I already knew I have perfect pitch, so naturally I got a perfect score. But honestly, I'm not a big believer in the idea that a few seconds of random noises is enough to reset someone's pitch memory. I think the only thing that can do that is time. Good octave practice though.
8/10. Had some music theory lessons but I'm not professionally a musician and I'm happy i have some musical pitch there. I just think it needs more practice since i can recognize some pitches faster than anothers
@@katede4553 Compere one not to another and write down the differences you hear. You will soon find that our hearing his spectral--just like the rainbow. See my stuff here at: _The Acoustic Rabbit Hole!_
Get a journal, then to to one one and play it comparing it to a neighboring note. The you will here the gradiation changes.For example C, which is like red (robust, weightly, fleshy) then becomes C# (red--orange) which is more a destached or active type of fire compared to C. C is the blood. C# is the blood pumping. This is why love songs always get written in C, but in people's minds songs vigor and endurance go to C#. Like Vangeli's "Chariots of Fire," the Olympics song. Expand the journal till you can DESCRIBE each note. Then you well soon be able to recognize it because you are aware of the textural coloring.
10/10. Sight singing and melodic dictation were the two things that kept my music theory grades up in college. My keyboard skills were terrible, my score analysis was as well. I can read music two ways: like everyone else does (reading notes based on their intervals with other notes, etc), or the lazy way which is just singing the pitches at sight
8/10 I've been practicing my pitch for like 2 weeks and it's going pretty good. Missed the F because it sounded like E and the Ab cause F# and Ab are pretty much the only notes that are difficult for me to recognize.
My son has perfect pitch. It has always amazed me. I do not, I got 2/10 right. He graduated recently from Berklee College of music and he is helping me ear train. I have recently resumed playing flute after 15 years.
7/10 Holy shit i wasnt expecting this, im quite young and i already have a bit of quasi perfect pitch, and really good relative pitch. soo if I train every day I might develop perfect pitch ! SOO COOL
I'm going to ahead and just share this. I have a color-shape association for each note, and i'm convinced that our hearing his actually spectral, beginning with C as a fiery (red) note. D is like orange. E = yellow. F#, grass green. Ab is like blue, cold, circle. Etc. // Bb is purple and in oval shape. Prince's "Purple Rain" was written in this key!!! I think my associations might really help others on their perfect pitch journey! I'm here at: _The Acoustic Rabbit Hole_
Hey, me too. I call it a synesthetic relationship. Except for me, C, E, F, and G are red, yellow, green, and blue respectively, D is an off-white super-pale ice blue, and A is a darker grayer version of that same ice blue. B and all of the black key notes are various shades of amber, brown, or dark gold.
@@sparkyshore3543Very, VERY interesting that there seems to be a parallel here.Our CEF&G are rainbow spectrum, with a small discrepancy and G as BLUE for you, and turquoise-blue for me (aquamarine). // Also, fascinating that you see my Orange-D as “ice-blue” because the opposite of orange is Blue. I find that coomplimentaries do switch themselves in an almost naturally automatic polar shift. // Incidentally, I see the tri-tone of D (A-flat) as blue and very distant. Alone, the higher AB’s sound like twinkling stars. // I always encourage my piano students to compare notes and make a journal to describe and catalogue their these individual perceptions. I also have a similar idea about the black keys as being intrinsically more muted and complex in coloring/texture. And I’m working on a video right now, incidentally, called “Why the black keys are the complex keys” I’ve learned that if I stay true to the sound itself, I can’t go wrong with my analysis. I even have a Theory of Pitch Psychology. I will save your commentary about your pitch perceptions for my own notes, and I hope you don’t mind if i use them in a future video as a comparative thing. While my theories at the moment are mostly imbedded into my music videos, there should still be enough info there to garner clear idea of my sort of discreet theories. And, again that’s here at _The Acoustic Rabbit Hole,_ if interested. Thanks so much for the conversation. Your, _Acoustic Rabbit Hole_
@@Acoustic-Rabbit-Hole I also find my color perceptions become a lot less well-defined in minor keys. But they often tend to be paler versions of either the parallel or relative minor. Like A minor is kind of a pale, ethereal grayish-rose, but other keys can almost feel wetter and more saturated, like E minor is a very egg-yolk yellow, whereas E major is more like traditional sunlight representations, and then B♭ minor looks exactly the same as B♭ major (a dark, woody chocolate brown), except thicker and richer. Either way still cold dark brown. And F minor looks pretty much identical to me as A♭ major. Almost as if that particular scale doesn’t care which mode it’s in. Except it also kind of strikes me as an amber-forest green. Kind of contradictory. But again, the minor keys are less well-defined for me.
