilveira Před 2 lety +2

    Hilarious and extremely informative. Awesome work on the graphics, we can tell the amount of work you've put into this. Thank you! 🙌

  • @nm-ot1sj
    @nm-ot1sj Před 2 lety +1

    Never expected such a video to be published on CZcams. Purely educational 👌

  • @vic.txriia3479
    @vic.txriia3479 Před 2 lety +2

    as an orchestra AND choir kid, the talk about relative pitch was on point!!

  • @DebbieDenkeMusic
    @DebbieDenkeMusic Před 2 lety +53

    Excellent article on pitch recognition - one of the best I've seen. My father fine tuned his relative pitch into near perfect, by checking A440 first thing after/before waking/sleeping with a tuning fork. When Frank Denke wasn't out playing music in San Francisco I remember Dad leaping to the piano to check the key my mother sneezed in, or what note a water glass breaking as it got accidentally knocked off the table made. He also associated pitches with colors. I'm challenging myself each day to play whatever music I happen to hear in my head (ranges from Old McDonald to Beethoven's 2nd Movement of the Pathetique to various Jazz Standards). I often dream in near perfect pitch, but in reality could use more refining! Learned a new word, "Amusia" - thanks Brad & sharing this.

    • @TornaitSuperBird
      @TornaitSuperBird Před 2 lety +1

      So your dad was a synesthete?

    • @DebbieDenkeMusic
      @DebbieDenkeMusic Před 2 lety +1

      @@TornaitSuperBird Dad was a professional pianist who marked his own piano transcriptions with colored pencils, and I do believe it not only helped him identify the harmony of tunes for memorization but also refined his pitch identification. I remember meeting a nearly totally blind kid at a music camp who "saw" colors when he heard pitches played on the piano with 100% accuracy - about all he could see - even though he wore thick glasses over his contacts - were shapes of colors pressed up to his face, but could identify even the most complex combination of notes on the piano!

    • @TornaitSuperBird
      @TornaitSuperBird Před 2 lety +2

      @@DebbieDenkeMusic Yup, that sounds like synesthesia to me. That's pretty awesome how that kid's synesthesia helped him out like that.

    • @sprechendemulltonne5051
      @sprechendemulltonne5051 Před rokem +1

      @@DebbieDenkeMusic The Composer K. Penderecki did the same thing with coloring the score!

  • @N2nyo
    @N2nyo Před rokem +1

    This is one of the most thought out, clear and easy to understand videos I've ever seen. As a music student, it's good to know that it's still possible to sort of develop perfect pitch. Great video!

  • @seriaburns4511
    @seriaburns4511 Před 2 lety +2

    Thank you for this video! I used to think that I had perfect pitch but couldn't exactly memorize all the notes, but now I know that relative pitch is an actual term! I associated notes with songs I regularly practiced as a kid, like Mary had a Little Lamb conventionally starts with E, or River Flows in You starts with A, Canon in D (obviously), and A Thousand Miles started with B. Then everytime I read other notes, I would use these songs as the baseline and scale up or down

  • @Whaddif_
    @Whaddif_ Před 2 lety +2

    I started following this channel because of my music course, but i ahve long failed that class yet i still watch. thank you for being entertaining & informative !

    • @BradHarrison
      @BradHarrison  Před 2 lety

      Glad you’re enjoying! Thanks for sticking around!

  • @LiviaBrash
    @LiviaBrash Před 2 lety +6

    Thank you for also pointing out what true tone deafness is! As a singing teacher, I have come across people who find it difficult to match pitch when singing and assume they are “tone-deaf”, but are actually quite good at picking up nuances in music as they listen. A lot of people jump to recommend ear training in that kind of situation, but in my experience, it actually comes down to the relationship between what you hear in your head and how you coordinate your body. It’s oftentimes an issue of breath management (which can determine how fast your vocal folds vibrate, i.e. the pitch). If you don’t realize you’re singing out of tune at the time, but listen back to a recording and notice that you are, you’re definitely not “tone-deaf” 😁

  • @JoshSong
    @JoshSong Před 2 lety +2

    This is brilliant. Graphs and examples were absolutely well thought out.
    Thanks for sharing!!

