GMG Classical Music Forum

The Music Room => Classical Music for Beginners => Topic started by: Mozart on June 15, 2007, 08:54:25 PM

Title: Perfect Pitch training
Post by: Mozart on June 15, 2007, 08:54:25 PM
Has anyone tried those learn perfect pitch cds?
Title: Re: Perfect Pitch training
Post by: Bonehelm on June 15, 2007, 11:01:54 PM
I haven't, I have played piano for only 3-4 years and my pitch is accurate 80% of the time.
Title: Re: Perfect Pitch training
Post by: Mozart on June 16, 2007, 12:04:02 AM
Thanks for showing off  :)
Title: Re: Perfect Pitch training
Post by: Mark on June 16, 2007, 12:37:21 AM
I did a couple of online tests and my accuracy averaged at 86%. :)

I don't know the first thing about music from a technical perspective, so I'd be interested in those CDs. Do you have a link?
Title: Re: Perfect Pitch training
Post by: Mozart on June 16, 2007, 01:02:01 AM
Here is one of them.

http://www.perfectpitch.com/

Title: Re: Perfect Pitch training
Post by: Mozart on June 16, 2007, 01:03:11 AM
http://www.aruffo.com/eartraining/software.htm this one has a demo.
Title: Re: Perfect Pitch training
Post by: Mark on June 16, 2007, 01:04:58 AM
Thanks. :)
Title: Re: Perfect Pitch training
Post by: Kullervo on June 16, 2007, 06:42:08 AM
No, but I trained myself to have relative pitch by studying Hindemith's book on music theory for practical musicians.
Title: Re: Perfect Pitch training
Post by: Bonehelm on June 16, 2007, 12:27:17 PM
Quote from: Mozart on June 16, 2007, 12:04:02 AM
Thanks for showing off  :)

Showing off? You must be kidding. 80% is very, very low.
Title: Re: Perfect Pitch training
Post by: Mark on June 16, 2007, 12:50:43 PM
Quote from: Bonehelm on June 16, 2007, 12:27:17 PM
Showing off? You must be kidding. 80% is very, very low.

I think I read somewhere that many musicians struggle to reach 80% accuracy.
Title: Re: Perfect Pitch training
Post by: tjguitar on June 16, 2007, 01:19:02 PM
Quote from: Mark on June 16, 2007, 12:37:21 AM
I did a couple of online tests and my accuracy averaged at 86%. :)

I don't know the first thing about music from a technical perspective, so I'd be interested in those CDs. Do you have a link?

have a link for the online tests?
Title: Re: Perfect Pitch training
Post by: Mark on June 16, 2007, 01:21:56 PM
Quote from: tjguitar on June 16, 2007, 01:19:02 PM
have a link for the online tests?

It's on the old forum ... somewhere. I searched earlier but couldn't find it. :(
Title: Re: Perfect Pitch training
Post by: Bonehelm on June 16, 2007, 04:00:43 PM
Quote from: Mark on June 16, 2007, 12:50:43 PM
I think I read somewhere that many musicians struggle to reach 80% accuracy.

Oh really? Sorry then.  :( Didn't know I was showing off, lol
Title: Re: Perfect Pitch training
Post by: Mark on June 16, 2007, 04:01:54 PM
That's okay. I was showing 6% more than you. ;D
Title: Re: Perfect Pitch training
Post by: Bonehelm on June 16, 2007, 07:37:46 PM
Quote from: Mark on June 16, 2007, 04:01:54 PM
That's okay. I was showing 6% more than you. ;D

Haha. Mark, is your avatar by any chance a photo of yourself?
Title: Re: Perfect Pitch training
Post by: Mark on June 17, 2007, 01:11:01 AM
Quote from: Bonehelm on June 16, 2007, 07:37:46 PM
Haha. Mark, is your avatar by any chance a photo of yourself?