@@Acoustic-Rabbit-Hole let me also recommend watching the music video for Rachel Platten’s Nothing Ever Happens. I’ve never seen such a perfect match between my color perception and the artist’s chosen key. It just makes me super happy. Granted her dress is still darker than the ice-blue I see, but mine is so pale you can barely even see it against a white background.
I think if I went through the effort of connecting the letter/number with the tone I could maybe have perfect pitch but even though I played violin for years I always thought in fingers (like I need 3, 4 close, put 1on 3 etc.)i mean I know my music theory but again never bothered to play a c and look what's the notes name was
I think these notes are slightly out of tune because I’m hearing that its like in between two notes. Idk how thats possible if its a digital piano though maybe Im trippin
I feel like a ton of people are lying in this comment section, only 1/500 people or something have perfect pitch and half the comments here are saying "10/10"
I have a question. I think I might have perfect pitch but I'm not very familiar with the names of notes and their associated sounds so I fail all these RUclips tests. I can pretty easily identify notes given a starting note (if you play a note and tell me what it is then I can identify any other note you play after it). So idk if I don't have perfect pitch or if I just need to learn the pitches and their names
What does it mean if I can hear any note or chord and go find the note on an instrument? Or think of any song in my head and accurately find the notes one at a time? I haven’t learned the note letter
same here. couldnt be able to tell the letters with the given order after 1 minute even if its not about music or notes lol. I think musicality and talent lays way ahead idk. I can easily hear notes in every moving thing which makes any sound in the world and even replicate the note with my humming but being able to give a letter to them is hard for my memory
Though throughout history many exceptional musicians have possessed absolute pitch, it is not at all an absolute indication of musicality. One could equate it with a kind of "idiot savant" ability. As a composer and music teacher for nearly 50 years, i have found that a quarter to one third of musicians possessing absolute pitch do not have an intuitive understanding of the grammar of tonality, and are in fact even unmusical. Such are the mysteries of the human being...
Oh I feel like a right knob, I don't think I understand what I'm supposed to be doing. Am I meant to hear the note and be able to name it? For example- the first one is E3, so is that the answer I'm trying to find? If so then I'm fiduced, I hear the pitch perfectly, but never having had 'training ' I have zero idea what the name of that note is. So I guess that means I can't play here with you guys anymore huh😢 I just wanted to sing dammit! Sing like a child sing like a naked fat man in the middle of the supermarket, singing so strong and so proud and so free. But I'm an unedumacated fool with a fools foolish dream. But, but, but and a big but to all you unbelievers. I shall sing and I will sing, so strong that you will all hear me, from all four corners!! I am going to learn the names of these notes whom I love, those notes I desire. Those nameless beautiful notes shall be named, they shall be remembered, remembered by me! Mark down this day, for in time I will come again back to this place, reborn, repurposed, reupped. And I shall pass this test, this divider of musicians. This cruel and unfortunate measure of my musical abilities.. rejoice in my birth, my awakened ear. Hear me sing, loud long and lovely. Hear me sing, sing with me, we shall all know the divine names of the sacred 'mmmm' and the elegance of that sultry 'ahhhhh'.. they shall be known by their names, for us. You me and every young child and old oldie. " we are the world we are the children we are the ones that make a brighter day so let's start giving" . I must away now, for I have learning to do. ❤😊😅
I already knew I have perfect pitch, so naturally I got a perfect score. But honestly, I'm not a big believer in the idea that a few seconds of random noises is enough to reset someone's pitch memory. I think the only thing that can do that is time. Good octave practice though.