  • @qaq8409
    @qaq8409 Před rokem +2

    The elaboration is so clear and to the point that I actually feel better about my day

    • @BradHarrison
      @BradHarrison  Před rokem

      Ha! Thanks! I hope you’re day goes great!

  • @BrodySchoonMusic
    @BrodySchoonMusic Před 2 lety +50

    Wonderful video! I had basically no perfect pitch most of my life, but heard that Eddy from 2setviolin got it in high school, so I started training and now I have perfect pitch. There aren't any cheat codes going on in my head, I've just listened to songs like you mentioned and practiced enough that now I can hear an A and immediately know it's an A. I seriously believe lots more people could have perfect pitch than the amount that do right now.

    • @BradHarrison
      @BradHarrison  Před 2 lety +3

      That’s great! Very cool to develop it later. It gives power to the theory that genetics are a component. You always had the potential, you just needed to develop the ability.
      It’s possible that people with perfect pitch never develop or identify it because they’re never trained, but after working with thousands of beginners, which should comprise a pretty reasonable sample size, I pretty confident that perfect pitch is pretty rare. I’ve only ever known a few students who had it. It’s more common among pros but still a tiny minority.

    • @jackson.6282
      @jackson.6282 Před 2 lety +8

      That’s not perfect pitch, that’s relative pitch, and it’s not quite perfect, you would still make mistakes with pitch relation. Not being rude, but the closet you could get is quasi absolute pitch. I don’t know your situation, but that takes years of dedicated practice if I’m correct, but I’m not sure. I have perfect pitch, so I couldn’t tell you.

    • @eric.dangerfield
      @eric.dangerfield Před 2 lety +3

      @@BradHarrison I was born with perfect pitch but never realized it was rare until I started playing around other musicians. It’s definitely been a helpful tool when learning instruments and songs, but definitely not needed to be a good musician.

    • @eonstar
      @eonstar Před 2 lety +3

      @@jackson.6282 That is not relative pitch, with relative pitch you need to be given a starting pitch and then from there you can figure out other pitched, perfect pitch you just know from the start. How is what he has not perfect pitch?

    • @Taterzz
      @Taterzz Před 2 lety +3

      @@eonstar knowing a single note isn't that difficult, and not indicative of perfect pitch. the real test is being given a chord and identifying each individual note. you cannot learn perfect pitch, it's something that you have to develop very early in your life. when i say early, i mean before you learn to talk. this guy just got pitch memorization, which isn't flawless.

  • @batlin
    @batlin Před 2 lety +11

    There's an English researcher called Sam Leak who's experimenting with ways to learn some degree of absolute pitch. I'm in one of the training groups and have a pretty good level now, although I make frequent small errors. I'm still doing the exercises, although I completed the programme a while ago. It's a really fun skill and the fact that it's possible to learn as an adult gives me hope that we'll find even more efficient training methods in future.

    • @BradHarrison
      @BradHarrison  Před 2 lety +7

      Please post back! Would love to hear how it turns out.

  • @kenrichard5
    @kenrichard5 Před 2 lety +2

    What an incredibly well done video, thank you!

  • @insprcreatives702
    @insprcreatives702 Před 2 lety +1

    I started playing guitar and eventually bass around 2005. I was never born with great ears or anything close to a perfect pitch. But I've been practicing independently through youtube and tips from some friends I was able to develop something close to a relative pitch where I can get close to a note (or at times exactly) figure out the rest of the melody. Which is close to what he's explaining about maps. Great stuff

  • @kurtcobainofficial
    @kurtcobainofficial Před 2 lety +4

    10:35 Genius billionare playboy philanthropist? I think you might have the wrong superhero 😂

  • @neodymus
    @neodymus Před 2 lety +5

    I just experienced pitch memorisation recently. I have been playing recorder for a year and had easier time recognising pitch than on my ocarina !