It is indeed. More showing off, you might say. ;D
Title: Re: Perfect Pitch training
Post by: Mozart on June 17, 2007, 06:07:39 PM
Quote from: Mark on June 17, 2007, 01:11:01 AM
It is indeed. More showing off, you might say. ;D

Looks like a mugshot  :D


Then again, you are married.  8)
Title: Re: Perfect Pitch training
Post by: Steve on June 17, 2007, 06:15:06 PM
Quote from: Mark on June 17, 2007, 01:11:01 AM
It is indeed. More showing off, you might say. ;D

Indeed.... Grab a dead musician like the rest of us...
Title: Re: Perfect Pitch training
Post by: jochanaan on June 18, 2007, 02:11:12 PM
Quote from: Mark on June 16, 2007, 12:37:21 AM
I did a couple of online tests and my accuracy averaged at 86%. :)
What was involved in the tests?
Title: Re: Perfect Pitch training
Post by: Mark on June 18, 2007, 02:40:06 PM
Quote from: jochanaan on June 18, 2007, 02:11:12 PM
What was involved in the tests?

Don't recall. Search The Diner in the old forum. The link is somewhere there.
Title: Re: Perfect Pitch training
Post by: m_gigena on June 18, 2007, 05:18:54 PM
Quote from: Mozart on June 15, 2007, 08:54:25 PM
Has anyone tried those learn perfect pitch cds?

Forget those cds and start playing the violin. That's the best practice you can have.
Title: Re: Perfect Pitch training
Post by: jochanaan on June 19, 2007, 09:19:20 AM
Quote from: Mark on June 18, 2007, 02:40:06 PM
Don't recall. Search The Diner in the old forum. The link is somewhere there.
Hmmm...I'm not sure I can take the time to search the old forum, nor am I sure I can still access it.  But it might be interesting for someone who has perfect pitch to take those tests.

I have heard perfect pitch described as a perfect memory for pitches; that's as good a description as any.  When I hear a tone, for example, I know instantly what it is and can make a good guess as to whether it's sharp or flat.  (But period-instrument recordings often throw me, because they're tuned to pitches well off from modern concert pitch.)  I don't have to guess, or go through any kind of elimination process; I know.  (That's not "showing off;" that's just describing the ability these tests and courses are trying to measure and enhance.)  If these online programs can actually help develop this pitch-recognition ability, I'd be very interested; maybe I could actually teach it! :D
Title: Re: Perfect Pitch training
Post by: karlhenning on June 19, 2007, 09:21:41 AM
jochanaan! Expect imminent e-mail (beyond a msg I sent earlier . . . .)
Title: Re: Perfect Pitch training
Post by: stingo on June 22, 2007, 01:24:48 PM
Quote from: Mark on June 17, 2007, 01:11:01 AM
It is indeed. More showing off, you might say. ;D

Wasn't there a thread on the old forum where someone said you looked like a villain in a James Bond film? Not the main villain, but the seconday one?

And more to point, I've a friend that has perfect pitch and it's kind of amazing and annoying at the same time.
Title: Re: Perfect Pitch training
Post by: Mark on June 22, 2007, 01:29:16 PM
Quote from: stingo on June 22, 2007, 01:24:48 PM
Wasn't there a thread on the old forum where someone said you looked like a villain in a James Bond film? Not the main villain, but the seconday one?

No. There was talk of me looking like either a serial killer or a kiddie fiddler. I am neither.
Title: Re: Perfect Pitch training
Post by: bwv 1080 on June 22, 2007, 01:31:48 PM
Now I have been reading Guitar Player and other guitar mags off and on for over 20 years now and that Perfect Pitch weenie has been taking full page ads for his program in just about every issue I have seen.  So

A) Presumably he is getting a large number of people responding to the ad
B) The number of guitar players with perfect pitch (albeit from anecdotal evidence) has not increased above something just above nil

