How “Perfect” is Perfect Pitch?

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  • Опубликовано: 14 май 2024
  • In this episode I sat down with my friend Pierre Piscitelli to ask him how he developed his insane perfect pitch.
    Check out Pierre's channel: / @pierrejpiscitelli
    If you want to learn how to develop your ear, check out my 👂 Ear Training Program

    rickbeato.com/ear
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Комментарии • 937

  • @RickBeato
    @RickBeato  2 месяца назад +129

    👂If you want to learn how to develop your ear, check out my Ear Training Program here: rickbeato.com/ear

    • @mrnobody2873
      @mrnobody2873 2 месяца назад +2

      You should contact Dr. Andrew Huberman (has a podcast and has been on lots of podcasts, like Rogan.) he's done research in to the neuroscience behind neuroplasticity. This topic would be a fascinating conversation to watch both of you discuss.
      Edit: I realize that might be coming out of left field, I am referencing the original video you did on the topic, which is how I discovered your channel.

    • @johntheisen6791
      @johntheisen6791 2 месяца назад +1

      Already have a ear

    • @junmiamorecadenenzafu3694
      @junmiamorecadenenzafu3694 2 месяца назад

      don't need it since I have perfect pitch but I'll check it out

    • @jcreature11
      @jcreature11 2 месяца назад

      Hey Rick, love the content was easy to subscribe to your channel with how great it is. I wanna buy some of your books and wanna know what is the best place to purchase them that gives u the most profit?

    • @calvinmcdowell8328
      @calvinmcdowell8328 2 месяца назад

      Awesome video I have your ear training course but I am stuck telling the difference between major and minor triads any suggestions?

  • @adampezzuolo5618
    @adampezzuolo5618 2 месяца назад +335

    This video should be called "Rick tortures a guy with perfect pitch for 8 minutes straight"

  • @pierrejpiscitelli
    @pierrejpiscitelli 2 месяца назад +1578

    Thanks for having me, Rick! 🙏🏻

    • @falxonPSN
      @falxonPSN 2 месяца назад +30

      Watching you figure these chords out was something else! Intellectually, I knew what you were doing, but it still pretty much seemed like black magic. That is a really really cool skill. Talent? Skill? I'm not sure what to call it.

    • @Larriex97
      @Larriex97 2 месяца назад +6

      You've contributed to explain certain facts and processes that also happens to me, when we're recognising notes in a chord. Thank you 🙏🏻

    • @chickensays
      @chickensays 2 месяца назад +9

      Absolutely fascinating pierre. Any advice as how to help my 4yr old develop. I think she may have perfect pitch. Ask her to sing any song, even ones she hasn't heard in weeks or months, and she sings it perfectly in the original key.

    • @fortunyrodrigo.
      @fortunyrodrigo. 2 месяца назад +2

      the best!!!! ✌✌

    • @hillbilly4895
      @hillbilly4895 2 месяца назад +1

      I'll be checking you out...have a keyboard, never played it...ever.

  • @reneemarais431
    @reneemarais431 2 месяца назад +268

    You speak a language I don't understand but my dad was a jazz pianist and I recognise the sounds. Grew up to him practising, composing and doing orgistrations. Miss him now.

  • @schroede2
    @schroede2 2 месяца назад +167

    Pierre is one of my oldest and dearest friends. He is an exceptionally talented musician and a great person. It warms my heart to see him getting the recognition he deserves.

    • @MrLieka
      @MrLieka 2 месяца назад +10

      You are also a great friend to him for thinking this way, great minds find each other ;)

  • @SheetMusicBoss
    @SheetMusicBoss 2 месяца назад +227

    Perfect pitch definitely makes transcribing for piano easier! I love the complex jazz chords here. I can figure them out if I take the time. I’m sure I’d recognise them faster if they were more common in the music I listened to.
    They don’t come up that often for me, but it’s kinda fun to work them out because they’re outside my usual comfort zone. Great vid, Rick!

    • @hovis_esports
      @hovis_esports 2 месяца назад +2

      much of my family has perfect pitch, with my mom being a singer that never learned to read music because of her talent. what made you learn to read, despite having perfect pitch?