  • @oskachimbas3361
    @oskachimbas3361 Před rokem +1

    I have one of those bizarre situations as I am a classically trained musician of ten years in woodwind instruments and in this have developed pretty decent relative pitch and pitch memorization. However when I started learning guitar recently Ive started to understand how it feels to be a more natural musician. Where I can understand what sounds good and how things fit together, but not quite have that extra understanding that someone who has had guitar lessons. Gave me a new perspective

  • @dhdjsjshdj
    @dhdjsjshdj Před 2 lety +1

    this video is a comedic treat to a person with perfect pitch

  • @JamesMichaelStevens
    @JamesMichaelStevens Před 2 lety +3

    Nice explanation. Enjoyed listening to your lesson on Perfect Pitch!

  • @pffffdld
    @pffffdld Před 2 lety +3

    I'm a UNM, I hate reading theory and I'm veery very bad at reading sheets. I had some piano lessons by my aunt as a kid, but I was already playing by myself years before that, I would just listen to a song and play it. My parents wouldn't let me continue having lessons so I dropped it. I was unhappy for years. As an adult I decided to try again, it was so hard at first and I was only playing some easy songs for a few years. Exactly 1 year ago I decided to go for it, payed a music app and started. Today I'm playing Chopin and Rachmaninoff. I want to tell everyone, whether you're a natural or not, if you want it just go for it, Try. You have no idea what you might be able to do, if you love it you're gonna make it.
    Thanks for this beautiful video!

    • @BradHarrison
      @BradHarrison  Před 2 lety +2

      Excellent! Welcome back to music! Having natural chops is so fantastic, but reading and musical literacy is just so wildly useful. Glad you enjoyed the vid!

  • @oelekegel
    @oelekegel Před 2 lety +2

    i was born with pretty good pitch, i got a keyboard for christmas when i was 9 and i would just remember songs in my head and find the note that matched it and i would teach myself any song i remembered in an hour, now i can usually identify chords as well

  • @emilyofnewmoon
    @emilyofnewmoon Před 2 lety +2

    I don’t know if the grid system was meant to be a John Mulaney reference but that is his exact joke with the street numbers and everything and I’m LIVING FOR IT

    • @BradHarrison
      @BradHarrison  Před 2 lety +2

      Lost in New York? That’s a terrible title for a movie!

  • @g_way
    @g_way Před 2 lety +3

    Interesting video! I thought I had _almost_ perfect pitch my whole life, which was frustrating since I didn’t know there was a name for pitch memorization.

  • @dariodeluna5360
    @dariodeluna5360 Před 2 lety +45

    I FUCKING LOVE YOUR SENSE OF HUMOR. And it helps me so, so much to engage with the first-class information that you provide. I hope you already know this, but I'm sure that many of us can appreciate your authenticity and dedication. Thank you. Saludos desde México:)

  • @wubbsdingus4320
    @wubbsdingus4320 Před 2 lety +2

    Because he told me to comment, I will comment my thoughts.
    Perfect pitch is just pitch memorization but you know all the 12 tones. This is exactly how I learned perfect pitch. I made a video about my story and how I learned it, but basically you have to practice and memorize each tone. As with anything, the more you practice, the better / faster you become. I've been trying to get the ball rolling that you can learn perfect pitch for years and it still hasn't caught on.
    Anyway, this was a great video explaining the concepts and I liked the pranks with the notes on the staffs. Great work!

  • @delanagreen710
    @delanagreen710 Před 2 lety +1

    I loved how easy you described it and the humor. Great video

  • @gerardquinn4513
    @gerardquinn4513 Před 2 lety +3

    Excellent presentation and fun comments and graphics. I never heard of Amusia before. Brilliant teacher.

  • @davidbakke9293
    @davidbakke9293 Před 2 lety +4

    My perfect pitch came quite naturally, and I learned how to tap into it by relating chords, pitches, and scales with colors. For instance, I always thought F major was green, A major was orange, and C minor was purple.

    • @BradHarrison
      @BradHarrison  Před 2 lety +6

      Synesthesia! So useful.

