perfect pitch
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- KVRer
- 7 posts since 20 Apr, 2009 from Cork,Ireland
just wondering if anyone here has it or has learned it? and if so,how?
- KVRAF
- 43960 posts since 11 Aug, 2008 from clown world
I think quite a few people around here have Perfect Pitch. I got it with Celemony Melodyne!
Anyone who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities.
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- KVRian
- 1411 posts since 19 Mar, 2004
Strictly speaking, there is no such thing (except in Melodyneginganinja33 wrote:just wondering if anyone here has it or has learned it? and if so,how?
"Sometimes I think of Abraham...
How one star he saw had been lit for me"
How one star he saw had been lit for me"
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- KVRian
- 1084 posts since 12 Sep, 2008 from Your basement
According to the Sound on Sound staff, the definition of 'perfect pitch' is winging a banjo into the river in one throw. 
- KVRAF
- 43960 posts since 11 Aug, 2008 from clown world
Yes! Music to our ears! The best sound you can get out of a Banjo, is to f*ck it over a cliff . . . 
Anyone who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities.
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someone called simon someone called simon https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=185637
- KVRian
- 543 posts since 24 Jul, 2008 from a small city in a small country in the antipodes
The banjo is an awesome instrument. Just showing some banjo love.
instrument racism, thats what it is!
instrument racism, thats what it is!
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- Banned
- 3299 posts since 20 Dec, 2008
As well as a banjo, I would hurl guitars, drums, brass, woodwind and string instruments over the cliff; ie - anything not called a synthesiser or drum machine

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dirty oscillators dirty oscillators https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=122600
- KVRAF
- 2739 posts since 4 Oct, 2006
i dunno... instruments are like guns - it's the person using it that i might want to hurl over the cliff.yellowfever wrote:As well as a banjo, I would hurl guitars, drums, brass, woodwind and string instruments over the cliff; ie - anything not called a synthesiser or drum machine![]()
Eins zwei drei vier funf sechs sieben acht
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- KVRist
- 105 posts since 13 Oct, 2002
I admit that it may be quite difficult to convincingly perform The Agonised Face, crotch thrusts, and of course the "rush me girls" pout, whilst playing the banjo. But don't let that fool you - it can be a very expressive instrument in the right hands. Any one listened to Bela Fleck ?
Basjoe
Basjoe
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- KVRian
- 1000 posts since 25 Feb, 2008 from Sydney, Australia
I can identify a guitars Low E and open A pretty damn accurately without any reference ......even when played from a piano ....... Does this count ?

Prestissimo in Moto Perpetuo
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- KVRAF
- 2828 posts since 31 Dec, 2004 from Canarias
I've known somebody with 'perfect hearing'; he had an absolute perfect sence for pitch. You asked him for a note and he sing could it perfectly !
He was the director's right hand !
Cheers,
Max... .. .
PS : I just remembered another one too : a blind Greek piano tuner, known by nearly all the famous piano players who performed in Belgium.
He was the director's right hand !
Cheers,
Max... .. .
PS : I just remembered another one too : a blind Greek piano tuner, known by nearly all the famous piano players who performed in Belgium.
Carpo diem ergo sum !
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- KVRer
- 8 posts since 21 May, 2009 from Brooklyn, NY, USA
well, i know several people with perfect pitch. not all of them are musicians, it is an interesting ability though. but rather useless for music. what defines a musician is a relative pitch, which is learned through ear training. even a person with perfect pitch becomes a musician only when the relative pitch is developed, and it is actually much harder for them.
btw many good orchestras do not a hire musicians with perfect pitch.
btw many good orchestras do not a hire musicians with perfect pitch.
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- KVRAF
- 1585 posts since 13 Nov, 2005 from St. Paul
I read an interesting account of this recently in a book by Daniel Levitin (a psychologist who studies musical perception). Apparently if you ask someone to sing a popular song they will invariably sing it back in the same key it was recorded in without knowing it. That seems like a sort of naive version of perfect pitch. That surprised me.
- KVRAF
- 9590 posts since 17 Sep, 2002 from Gothenburg Sweden
I can guarantee you with 100% certainty that i won't.jmeier wrote:Apparently if you ask someone to sing a popular song they will invariably sing it back in the same key it was recorded in without knowing it.
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- KVRian
- 1084 posts since 12 Sep, 2008 from Your basement
I have heard about this. At least some forms of perfect pitch seem to be related to long-term pitch memory. Even today if I think about sitting in orchestra rehearsals in college, I can clearly hear the oboe playing a tuning A. Then I can sing it, walk over to the piano and sure enough, it's an A.jmeier wrote:I read an interesting account of this recently in a book by Daniel Levitin (a psychologist who studies musical perception). Apparently if you ask someone to sing a popular song they will invariably sing it back in the same key it was recorded in without knowing it. That seems like a sort of naive version of perfect pitch. That surprised me.
Perhaps this can be expanded, but as it's been said here before, relative pitch is more important to me. Understanding relationships between pitches is better than understanding static values.