    • @tylerhackner9731
      @tylerhackner9731 2 месяца назад +1

      Good to know!

    • @Nyoshi219
      @Nyoshi219 2 месяца назад +8

      Nice to see you here SheetMusicBoss! Great content!

    • @deepdiver3084
      @deepdiver3084 2 месяца назад +2

      @@hovis_esports, The correct term is absolute pitch. Equal temperament is actually out of tune when you play chords. To many beats. It’s useful for fixed pitch instruments, but is a bad compromise tuning system.

    • @02dusk
      @02dusk 2 месяца назад

      The boss himself!

  • @denaraptis3716
    @denaraptis3716 2 месяца назад +26

    Holy poly-chords! Crazy to see/ hear this guy. Would be so cool to see a scan of his brain during this session. (Music therapy nerd here) As always, thank you @RickBeato!

  • @camnto
    @camnto 2 месяца назад +8

    rick you are a freaking jewel. this is why you are unique and so loved. thank you for everything

  • @gabeatv
    @gabeatv 2 месяца назад +3

    Love the excitement in Pierre. He seems to be having so much fun. Great video, Rick!

  • @carlosenriquemorales187
    @carlosenriquemorales187 2 месяца назад +4

    Excellent Video on "Perfect Pitch" Rick, thanks for making & posting the video. This guy Pierre is amazing & you threw some complicated chords at him & he got them. I just subscribed to his channel as in addition to 4 guitars I also have a Casio CTS-410 keyboard. I will be watching a lot of videos on his channel, thanks again.

  • @thecowenfamily
    @thecowenfamily 2 месяца назад +135

    I find this perfect pitch business absolutely fascinating. I don't have it, in fact I'm probably negative if anything but watching it in operation live is brilliant.

    • @LogioTek
      @LogioTek 2 месяца назад +6

      Well the lady I'm featuring on my channel is a step above from perfect pitch, she's a synesthete with perfect pitch as by-product. She's been playing by ear since she was a toddler. I have footage of her doing various rare feats live involving audience (mashing up live audience requests and improvising on audience input) and involving other musicians (solo battle where she copies solo of other musician on the fly and plays it back embellished).
      Gifts like that help define your peak potential but it still requires thousands of hours to reach that peak potential.

    • @brianmi40
      @brianmi40 2 месяца назад +6

      Despite the recognition that the brain is plastic, so far all evidence points to getting perfect pitch from very early child development (Rick has spoken about playing complex music for his kids endlessly throughout their early life) or not at all.
      However, pretty much anyone at nearly any age can develop very good relative pitch as Rick mentions here. You can do it as simply as two sound sources (e.g. two pianos or electronic keyboards, two guitars, etc.) and one person plays single notes while the other detects them within a small range, like C then D or C then E and have the person repeat them back to them. If alone you could simply record enough of these to not be able to memorize them and practice this by yourself. Do this over a few hours and you may be amazed at how much you'll progress to hearing 3 or possibly more notes in a row, or wider ranges start to be possible because you can "run the notes up" in your head to figure out the further note...
      I basically went that route and forever ruined, so to speak, my desire to learn to play traditionally despite having a piano teacher mother. But as soon as I started hearing the notes and intervals, I would figure what was on the sheet music once, and thereafter just use my ear to replay it. Over a few decades playing guitar I got good and quick enough at just recognizing the intervals I could even do a bit of soloing over key changes. Endless fun, but not much commercial value!

    • @LogioTek
      @LogioTek 2 месяца назад +2

      @@brianmi40 It's very likely that kids are born with perfect pitch and other gifts. It can be proven statistically. Say in a family there are 2 kids of similar age (preferably twins or 1-2 years age gap) that were exposed to the exact same household musical conditions, yet one of the kids shows early signs of talent and aptitude toward the craft. Especially if it's a slightly younger child of 1-2 years age gap that pulls away early compared to the older child, while being exposed to the same musical conditioning and lessons. Such talent gap would be apparent at age as early as 4 years old between siblings. Enough documented cases like that can statistically prove that you don't develop these gifts in early childhood.
      I have one case like that researched and documented already, where a child younger by 1 year started playing by ear at the age of 4, pulling away from older sibling. All while having the same exact household exposure (you can even argue that older sibling had an extra time of this musical exposure - their mom played piano at home and they both poked around until they were sent for piano lessons).