    • @vyou1
      @vyou1 Před 7 měsíci +1

      i do this too!! i associate 5ths with similar colors so im not always correct but C + F major = blueish green (F being greener), D + A being pinkish orange (D being a bit pinker) and C minor being reddish purple. D minor is like a ice white sea green. E minor being a blueish pink. etc. Definitely dont have perfect pitch but i would never confuse a D# major scale for a G major scale cuz theyre completely different colors. (might confuse a c# and f# tho)

  • @GreatBeanicus
    @GreatBeanicus Před rokem

    Alot of your comparisons to color really helped me understand what you were saying. I see very vivid color (even if I'm incredibly near sighted) and find that almost nobody i know is able to quite understand the difference between colors that i can. I'm gonna have to see if there's a video on color vision as succinct as you were here now.
    You definitely helped me understand that I'm not as tone deaf as I've always worried. I'm no musician even if i like to sing when I'm in a good mood and doing menial tasks. I swear I've got a good ear for sound and I'm rather picky with the music i listen to because of it. But i can't seem to correlate notes to a letter or replicate them easily. I'm not sure if i ever sing in key, even if I've been complimented often when caught singing when i thought i was alone. Based on what you've explained i think i just have confidence issues.
    So thanks! I appreciate the practical comparisons, they really helped.

  • @carazy123_
    @carazy123_ Před 2 lety +1

    This was a really well made video! Great job on the explanations.
    One suggestion: either your voice has a lot of low end, or you’re close to your mic, resulting in proximity effect, but there’s a taxing low end resonance in the audio. If possible, I’d recommend EQ-ing that out or using a dynamic compressor to make it more neutral. That’s all!

  • @lucapianoguy
    @lucapianoguy Před 2 lety +61

    As someone with perfect pitch - it most definitely has its practical benefits, but there's two sides to the coin.
    Oftentimes it can actually get in the way of daily tasks. For example going shopping, lots of the time I find myself not being to focus properly because all my mind can focus on is all the different pitches produced by the scanners and checkouts. Even going on walks, listening to the pitches of car engines/horns or planes flying overhead etc. Fortunately though, in my experience, the benefits do outweigh the annoyances! I don't like to talk about it very much as one can come across as a bit 'big-headed', but when people have asked in the past they often don't understand when I say I hardly ever listen to the lyrics in a song because my mind is constantly fixed on the chord progressions.
    However what is most important is strong relative pitch as, ultimately it doesn't really matter if you have the exact (perfect) pitch. But being able to immediately work out the relationship between chords/notes (relative pitch) is such a strong ability to have. But if someone has perfect pitch then I imagine that they would have strong relative pitch anyway!
    Most people say that one is born with perfect pitch, but my opinion is that quite a few people could have it within themselves but the correct musical experiences have to be gained at an early age so therefore some people who could maybe develop it often may not. So I believe that it is a combination of being born with it and developing it - nature AND nurture.

    • @grischad20
      @grischad20 Před 2 lety +2

      i have a solid guess that the probability of people having perfect pitch in tonal language places is the actual probability, and the difference with non tonal languages is just people who have that "gift" but don't know they do

    • @falala435
      @falala435 Před 2 lety +2

      I have perfect pitch and I relate to u 100% I feel like it’s a curse and a blessing ? Does that make sense? ( I’m not good at English)😅

    • @falala435
      @falala435 Před 2 lety

      It’s also some what annoying when u look at pieces written in other keys like not concert C pitch? Like a trumpet or saxophone.Cause u c a different note on score than what u hear

    • @lucapianoguy
      @lucapianoguy Před 2 lety +2

      @@falala435 Certainly a curse and a blessing, but you learn to live with the curse and appreciate the blessing :)

  • @lagrenouillequisappelleano6334

    I'm a bassist and while I may not have perfect pitch, my partner does. I'm always amazed when she mutters under her breath the pitch of someone's footsteps or of someone clapping, but I think because of he tendency to do this, it's helped me memorise pitches. Often I'll try and guess along with her and usually I come within a tone of the correct pitch. I find it much easier to identify pitches on a bass too, as I'm used to its timbre and sound. I don't think that perfect pitch is necessary in order to be a good musician, but I think it can help in some situations, but also be a bit of a nuisance. What is more important is relative pitch and being able to hear the relationships between notes. It's like if you speak several languages, it's easier to translate a phrase than all the individual words, knowing how the sounds interact is much more useful than just knowing what the sounds are.

  • @VyxtheBat
    @VyxtheBat Před 2 lety +2

    so I knew I had relative pitch and pitch memorization but I didn't know they were called that. thank you so much!