Therefore the program does not work and perfect pitch (unlike relative pitch) cannot be taught.
Title: Re: Perfect Pitch training
Post by: orbital on June 22, 2007, 01:39:21 PM
you don't need perfect pitch to find out what's wrong with this f minor fantasy clip  $:)
Title: Re: Perfect Pitch training
Post by: Montpellier on June 23, 2007, 04:07:40 AM
It depends on things like how tired I am.  I can usually tell the key of a diatonic piece, can sometimes name a pitch in isolation.  As a composer it hasn't worried me as relative pitch seems more important.
Title: Re: Perfect Pitch training
Post by: greg on June 25, 2007, 05:41:25 AM
Quote from: bwv 1080 on June 22, 2007, 01:31:48 PM
Now I have been reading Guitar Player and other guitar mags off and on for over 20 years now and that Perfect Pitch weenie has been taking full page ads for his program in just about every issue I have seen.  So

A) Presumably he is getting a large number of people responding to the ad
B) The number of guitar players with perfect pitch (albeit from anecdotal evidence) has not increased above something just above nil

Therefore the program does not work and perfect pitch (unlike relative pitch) cannot be taught.
i see that ad all the time, too!
i tried using a program a few years ago to help me with perfect pitch but i got bored with it and was going nowhere, so i don't use it anymore.
Title: Re: Perfect Pitch training
Post by: Shrunk on June 25, 2007, 06:58:11 AM
Quote from: bwv 1080 on June 22, 2007, 01:31:48 PM
Now I have been reading Guitar Player and other guitar mags off and on for over 20 years now and that Perfect Pitch weenie has been taking full page ads for his program in just about every issue I have seen.  So

A) Presumably he is getting a large number of people responding to the ad
B) The number of guitar players with perfect pitch (albeit from anecdotal evidence) has not increased above something just above nil

Therefore the program does not work and perfect pitch (unlike relative pitch) cannot be taught.

I actually bought that set (on cassettes; this was pre-CD's, so that will give you a hint how long ago this was).  The basic premise was that every pitch has a distinct "colour" and that thru practice you could learn to recognize this as easily as you can tell yellow from blue.  To demonstrate, the course started out comparing F# with Eb, supposedly the two pitches with the most extreme contrast.  F# supposedly has a  harsh, nasal quality, while Eb is more mellow.  Another way of making the distinction was F# sounds like the word "where",and Eb like "wah".

I thought I could hear these distinctions, but the course involved more practice time than I thought was justified, given the much more basic things I needed (and still need) to work on.  Still, I remain open to the possibility that it might work.
Title: Re: Perfect Pitch training
Post by: jochanaan on June 25, 2007, 02:54:59 PM
Quote from: Shrunk on June 25, 2007, 06:58:11 AM
I actually bought that set (on cassettes; this was pre-CD's, so that will give you a hint how long ago this was).  The basic premise was that every pitch has a distinct "colour" and that thru practice you could learn to recognize this as easily as you can tell yellow from blue.  To demonstrate, the course started out comparing F# with Eb, supposedly the two pitches with the most extreme contrast.  F# supposedly has a  harsh, nasal quality, while Eb is more mellow.  Another way of making the distinction was F# sounds like the word "where",and Eb like "wah".

I thought I could hear these distinctions, but the course involved more practice time than I thought was justified, given the much more basic things I needed (and still need) to work on.  Still, I remain open to the possibility that it might work.
*shakes head*  I can't speak for everyone with perfect pitch, but that's not how I do it.  I recognize the pitch itself, not its color.  And what happens when you change instruments?  That's certainly a color change.

I think you guys are getting scammed. ::)
Title: Re: Perfect Pitch training
Post by: Bunny on June 26, 2007, 01:53:49 AM
Quote from: jochanaan on June 25, 2007, 02:54:59 PM
*shakes head*  I can't speak for everyone with perfect pitch, but that's not how I do it.  I recognize the pitch itself, not its color.  And what happens when you change instruments?  That's certainly a color change.