    • @brianmi40
      @brianmi40 2 месяца назад +2

      @@LogioTek I'm not claiming everyone gets it. What is factual is that no 30 year old can "get it".

    • @musicbro8225
      @musicbro8225 2 месяца назад +2

      I don't know what's factual or statistically significant, but I know 30 year olds can learn a new language. It's no doubt harder for them but with immersion it can eventually become the language they use to think with, or even dream with, without having to translate in their heads. They would have to want to learn and probably have no alternative but to learn because that's the place they are living now.
      When the nuances of sonic structures start to truly translate to emotional expression, I think single notes and note relationships become embedded and recognizable, but like the speech analogy, it has to become usable as the 'first' language without the intervention of a translator within the head.
      Highly unusual I would say, maybe it's because people keep telling others that it's impossible. If you weren't driven to be a musician (within yourself) at an early age then the level of dedication and commitment is unlikely to be there, but there is more than just talent and desire involved in a persons relationship with their passions in life and some people don't connect with that passion till later in their lives.

  • @pauljansen1137
    @pauljansen1137 2 месяца назад +164

    I've seen a lot of channels about music over the years....Rick's is just about the only one i'm still interested in these days though!!!

    • @jasonbone5121
      @jasonbone5121 2 месяца назад +4

      From day to day you never know what Rick is going to surprise you with on his next video. I love the variety of topics, with a central theme... music.

    • @brettliebermanmusic
      @brettliebermanmusic 2 месяца назад +3

      Yeah, pretty much the same

    • @cleroyster2610
      @cleroyster2610 2 месяца назад +1

      His video with O Martian was fantastic.

    • @pauljansen1137
      @pauljansen1137 2 месяца назад

      @@cleroyster2610 loved him with Maynard as well!!!!

    • @jerandcor
      @jerandcor 2 месяца назад +1

      Rick is just the bee's knees. What an absolute treasure in our community!

  • @budove58
    @budove58 2 месяца назад +5

    Ive always been musically inclined. I play but always play by ear and ive always had the ability to pkay what i hear or imagine. This video made me realize i can see the sounds and intervals that Pierre was trying to replicate. For me its not just replicating the intervals but breaking down the texture of the chord that i see in my mind. I dont play jazz but hearing the chords Rick was playing made me realize how rich in texture those chords are.

  • @martinsokol3527
    @martinsokol3527 2 месяца назад +25

    4:47 is perfect explanation summary for what Perfect Pitch is and how people who have it understand it.

  • @curtislindsey1736
    @curtislindsey1736 2 месяца назад +14

    I love watching music nerds talk, I just wish I had even a 10th of either of their talents!

  • @WonderrDogg
    @WonderrDogg 2 месяца назад +1

    Love this kind of video Rick! Keep up the good work!

  • @dathyr1
    @dathyr1 2 месяца назад +1

    It is very amazing when someone has that kind of talent and can hear the notes to that degree.
    Great video.

  • @CB-kj6xw
    @CB-kj6xw 2 месяца назад +3

    Speaking of perfect pitch, I enjoyed the Rick Beato article this morning on CNN! I agree with all the good points the interviewer made about why this channel is so relevant and important. 😊

  • @kassemir
    @kassemir 2 месяца назад +39

    The thing about it being flat in his memory is actually pretty interesting. I've heard about this happening sometimes, if the piano in the home isn't tuned regularly when they're kids and getting that initial exposure needed to develop it.

    • @ehcmier
      @ehcmier 2 месяца назад +3

      And there's a phenomenon of it happening eventually with age.

    • @Ascendantmusic
      @Ascendantmusic 2 месяца назад +3

      Wanting to get all metaphysical and such, I think it being flat in memory (this happens to me too) is because we tune instruments to A=440 but the universe is supposedly tuned to 432hz. That's my hypothesis. I have no intention of finding out if it's correct or not lol.

    • @dculp9284
      @dculp9284 2 месяца назад

      I have heard about this happening with age to Oscar Peterson and he found it frustrating to have to kind of "modulate" away from what his brain was telling him.