Ayy we both have perfect pitch. Honestly I feel like more people have perfect pitch than what studies show (1 in 1000)
8/10. Had some music theory lessons but I'm not professionally a musician and I'm happy i have some musical pitch there. I just think it needs more practice since i can recognize some pitches faster than anothers
I got 0/10 man I just wanna cry
😂❤
Me too😢
Its really hard to find a honest person these day
10/10. Learning perfect pitch IS possible if you just practice consistently!!
How? 😭
@@katede4553
repetition and find songs you can relate each note to
repetition and finding songs you associate each note with
@@katede4553 Compere one not to another and write down the differences you hear. You will soon find that our hearing his spectral--just like the rainbow. See my stuff here at: _The Acoustic Rabbit Hole!_
Get a journal, then to to one one and play it comparing it to a neighboring note. The you will here the gradiation changes.For example C, which is like red (robust, weightly, fleshy) then becomes C# (red--orange) which is more a destached or active type of fire compared to C. C is the blood. C# is the blood pumping. This is why love songs always get written in C, but in people's minds songs vigor and endurance go to C#. Like Vangeli's "Chariots of Fire," the Olympics song.
Expand the journal till you can DESCRIBE each note. Then you well soon be able to recognize it because you are aware of the textural coloring.
pretty close to all of them (either a half step above or below) except for the B3 at the end
I got 10 and I can still recognise the pitch accuracy, too!
Radio non tonal noise can't reset relative pitch memory. You had to include a musical passage in a random key.
I'm not even convinced that would do it. I'm not convinced anything can reset pitch memory other than time.
9/10… so close!
10/10. Sight singing and melodic dictation were the two things that kept my music theory grades up in college. My keyboard skills were terrible, my score analysis was as well. I can read music two ways: like everyone else does (reading notes based on their intervals with other notes, etc), or the lazy way which is just singing the pitches at sight
6/10, Im actually pretty happy with that tbh 😅
Well done, you did well!👏
all 10 at notes but could recognize the octaves numbers :D
100%. apparently i have perfect pitch
8/10 I've been practicing my pitch for like 2 weeks and it's going pretty good. Missed the F because it sounded like E and the Ab cause F# and Ab are pretty much the only notes that are difficult for me to recognize.
the F sounded like an F
@@looksmaxxingmastersigma Yeah, I wasn't that good on those times, but 6 months later, its way easier for me to identify it.
@@looksmaxxingmastersigma nvm, I did it again and got everything right except that deep F that lowkey sounded like E 😭🙏
10/10! Man's gonna be in pitch perfect 3 at this rate!! #rapperwithchops
Nicely done!👏👏
Today I learned I think every note I hear is a half step up from what it is
I can recognise if something is an accidental or not. that's probably just because whenever I mess around with chords and stuff I go to C first.
all 10! i had to replay a couple of them tho lol
Nice! Well done that's amazing!👏👏
@@pitch_practice thanks!
10 for 10 let’s go
7/10; the lower ones got me.
got them all, i already have perfect pitch so this was a fun lil thing
My son has perfect pitch. It has always amazed me. I do not, I got 2/10 right. He graduated recently from Berklee College of music and he is helping me ear train. I have recently resumed playing flute after 15 years.
I miss on semitone on some, but found some others.
I can hear the sound of number 3/10 sliding down (It doesn't stay on the same pitch).
Either it slid down or something but #6 definitely ended on an E
no it didnt
7/10 Holy shit i wasnt expecting this, im quite young and i already have a bit of quasi perfect pitch, and really good relative pitch. soo if I train every day I might develop perfect pitch ! SOO COOL
2/10. Got Ab4 and C3. Really surprised that I couldn't get natural notes but got a flat note that wasn't even B flat or E flat.