I think you guys are getting scammed. ::)

Unless you are a synesthete, you aren't going to see notes in color.  There are people who taste numbers or see them in different colorsas well.  Perception of letters can also be affected.  This is caused when different centers in the brain are for some reason of chemistry or wiring reactive to stimuli which generally don't affect that part of the brain in most people.  The artist David Hockney was a more famous synesthete, and there was recently a tv special about a man who after a serious injury as a child became a synesthete.  He became famous because he was able to memorize the number Pi to more places than anyone has ever done before.  He was  able to do this because each digit had a different color and he could remember those.

All the training in the world won't make someone who isn't a synesthete into one, although I'll bet that LSD might help. 
Title: Re: Perfect Pitch training
Post by: Black Knight on June 26, 2007, 02:34:22 AM
I don't think they're talking about actual colors. It's a metaphor.
Title: Re: Perfect Pitch training
Post by: jochanaan on June 26, 2007, 03:07:58 AM
Quote from: Black Knight on June 26, 2007, 02:34:22 AM
I don't think they're talking about actual colors. It's a metaphor.
Of course.  What these tapes apparently describe is what most musicians call "instrumental color," the unique combination of harmonics and other overtones that give each instrument its recognizable tone.  But that changes from instrument to instrument, and even from player to player; one flutist is not going to sound exactly like another, nor one violinist or trumpeter.

What I'm saying is that I can recognize pitches apart from all these color factors, and so can the others I've known who have perfect pitch.  We can recognize an F# even when it's played on a mellow horn, or an Eb on a reedy oboe.  Nor have these colors ever had anything to do with my ability to recognize pitches.  The nature of our gift is that we can recognize any pitch in any circumstance, whether it's produced by a piano, a clarinet, a vacuum cleaner or a car.

Please don't get me wrong.  I would like nothing better than to find that perfect pitch could be taught!  If nothing else, that would help choirs to sing perfectly in tune without accompaniment and avoid those pitch changes that irritate us. ;D But this "color" method is not the way to do it.  At most, it may teach you to recognize certain pitches under controlled circumstances.  That can be useful--but it's not perfect pitch as I experience it.
Title: Re: Perfect Pitch training
Post by: Shrunk on June 27, 2007, 04:51:15 AM
Quote from: jochanaan on June 26, 2007, 03:07:58 AM
What I'm saying is that I can recognize pitches apart from all these color factors, and so can the others I've known who have perfect pitch.  We can recognize an F# even when it's played on a mellow horn, or an Eb on a reedy oboe.  Nor have these colors ever had anything to do with my ability to recognize pitches.  The nature of our gift is that we can recognize any pitch in any circumstance, whether it's produced by a piano, a clarinet, a vacuum cleaner or a car.

I'm curious.  Do you feel you have this ability innately, or is it something you developed.  In other words, where you able to distinguish absolute pitch the moment you picked up an instrument, or is that ability something that developed as you became more adept and experienced as a musician?
Title: Re: Perfect Pitch training
Post by: jochanaan on June 27, 2007, 06:43:34 AM
Quote from: Shrunk on June 27, 2007, 04:51:15 AM
I'm curious.  Do you feel you have this ability innately, or is it something you developed.  In other words, where you able to distinguish absolute pitch the moment you picked up an instrument, or is that ability something that developed as you became more adept and experienced as a musician?
Oh, I've had it ever since I can remember, from when I first learned what to call each note--and I don't remember learning to read music either, although I can just barely remember a time when I couldn't actually distinguish the notes.

Some have theorized that it's learned very young, maybe during the first year after birth.  That's very possible in my case, for I was surrounded by music from the moment of my conception; my father was a very fine violinist, my mother played piano and sang well, and my elder sisters played violin and piano, respectively.  We also had an extensive record collection, both LPs and 78s.  (I have most of it now.)