  • @13junior15
    @13junior15 Před 8 měsíci

    i was telling myself i could learn pitches by it’s identifying it through music that i know the key in and then you immediately taught me that’s pitch memorization. thank you!

  • @rolandstewart4057
    @rolandstewart4057 Před 2 lety +7

    I have watched many youtube videos on d topic, and only now understand clearly d difference between perfect and relative pitch. Thanks, very much.

  • @nandakusuma22
    @nandakusuma22 Před 2 lety +3

    This video is a golden nugget, thanks

  • @vari1535
    @vari1535 Před 2 lety +2

    I loved every single example in here. I know making such a general statement kind of makes the statement have less value to each specific example, but just imagine that I listed each example, from linguistics and art and music, and said I loved it.

  • @lu-hl9nd
    @lu-hl9nd Před 2 lety +2

    Wow, thanks for this amazing video! 13 minutes passed like 2 and I loved those comparisons haha
    As a musician, I‘ve always been fascinated by this crazy ability so this was super interesting to me :)

  • @gerardchumilla
    @gerardchumilla Před rokem +3

    Very interesting video. I actually have a perfect pitch that I trained. At some point I became obsessed on identifying pitches I would hear every day using the pitch memorisation (I could sing an A). After some years I realized I could identify the pitches without having to sing the A. However, and since I am a tenor sax player, I hear everything in Bb.

  • @josephazevedo2332
    @josephazevedo2332 Před 2 lety +6

    My relative pitch is entirely reliant on the G note from the black parade being seared into my memory.

  • @shahargabay2808
    @shahargabay2808 Před rokem +2

    Pitch memorization feels amazing. I don't actively practice it, but every so often I'll hear a sound like a car horn or a motor humming or a piano chord and immediately a song jumps to mind and I know that it's 100% the starting note of this song

  • @hi_8983
    @hi_8983 Před 2 lety +2

    I don't have perfect pitch, but a lot of my friends think I do because I've memorized all the notes in the scale and can tell when a note isn't quite in tune (you could say it's the best of both worlds - effective perfect pitch without the difficulties imposed by key changes and transposition). This video will be super helpful to explain what I'm actually doing, and that they also could do the same with a lot of training.

  • @arvidd
    @arvidd Před 2 lety +11

    Fun fact: in Swedish, “gift” means both married and poison. No wonder my wife left me…

  • @AkwardDummy4444
    @AkwardDummy4444 Před 2 lety +4

    I was in a music school for 8 years and I had 1 or maybe 2 kids with perfect pitch. Luckily, the school taught us how to develop relative pitch. Pitch memorization came naturally, because of the choir class or playing in the orchestra, so I can confirm the information given in this video is right.

  • @madhavgnayar2825
    @madhavgnayar2825 Před rokem +1

    Very useful. I learn the Indian bamboo flute and am struggling to develop some relative pitch abilities even after hundreds of hours of structured listening. Pitch memorisation is a useful concept I've picked up from your video. Didn' t realise that a concept like this existed. It's given me an idea that if I can memorise specific phrases, it will help in identifying at least some notes. Thank you

  • @erniesinger8768
    @erniesinger8768 Před rokem +1

    As a whole-step lapsed possessor of perfect pitch, I found this educational and entertaining. Well done!

  • @corneliaippers603
    @corneliaippers603 Před 2 lety +20

    I have pretty good pitch memory. But „perfect pitch“ got a completely relative meaning for me when I ventured into nerdy Baroque territory with A=415 Hz i.o. 440 or 442 as current fashion is. Or go for high Renaissance 466 Hz pitch and meantone i.o. well-tempered tuning.

    • @BradHarrison
      @BradHarrison  Před 2 lety +4

      Lmao. Maybe that’s what happens when people age and their perfect pitch drops…they’re just regressing to the baroque era.

    • @matsu820
      @matsu820 Před 2 lety

      How is perfect pitch any different from a fully developed pitch memory (pitch memorization) that one is totally confident in? To me the concept of perfect pitch as a totally discrete ability is just crazy. It's more akin to knowing a language by ear and then learning the convention to name the pitches. To my knowledge A=440hz isn't some magical number either, just the convention that's most widely used so that's what people become accustomed with. And like with any other skill, use it or lose it.