    • @solideomusical
      @solideomusical 2 месяца назад

      A professor of mine had absolute pitch. He told me that he grew up with piano that was a half step flat so he always had to account for that when naming pitches.

    • @iswm
      @iswm 2 месяца назад +2

      @@Ascendantmusic interesting thought but the universe is also running on perfect fifth pythagorean tuning and not equal temperament like a piano, so one might also expect to have a different "internal representation" of the intervals which doesn't seem to be the case, or at least he didn't mention it. Seems more likely he learned on a slightly flat instrument during his formative years and that got sort of baked into his neural pathways, but who knows. Mysterious stuff.

  • @davidguthrie3739
    @davidguthrie3739 2 месяца назад +1

    Love Pierre’s tutorials. I subscribed to his channel when he showed up on my feed a few months ago.

  • @bluesdjben
    @bluesdjben 2 месяца назад +3

    Great job with the cameras, recording, and editing.

  • @martynridley3671
    @martynridley3671 2 месяца назад +68

    By far, THE most impressive perfect pitch video I've ever seen is that first one that you did with Dylan! Really nice that Pierre became friends with Lyle who, for me, is the best, most expressive pianist/keyboard player to ever grace this planet. He's sorely missed and I really think that Pat's best stuff was when he was with Lyle. I've been listening to the pair of them for 35 years now. Anyway, good video. Would have liked to hear some input from Dylan now that it's some years ago since the first. I'd quite like to know how he perceives his ability.

    • @Aaron-Qman
      @Aaron-Qman 2 месяца назад +6

      Yeah I miss seeing Dylan! Absolutely brilliant ear 🎶🔥

    • @nfrankiksa4596
      @nfrankiksa4596 2 месяца назад

      what happened to him? does he not care about music?

    • @c3dmf4s
      @c3dmf4s 2 месяца назад +1

      Maybe he is not wanting to be on RUclips. Now that would be a 1st. To comment that he does not like interest is just ignorant. ​@nfrankiksa4596

    • @glp.1337
      @glp.1337 2 месяца назад

      Is this really so impressive? I always thought everyone was able to do this, guess not.

    • @martynridley3671
      @martynridley3671 2 месяца назад

      @@glp.1337 So make an impressive video of you doing it, then! Yeah, guess not, eh?!

  • @marklecornu
    @marklecornu 2 месяца назад +49

    Rick - my son has insane perfect pitch. He "sees" the notes as colors. The notes are always consistently the same color and have been since we discovered he had PP when he was around 7 years old. He likes certain keys over others because the colors are more pleasing.

    • @therileyobrien
      @therileyobrien 2 месяца назад +39

      Synesthesia

    • @oe542
      @oe542 2 месяца назад +1

      Does he have any other intellectual abilities?

    • @lukaskuipers7791
      @lukaskuipers7791 2 месяца назад +5

      I have the same. I'd say that approaching music theoretically like we do in music school has made me analyse it differently and perhaps less 'colored'.

    • @Troy1g
      @Troy1g 2 месяца назад +2

      I don’t have perfect pitch, but when I sometimes I change the key of a song I am learning to suite my vocal range. Even though the new key is relatively all same, I often sense something is just different, whether we can hear it or not each individual note has its own unique quality I believe. So interesting.

    • @chixma7011
      @chixma7011 2 месяца назад +4

      I ‘see’ chords too, but not in colour. What I see is the physical distance between the notes whilst also being able to read and hear the SATB voices from my mental score, both individually and in combination. My piano teacher told me what I can do is a rare skill, although I had difficulty in explaining it to him, and my last examiner asked me if I had Perfect Pitch. I told him I didn’t know, but asked him why he thought I might have. He said it was because my answers to the aural questions came so fast.
      My better half can’t match it in spite of his being a much better musician (piano and bassoon) than I am. If there’s a particular harmony he wants to use in his jazz flights of fancy he’ll ask me to find it for him. Sadly, my deeply baroque soul prevents me from being able to play a single note of jazz myself. 😮 To each his own, I guess.

  • @spencerleehorton
    @spencerleehorton 2 месяца назад

    Great stuff as always Rick, hope you and yours are all good, all the best from UK.