So no, I can't claim any credit for learning the ability, although I have developed and sharpened it over the years.  I can't quite tell if, say, an A is exactly 440 Herz, although I can come very close; but I can recognize it as an A at once with no mental gymnastics, no hesitation.  And even in my young days I could tell if a record player (does anybody else still have one?) played records a little too fast; it sounded sharp.

A friend once commented as I was tuning a mandolin by ear, "So you just adjust until you feel it's the right pitch?"  I replied, "Feeling has nothing to do with it.  I know."
Title: Re: Perfect Pitch training
Post by: Shrunk on June 27, 2007, 09:04:28 AM
Interesting, Jochanaan.  That's pretty consistent with others I have spoken to who have absolute pitch.  i.e. it seems as natural to them as being able to distinguish green from yellow, or the taste of an onion from that of a cherry.  The etiology of absolute pitch is a classic "nature vs. nurture" debate, and your example could give ample evidence for either side. 

This article, though ten years old, summarizes a lot of the thinking on where absolute pitch comes from:

http://tinyurl.com/3dsy3q
Title: Re: Perfect Pitch training
Post by: greg on June 27, 2007, 09:31:44 AM
i don't think i posted this before:

http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?articleID=000AF8AE-D1DD-118F-91DD83414B7F0000

there seems to be a relation between tonal languages and ability with perfect pitch
Title: Re: Perfect Pitch training
Post by: jochanaan on June 27, 2007, 09:55:58 AM
Quote from: greg on June 27, 2007, 09:31:44 AM
...there seems to be a relation between tonal languages and ability with perfect pitch
That makes a lot of sense.  I have also observed that musicians tend to learn foreign languages more easily than non-musicians.
Title: Re: Perfect Pitch training
Post by: greg on June 28, 2007, 07:22:03 AM
Quote from: jochanaan on June 27, 2007, 09:55:58 AM
That makes a lot of sense.  I have also observed that musicians tend to learn foreign languages more easily than non-musicians.
and that's good news for ME!  :D
Title: Re: Perfect Pitch training
Post by: M forever on June 29, 2007, 08:34:45 PM
Quote from: jochanaan on June 27, 2007, 09:55:58 AM
That makes a lot of sense.  I have also observed that musicians tend to learn foreign languages more easily than non-musicians.

They do? Do you speak any foreign languages? I mean, really, not "eek sprayken ine bissken doytsh" or "jay parl an poo fransays".
Title: Re: Perfect Pitch training
Post by: greg on June 30, 2007, 06:27:52 AM
Quote from: M forever on June 29, 2007, 08:34:45 PM
"eek sprayken ine bissken doytsh" or "jay parl an poo fransays".
lol

Title: Re: Perfect Pitch training
Post by: jochanaan on July 03, 2007, 08:47:50 PM
Quote from: M forever on June 29, 2007, 08:34:45 PM
They do? Do you speak any foreign languages? I mean, really, not "eek sprayken ine bissken doytsh" or "jay parl an poo fransays".
Oui, je suis un peu fluent en français.  And my accent has been described as quite good.
Title: Re: Perfect Pitch training
Post by: Soundproof on July 17, 2007, 06:31:34 AM
Quote from: greg on June 27, 2007, 09:31:44 AM
i don't think i posted this before:

http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?articleID=000AF8AE-D1DD-118F-91DD83414B7F0000

there seems to be a relation between tonal languages and ability with perfect pitch