    • @Willriii
      @Willriii Před 2 lety

      @@matsu820 You have a very good point. At some point you have to associate a name to the pitch. What if your historical reference is an out of tune piano in your parents house, say 5 cents flat?. What if your drunk uncle told you magenta was purple? What if there was no well tempered clavier?

  • @JordanWeberMusic
    @JordanWeberMusic Před 2 lety +4

    I’m a UNM. I attribute it to having a musical family; my mom being a music teacher and pianist, and my dad singing in barbershop most of his life. My sisters and I are musically talented, but I have the most natural affinity to music and have used my skills towards composing and transcribing (hearing music and being able to write it out).
    I’ve always been able to learn by ear and can quickly play pieces with minimal effort, but over the years I have spent time in music theory and developed great relative pitch. Plus with my mom teaching Kodaly, the way of using the “Do, Re, Mi” association with pitch, it is solidified in my head, sometimes even better than her, and she has her Master’s in it.
    My memorized pitch is a B from the top note of the E minor chord that starts John Williams’ Duel of the Fates, and, honestly, I was able to correctly sing “Never gonna give you up” before it played. I feel I was able to do this because I can feel the quality of the chords and so whenever I hear something in a different key, it sounds “off”.
    Now, there are studies on what is the saddest key and things like that, and that’s as close as I can relate my sense of a different key being “off” is; it doesn’t have the same properties or sound that the key it originally was in has, which is why the E minor chord in Duel of the Fates is so easily identifiable to me. That E minor chord sounds a certain way so much so that a D minor chord, for instance, would change the sound and feel of the piece. Plus, I can also tell you if I am listening to the original recording because I listen for the Baritones / Tenors to belt the Eb in the C minor chord at the end of the choral intro.
    Perfect Pitch is a great ability for sure, but if you have watched Adam Neely’s video on perfect pitch and why you don’t want it, he also describes that you can lose your natural ability of perfect pitch, but having relative pitch, because you taught yourself that ability, will stick around longer.
    So, it’s never too late to start your musical journey and gain this kind of ability too! You’d be amazed at what you can accomplish!

  • @Bert_Hammers
    @Bert_Hammers Před 2 lety +1

    When I was younger, I always had problems listening to music because sometimes I couldn't tell if the note was going up or down, but I found myself in choir, and doing exercises helped get over that. I can listen to almost any song now without a problem. Even hearing complex basslines.

  • @charlesallan6978
    @charlesallan6978 Před 2 lety +15

    Perfect pitch can be twarted by inconsistent recording and playback speeds if there is no point of reference. If your PC interprets A440 in the range of one or more half or whole steps higher or lower than the original master, it is left to the listener to rely upon memory in order to exact the correct pitch. The letter H will be either permanently omitted or judiciously applied subject to public demand.

    • @jiovanniaguirre4888
      @jiovanniaguirre4888 Před 2 lety +2

      You just described relative pitch. Where if given the beginning pitch you can figure out all the other notes. Perfect pitch is independent and can be figured out with no reference

  • @AltissimoMan
    @AltissimoMan Před 2 lety +4

    Perfect pitch guy here, that was a funny joke when you said the C was an F, was about to yell at the computer. Cool video!

    • @AltissimoMan
      @AltissimoMan Před 2 lety +2

      Actually a downside to perfect pitch that many aren't aware of (at least for me) is I am completely lacking in relative pitch skills and have had a very difficult time trying to learn them. IE: Someone with very little training in relatively pitch can easily know a chord quality IE: Major or minor even if they do not know the exact chord. I feel like I have to think of each note I hear in the chord to answer the question of what kind of chord it is, unless it is a chord I just automatically know which is all major and minor chords, but once we get into extensions beyond the standard triad, I do not have every Dominant 7 chord's sound memorized so I have to think about what notes I am hearing and apply theory to name the chord quality... if that ramble makes any sense.

    • @BradHarrison
      @BradHarrison  Před 2 lety +1

      Good point! During ear training class in university I said I was jealous of a friend who had perfect and she said “yeah but I still have to do almost all the same work as you because it just takes too long to listen to every note and then analyze the chord”. I thought about adding that story into the video but couldn’t quite manage to make it feel organic.