Got 10/10. Still not sure if I have perfect pitch, though.
Got 10/10 :3
I'm going to ahead and just share this. I have a color-shape association for each note, and i'm convinced that our hearing his actually spectral, beginning with C as a fiery (red) note. D is like orange. E = yellow. F#, grass green. Ab is like blue, cold, circle. Etc. // Bb is purple and in oval shape. Prince's "Purple Rain" was written in this key!!! I think my associations might really help others on their perfect pitch journey!
I'm here at: _The Acoustic Rabbit Hole_
Hey, me too. I call it a synesthetic relationship. Except for me, C, E, F, and G are red, yellow, green, and blue respectively, D is an off-white super-pale ice blue, and A is a darker grayer version of that same ice blue. B and all of the black key notes are various shades of amber, brown, or dark gold.
@@sparkyshore3543Very, VERY interesting that there seems to be a parallel here.Our CEF&G are rainbow spectrum, with a small discrepancy and G as BLUE for you, and turquoise-blue for me (aquamarine). // Also, fascinating that you see my Orange-D as “ice-blue” because the opposite of orange is Blue. I find that coomplimentaries do switch themselves in an almost naturally automatic polar shift. // Incidentally, I see the tri-tone of D (A-flat) as blue and very distant. Alone, the higher AB’s sound like twinkling stars. // I always encourage my piano students to compare notes and make a journal to describe and catalogue their these individual perceptions.
I also have a similar idea about the black keys as being intrinsically more muted and complex in coloring/texture. And I’m working on a video right now, incidentally, called “Why the black keys are the complex keys”
I’ve learned that if I stay true to the sound itself, I can’t go wrong with my analysis. I even have a Theory of Pitch Psychology.
I will save your commentary about your pitch perceptions for my own notes, and I hope you don’t mind if i use them in a future video as a comparative thing.
While my theories at the moment are mostly imbedded into my music videos, there should still be enough info there to garner clear idea of my sort of discreet theories. And, again that’s here at _The Acoustic Rabbit Hole,_ if interested.
Thanks so much for the conversation.
Your, _Acoustic Rabbit Hole_
@@Acoustic-Rabbit-Hole go right ahead. I even drew a diagram which I show my friends. No way to get it to you though, unfortunately. P
@@Acoustic-Rabbit-Hole I also find my color perceptions become a lot less well-defined in minor keys. But they often tend to be paler versions of either the parallel or relative minor. Like A minor is kind of a pale, ethereal grayish-rose, but other keys can almost feel wetter and more saturated, like E minor is a very egg-yolk yellow, whereas E major is more like traditional sunlight representations, and then B♭ minor looks exactly the same as B♭ major (a dark, woody chocolate brown), except thicker and richer. Either way still cold dark brown. And F minor looks pretty much identical to me as A♭ major. Almost as if that particular scale doesn’t care which mode it’s in. Except it also kind of strikes me as an amber-forest green. Kind of contradictory. But again, the minor keys are less well-defined for me.
@@Acoustic-Rabbit-Hole let me also recommend watching the music video for Rachel Platten’s Nothing Ever Happens. I’ve never seen such a perfect match between my color perception and the artist’s chosen key. It just makes me super happy.
Granted her dress is still darker than the ice-blue I see, but mine is so pale you can barely even see it against a white background.
I think if I went through the effort of connecting the letter/number with the tone I could maybe have perfect pitch but even though I played violin for years I always thought in fingers (like I need 3, 4 close, put 1on 3 etc.)i mean I know my music theory but again never bothered to play a c and look what's the notes name was
I dont play piano but i got em all correct.
9/10
Isn't #1 a F sliding down to a E?
10/10, does this mean i have perfect pitch?
I think these notes are slightly out of tune because I’m hearing that its like in between two notes. Idk how thats possible if its a digital piano though maybe Im trippin
The only one that felt iffy for me was the F1, which sounded a little sharp. But it's really hard to tell at such low ranges.
@@sparkyshore3543 right??! sounded like it leaned more into an F#1 for me 😢
8
3/10 just gotta practice more.