Makes sense. Heard an interview with Mitsuko Uchida on the radio yesterday, and was struck by how well she spoke English, with dramatic intonations. And when she made a reference to the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Wien, where she had played on a variety of historic instruments, she switched into a perfect German accent.
Pianists are often very good singers - to the point that Gould couldn't stop singing, right?
Title: Re: Perfect Pitch training
Post by: greg on July 17, 2007, 06:43:31 AM
Quote from: Soundproof on July 17, 2007, 06:31:34 AM
Makes sense. Heard an interview with Mitsuko Uchida on the radio yesterday, and was struck by how well she spoke English, with dramatic intonations. And when she made a reference to the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Wien, where she had played on a variety of historic instruments, she switched into a perfect German accent.
Pianists are often very good singers - to the point that Gould couldn't stop singing, right?
except....... you're talking about a Japanese lady, and Japanese isn't a tonal language.
Title: Re: Perfect Pitch training
Post by: Bunny on July 17, 2007, 08:04:05 AM
Quote from: jochanaan on June 27, 2007, 06:43:34 AM
Oh, I've had it ever since I can remember, from when I first learned what to call each note--and I don't remember learning to read music either, although I can just barely remember a time when I couldn't actually distinguish the notes.

Some have theorized that it's learned very young, maybe during the first year after birth.  That's very possible in my case, for I was surrounded by music from the moment of my conception; my father was a very fine violinist, my mother played piano and sang well, and my elder sisters played violin and piano, respectively.  We also had an extensive record collection, both LPs and 78s.  (I have most of it now.)

So no, I can't claim any credit for learning the ability, although I have developed and sharpened it over the years.  I can't quite tell if, say, an A is exactly 440 Herz, although I can come very close; but I can recognize it as an A at once with no mental gymnastics, no hesitation.  And even in my young days I could tell if a record player (does anybody else still have one?) played records a little too fast; it sounded sharp.

A friend once commented as I was tuning a mandolin by ear, "So you just adjust until you feel it's the right pitch?"  I replied, "Feeling has nothing to do with it.  I know."

I don't think perfect pitch is something that you learn.  It's something you are born with.  My cousin's oldest son was born with it and now he is a very talented trumpet player (just toured with Zander and his youth orchestra in China sitting first trumpet doing Mahler's 1st).  That family has no other person with any musical talent at all!  No classical records except what the boy has bought.  The parents can barely carry a tune!  No hint of great musical talent on either side and still, a child came into their family who has perfect pitch, and an ability to play almost any instrument he picks up by ear.  Ah sweet mysteries of life...      (and genetics.) ;)

Even considering that, I do believe that when you have two musical parents, the likelihood of having a child with great musical ability and perfect pitch is increased.  However, if that were all it took, then almost every child of musicians would have perfect pitch which they don't. 
Title: Re: Perfect Pitch training
Post by: Mark on July 17, 2007, 08:21:32 AM
Quote from: Bunny on July 17, 2007, 08:04:05 AM
... any instrument he picks up by ear.

Man, that kid must have freaky looking ears. ;D
Title: Re: Perfect Pitch training
Post by: franz.luigi on January 14, 2008, 03:14:01 PM
Someone gave me the Perfect Pitch & Relative Pitch Super Course from perfectpitch.com (I think mostly to get it off his hands after giving up on it himself, as I already have perfect pitch and didn't really need it) and my sister (who has relative pitch) and I have listened to a few of the lessons and we both found it a waste of time (and money if you buy it).

For example, in the perfect pitch course, the way he teaches the way to distinguish between 2 notes - I can't remember exactly which 2 notes as it's been several years - is by telling you that one note sounds like "wang" and the other "wah". He then proceeds to sing the notes with his assigned sound over and over: "wang, wang, wang", "wah, wah, wah".

The relative pitch course consists of lessons and drills you could do on your own without spending the $200. His way of teaching the intervals is basically singing them with their name of the name of the intervals. For example, he'll sing the notes "C-G" while singing the words "perfect fifth" over and over.

So, in my opinion, there are better ways to spend your money.

As for the discussion on possessing perfect pitch, I have had it since I started piano lessons at 5. My first language was a tonal language (Mandarin), I have several cousins who also have PP - they also started music lessons at a young age, and my father is tone deaf. I also learn languages easily and have an easy time with pronunciation.