    • @AltissimoMan
      @AltissimoMan Před 2 lety

      It's also something that I don't think every perfect pitch person experiences, but I don't meet enough others to have a good sample group to interview.

  • @voLumez
    @voLumez Před rokem +1

    These videos are awesome. I'm hooked

  • @PeepSqueal
    @PeepSqueal Před 2 lety +1

    Very well researched 👌🏾 Beautiful delivery...

  • @sticks4382
    @sticks4382 Před 2 lety +54

    I actually took a bit of time before realizing I had perfect pitch, bc one of my friends has it, and so we mostly asked him to sing specific notes, so I didn't really had any occasions to do that myself. I realized it bc I knew that I would always do an A correctly on demand, kinda like a tuning fork, and that was it, and I was ok with that, but then it developed into a thing where I can do any notes, and recognize any notes, except for sharp or flat notes for now, and I know I can train myself a bit on that apparently.

    • @dennisvagnerfrancis6510
      @dennisvagnerfrancis6510 Před 2 lety +10

      Its not perfects pitch then but it's still very good ear and pitch reading so well done

    • @uchoo
      @uchoo Před 2 lety +13

      @@dennisvagnerfrancis6510 it is perfect pitch, but not trained well

    • @dennisvagnerfrancis6510
      @dennisvagnerfrancis6510 Před 2 lety +3

      @@uchoo if it was then i would to because i can recognise almost every not except some but perfect pitch is when you don't mess up because you just know

    • @momkatmax
      @momkatmax Před rokem

      LOL, I can tuning fork C which is kinda useful.

  • @darsterz
    @darsterz Před 2 lety +6

    one of the downsides of me having perfect pitch is that i relied on it so much when i had to play songs that i eventually forgot how to read due to not practising that habit... now i struggle to read sheets fluently and i have to memorise fragments by fragments so i learn a piece

  • @janellar4382
    @janellar4382 Před 2 lety

    This was an awesome video. I moved to subscribe but found I already did. These visuals were entertaining and informational! Kudos! It's a goal of mine to get better at relative pitch by learning more music theory, but it's a slow process despite my playing a few instruments for years.

  • @genehenson8851
    @genehenson8851 Před 2 lety +1

    This was informative and entertaining. Thank you. Really well done.

  • @Titi-yo9jq
    @Titi-yo9jq Před 2 lety +4

    I think it’s really cool that my school district starts training middle school choir kids to sing an A on Ooo as a way to get their attention, but once you get to the high school program, A on Ooo becomes our tuning pitch. And because of this A pitch memorization our high school choir can sight read music without a piano guide.

    • @da504ever
      @da504ever Před 2 lety +2

      Very similar. Our choir started in grade school and at the beginning of warm up, we always started on an acapella middle C. And to this day, I know a middle C no matter what. Idk if this means I have perfect pitch if I only know other notes relative to this note… but. 😂

  • @davidwittie4177
    @davidwittie4177 Před 2 lety +5

    Though I am not a teacher, I have tried explaining how to easily acquire the skills of relative pitch and even pitch memory to groups of musicians both in person and online. Mostly I get shrugs or crickets in response (like, who cares, I just wanna play, etc.). But with the help of this video, I may now have a better "script" with precise (and humorous) terminology to pique interest in these very practical musical skills.

    • @davidwittie4177
      @davidwittie4177 Před 2 lety +4

      Also, is it offensive to describe "perfect pitch" as when a banjo player throws his instrument out of a window and hits a bagpipes player?
      Asking for a friend...

  • @kingarth0r
    @kingarth0r Před 5 měsíci +2

    Ive gotten to the point with pitch memorization and relative pitch that everyone thinks I just have perfect pitch because I can name whatever note on command.

  • @luanaxavier7310
    @luanaxavier7310 Před rokem +1

    Amazing video and perfect explaining, even with english not being my first language, I was able to understand every single thing said here! Congrats and thanks for the video!

  • @fraxille_
    @fraxille_ Před 2 lety +7

    Gift in Norway is a doubled word, depending on the context it means either "Poison" or "Married". Same goes for many other