  • @cembobiohazard7779
    @cembobiohazard7779 2 месяца назад

    glad to see you Rick posting videos like this one 👍

  • @CCKaraoke
    @CCKaraoke 2 месяца назад +76

    3:39 "Hello, is it me you're looking for?" 🎶

    •  2 месяца назад +2

      Hahahahaha good one! Same type of chord, but I think it's off a semi-tone or two...

    • @OpticIlluzhion
      @OpticIlluzhion 2 месяца назад +5

      It's off by a minor third, it's a Cm9 but the song is Am9

    • @Jasper_the_Cat
      @Jasper_the_Cat 2 месяца назад

      See also Mr. Roboto except Eb minor 9, in the verses. lol.

    • @richcatalano
      @richcatalano 2 месяца назад

      100%. I thought the same

  • @picksalot1
    @picksalot1 2 месяца назад +17

    The big advantages with Perfect Pitch for a musician seems to be that it substantially reduces the amount of time it takes to learn a piece/find the notes, and makes recall easier and more accurate.

    • @LogioTek
      @LogioTek 2 месяца назад +3

      There are other advantages too such as hearing stuff and playing by ear and increasing your improvisational vocabulary much faster and broadly.
      The lady I'm featuring on my channel has been playing by ear since she was a toddler, she's a synesthete (~1 in 100K ability) with a perfect pitch (~1 in 10K ability) as a by-product bonus and she's an amazing fluent improviser and a great composer. I have footage of her doing feats in a live setting such as: mashing up live audience requests, improvising on random audience phrases and rhythms, as well as doing solo trading battles where she copies solos of others by ear and embellishes them when playing it right back, and all of that is fluent not like in this video with pauses and thought involved.
      There are definitive advantages being born gifted, provided you put in the time to practice and utilize your gifts to the fullest. Gifts like that help define your peak potential.

    • @picksalot1
      @picksalot1 2 месяца назад +1

      @@LogioTek Most definitely. I didn't want to try and document every advantage using my cellphone.

    • @lukaskuipers7791
      @lukaskuipers7791 2 месяца назад +1

      It can be, but remembering pieces by developing a relative understanding of them is more effective in the long term

    • @km6206
      @km6206 2 месяца назад

      but it's a hindrance to many other musicians with perfeect pitch. Seen early period classic musicians say they had problems that relatve pitch folks didn't.

  • @timmyschools5158
    @timmyschools5158 2 месяца назад +2

    Hey Rick, I really enjoy and love these videos, especially your takes on perfect pitch. I'm personally modeling a years-long curriculum for my son based off of what you did with Dylan and high-information music.
    If you happen to see this, I'm sure I speak for many people when I say that we would love an update on how Dylan is doing with his life and how his perfect pitch has helped him, just generally how things are going. It's been a while since he was on the channel! If you or he doesn't want to, that is understandable as well.
    Thank you for all that you have done to advance music appreciation, education, and communication to the masses, your life is a true inspiration. God bless you.

  • @midlandernc7403
    @midlandernc7403 2 месяца назад

    Hello Rick I enjoy your show and your instructional material. I purchased the 4 module set and am using it now. I played Coronet and Trumpet 6 years in school band. We studied alot besides learning our instrument. All us 7 kids in my family played an instrument with one in chorus. Our parents enjoyed a wide range of music and gave us educational opportunities to have a wide appreciation also. Your videos are mostly for advanced beginners and intermediates. And in music theory it is all advanced. I know one thing that would help people who are absolute beginners with music and music theory and that is Leonard Bernstein’s Young Peoples Concerts. They will lay a great foundation and seed interest in learning more. It did for all us. I still watch them once and a while for refresher. Thanks for your passion for teaching. Your material is worth every penny and it is very helpful. I really enjoy your interviews and guests it is an archive like no other and will go down in the annals’ of The Library Of Alexandria. Thanks for your work.

  • @monikadeinbeck4760
    @monikadeinbeck4760 2 месяца назад +9

    A friend of mine is a sound engineer, and he once showed me his new electric piano and hit the A key. With a puzzled look, he said, there is something wrong, and made the keyboard show the frequency for the A, and it was 444. He corrected it to 440. He could hear a 4 hertz deviation.