I feel like a ton of people are lying in this comment section, only 1/500 people or something have perfect pitch and half the comments here are saying "10/10"
I have perfect pitch, is that cheating? I’ve known this since I was 10 yrs old so this is easy for me, but good test.
I mean its not cheating but im sure it made it much easier😂😅, and thank you!💙
I have a question. I think I might have perfect pitch but I'm not very familiar with the names of notes and their associated sounds so I fail all these RUclips tests. I can pretty easily identify notes given a starting note (if you play a note and tell me what it is then I can identify any other note you play after it). So idk if I don't have perfect pitch or if I just need to learn the pitches and their names
@@noxaka523that means you have very good relative pitch, but if you need a reference note, it's not perfect pitch.
8/10
I got 4 out of 10😮
What does it mean if I can hear any note or chord and go find the note on an instrument? Or think of any song in my head and accurately find the notes one at a time?
I haven’t learned the note letter
same here. couldnt be able to tell the letters with the given order after 1 minute even if its not about music or notes lol. I think musicality and talent lays way ahead idk. I can easily hear notes in every moving thing which makes any sound in the world and even replicate the note with my humming but being able to give a letter to them is hard for my memory
10/10
I guess I have perfect pitch🤷♂️
WOW! // Dear Mr. Enoch, 7th Son of Adam, come and see my Theory of Pitch Psychology and my Musicolor Matrix.
Your, _Acoustic Rabbit Hole_
i got 10/10
3/10. I was a semitone off for a few others
10/10 actually :)
Though throughout history many exceptional musicians have possessed absolute pitch, it is not at all an absolute indication of musicality. One could equate it with a kind of "idiot savant" ability. As a composer and music teacher for nearly 50 years, i have found that a quarter to one third of musicians possessing absolute pitch do not have an intuitive understanding of the grammar of tonality, and are in fact even unmusical. Such are the mysteries of the human being...
10/10, it was super easy but thanks
Nicely done!👏
Got 8 out of 10. I mistook the Db2 for a D2 and the F1 for a F#1. I guess I struggle with lower notes.
5/10
Lol I got 2/10. Hahaha😂
Edit: two weeks later, I got 4/10! :)
7 months later: I got 6/10 🎉🎉
Man my left ear sure works well…
I got all 10 right and can play any song instantly after listening to it once, also can recall notes instantly. Does this mean I have perfect pitch?
1/10 like I only know C3 HAHAHA still need to practice
My only mistake was Ab, I thought of it as a G# (still the same thing😂)
Oh I feel like a right knob, I don't think I understand what I'm supposed to be doing. Am I meant to hear the note and be able to name it? For example- the first one is E3, so is that the answer I'm trying to find? If so then I'm fiduced, I hear the pitch perfectly, but never having had 'training ' I have zero idea what the name of that note is. So I guess that means I can't play here with you guys anymore huh😢 I just wanted to sing dammit! Sing like a child sing like a naked fat man in the middle of the supermarket, singing so strong and so proud and so free. But I'm an unedumacated fool with a fools foolish dream. But, but, but and a big but to all you unbelievers. I shall sing and I will sing, so strong that you will all hear me, from all four corners!! I am going to learn the names of these notes whom I love, those notes I desire. Those nameless beautiful notes shall be named, they shall be remembered, remembered by me! Mark down this day, for in time I will come again back to this place, reborn, repurposed, reupped. And I shall pass this test, this divider of musicians. This cruel and unfortunate measure of my musical abilities.. rejoice in my birth, my awakened ear. Hear me sing, loud long and lovely. Hear me sing, sing with me, we shall all know the divine names of the sacred 'mmmm' and the elegance of that sultry 'ahhhhh'.. they shall be known by their names, for us. You me and every young child and old oldie.
" we are the world we are the children we are the ones that make a brighter day so let's start giving" .
I must away now, for I have learning to do. ❤😊😅
8/10
10/10
5/10
10/10
10/10