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Absolute pitch does not necessarily imply that you can name the pitch. The ability to automatically reproduce that pitch on an instrument is considered to be absolute pitch. So, with respect to our voices most of us have absolute pitch.
People with absolute pitch have told me that it can be an obstacle. They find it more difficult to sing if the choir goes flat (a not-uncommon occurrence), or if the director has the choir sing in a different key than the piece is written in—say, a half step lower to emulate Baroque pitch (A=415 Hz.) while reading from the original score.
Sorry but an instrumentalist’s ability to immediately play without error a heard pitch with or without naming the pitch is absolute pitch. What else would you call it?
Quote from: Grizzly on September 12, 2020, 01:37:03 PMPeople with absolute pitch have told me that it can be an obstacle. They find it more difficult to sing if the choir goes flat (a not-uncommon occurrence), or if the director has the choir sing in a different key than the piece is written in—say, a half step lower to emulate Baroque pitch (A=415 Hz.) while reading from the original score.Maybe that’s what they tell you but it makes zero sense that this would pose a problem for anyone. Sounds like an excuse for some other failing.Perfect pitch has no correlation with one’s ability to sing notes of arbitrary fundamental frequency.
Quote from: SaxonyFan on September 12, 2020, 09:24:56 PMSorry but an instrumentalist’s ability to immediately play without error a heard pitch with or without naming the pitch is absolute pitch. What else would you call it?Oh, jeez. What's in a name? S/he has to know the fingering, if nothing else. A rose by any other name would smell as sweet.Tom
People with absolute pitch have told me that it can be an obstacle. Tom
Nonsense, Tom. People with absolute pitch don’t lack relative pitch. They are perfectly capable of adjusting to the key pitch in the same manner a person with relative pitch adjusts.If that particular singer learned to sight sing using her absolute pitch rather than her relative pitch then there is the musical failing I spoke of. She had to have known that would cause her problems.BTW, I wish I could sight sing ... kind of.
Quote from: Grizzly on September 12, 2020, 01:37:03 PMPeople with absolute pitch have told me that it can be an obstacle. TomI agree. The school I attended to become a piano technician would not accept anyone into the program who had perfect pitch.
Quote from: SaxonyFan on September 13, 2020, 12:18:32 AMNonsense, Tom. People with absolute pitch don’t lack relative pitch. They are perfectly capable of adjusting to the key pitch in the same manner a person with relative pitch adjusts.If that particular singer learned to sight sing using her absolute pitch rather than her relative pitch then there is the musical failing I spoke of. She had to have known that would cause her problems.BTW, I wish I could sight sing ... kind of.I never said that. I suspect every good musician with a good sense of absolute pitch also has a good sense of relative pitch. Not everyone with a good sense of relative pitch has absolute pitch. Just because both exist doesn't necessarily mean that they're related.Perhaps some people can adapt. I've not met one. Not everyone is "perfectly capable" of adjusting. Denigrating my fine colleague serves no useful purpose. I gave you a concrete example of one person's experience. Let's hear your example from among your acquaintances.TomPS: BTW, reread vid wes's reply #17.
TomAt this point you have no idea what point you are arguing with me.