    • @DanielTalOr
      @DanielTalOr 2 месяца назад +2

      I'm like that. I have nothing approaching perfect pitch, but I have decent pitch memory and I can hear a 1% pitch variation, so I sometimes will hear a note and instinctively know something's wrong without being certain what.

    • @geraldfriend256
      @geraldfriend256 2 месяца назад +1

      @@DanielTalOrDoes it make it hard to listen to old blues or imperfect singers?😊

    • @DanielTalOr
      @DanielTalOr 2 месяца назад +3

      @@geraldfriend256 blues not so much, because I know it's part and parcel of the style, but imperfect singers can cause me to involuntarily physically cringe.

  • @comfyathome
    @comfyathome 2 месяца назад +19

    Wow! What Pierre said at 7:50 about always being "flat" in his head just VALIDATED something that has always bothered me! I have (almost) perfect "relative" pitch (relative to the open strings of standard guitar tuning), but if I don't use it for awhile - it goes a half step flat. So I strive to use (or more specifically - what I like to call "CALIBRATE") it at least once a week if I don't practice for a period of time. Very interesting and gratifying stuff here Rick.

    • @comfyathome
      @comfyathome 2 месяца назад

      @@tommyteetime"Perfect" or "Relative" in respect to musical pitch is dictated according to the standard of A-440Hz tuning - not notes/pitches in relation to each other (which could occur at ANY tuning above or below "440"). So, for example, if you were stranded on an island with NO A-440 tuning reference of any kind - and you hummed an E above middle C, you'd be spot-on with the same note played on a piano (or any other calibrated instrument or reference).

    • @yesterdayproductions1019
      @yesterdayproductions1019 Месяц назад +1

      Me too. I can hum a "G" note out of nowhere. BUT, if don't practice it OR most of the time in the morning when I wake up, I hum a Gb instead which pisses me off. LOL
      Later in the day it gets corrected up 1/2 step to "G".

  • @davidbeanlandsmusic7492
    @davidbeanlandsmusic7492 2 месяца назад

    Excellent as always. I really enjoy your clips & interviews as I speak the same language & also have pp. A great example of practical applied theory & aural training in action. I'd also add the shape changes on piano help to master this as we all have the same hand, wrist, arm & shoulder positions that help contribute to finding the chord / inversion much quicker once you know how it all fits together. My musician friends & I lovingly call some of those poly chords (especially with sharp 5's & 9's) demolished chords! Keep up the great work Rick, cheers from Australia 🇦🇺

  • @eviculum4518
    @eviculum4518 2 месяца назад +1

    BY FAR THE BEST VIDEO ON YT ABOUT PERFECT PITCH THANK YOU!

  • @jonashormann5700
    @jonashormann5700 2 месяца назад +8

    I'm super grateful for the Lyle Mays book that Pierre worked on.

  • @tichu7
    @tichu7 2 месяца назад +1

    The first video I ever saw on this channel was of Dylan demonstrating chroded perfect pitch (up till then, I had only ever seen it done with individual notes). I subscribed right away, and feel enriched by your "what makes a song great" videos. Nice to see another video about perfect pitch and some of the techniques behind it.

  • @LowEndUniversity
    @LowEndUniversity 2 месяца назад +2

    I'm not familiar with Pierre, but this is the best description I've ever heard as someone with perfect pitch. Amazing video!

  • @CONTROVERSYRISING
    @CONTROVERSYRISING 2 месяца назад +14

    "I know that chord.... because I played it" .... That's the essence, having a relationship with each note.... the open bell in AC/DC s "Hell's Bells" is what note? If you can hear the bell in your head and go to a piano figure out which note it is ....that's a great starting point.

    • @bcastromusic
      @bcastromusic 2 месяца назад +2

      that's how I determine root pitch...certain notes are burned very accurately into memory. The opening E&Eb in Fur Elise. The C bass note & gmaj chord in van halen jump, the opening to ain't talkin bout love, etc.. it's burned in the head with very accurate pitch.

    • @neilmarsh7437
      @neilmarsh7437 2 месяца назад

      its a G I think (the bell in ACDC)

    • @TheEnderBand
      @TheEnderBand 2 месяца назад

      for Bb I usually think of the first "to meeee" that starts the piano vamp in the beginning of Bohemian Rhapsody

    • @EddieVanAidan
      @EddieVanAidan 2 месяца назад +1

      It's an A but I think the whole track is a few cents sharp, so it'll probably drive some people with perfect pitch crazy lol

    • @TheEnderBand
      @TheEnderBand 2 месяца назад +1

      @@EddieVanAidan a lot of older records were sped up as well to add energy and excitement. I always wondered what it was like as someone with perfect pitch to listen to a band like Pantera who tunes somewhere in between standard and flat a lot of the time- like A 425 instead of 440

  •  2 месяца назад +16

    I don’t have perfect pitch, but I can sing lots of songs I know in their original key before playing the recordings. What the hell’s that called? 🤣

    • @mackinbox
      @mackinbox 2 месяца назад +2

      Quasi-absolute pitch

    • @1xRacer
      @1xRacer 2 месяца назад +6

      Great memory

    • @marshac1479
      @marshac1479 2 месяца назад +2

      I'm sure Rick did a video about that. He said it's a good skill to have!

    • @NotOfficialJosh
      @NotOfficialJosh 2 месяца назад +4

      Pitch Memory

    •  2 месяца назад +4

      @@marshac1479 It is! Especially when performing live.

  • @BrassThunder
    @BrassThunder 2 месяца назад

    Rick, been following you for a while after I found you via one of my perusing RUclips and completely by accident..lucky me......I'm a musician with over 50 years on the Trumpet. Playing an instrument that can only play one note at a time gives a kind of tunnel vision until I make this mistake that actually is one of those skills you could never get right but all of a sudden BAM there it is.. Your videos are like that, I always come away from your videos with tidbits I wish I knew years ago. Keep up the great work you do.....Pete

  • @mikaelv2085
    @mikaelv2085 2 месяца назад

    Amazing video. Rick is on fire with his interviews and content

  • @donpahl9270
    @donpahl9270 2 месяца назад +4

    It's all in defining what is perfect pitch? There's no question Pierre has a very distinct talent of hearing and reproducing chords and I would never take that away from him, although ask him to sing what is called concert pitch (A-440 hertz) without any reference; A-439 is close but not perfect. After tuning thousands of pianos during my 48 years as a piano technician I always had to default to a tuning fork and now to an electronic tuning device (ETD) to find my starting pitch. Pierre actually alludes to his inability to reproduce specific pitches out of his head towards the end of the video, nevertheless Pierre has an amazing gift!!

    • @yesterdayproductions1019
      @yesterdayproductions1019 Месяц назад +1

      NOBODY can tell the difference between 439 & 440. Even when you tune a guitar to "A" 440, when you strum the A chord it will register 441 or erven 442 briefly and then settle. You are splitting hairs. This guys has perfect pitch. There is NO QUESTION. He can hum any note perfectly out of nowhere. He proved it.

  • @marktye322
    @marktye322 2 месяца назад +4

    I’ve always heard perfect pitch was an accordion being tossed into a dumpster hitting a banjo….

  • @brian_hibbs
    @brian_hibbs 2 месяца назад +1

    I understand what he's saying it's hard to describe. I feel this same mind blocking anxiety he is describing when he's trying to show someone else what he can do. I also understand just recognizing chords from other music. I can't do what Rick does by singing out the notes with relative pitch but I can understand movement and find the chords using chords in that key. Awesome stuff.

  • @irevisibel9237
    @irevisibel9237 2 месяца назад

    Impressive, thanks for the insights, Rick

  • @charleschezhyan2498
    @charleschezhyan2498 2 месяца назад

    Thanks for making such videos ❤

  • @TheProducers
    @TheProducers 2 месяца назад

    I find this truly fascinating. Thanks for the learning opportunity,

  • @DrumNBassMC
    @DrumNBassMC 2 месяца назад

    Oh my God!!
    What an awesome video! Thanks Rick!

  • @FishKungfu
    @FishKungfu 2 месяца назад +1

    This is fantastic! I followed Pierre's channel.

  • @controlledburst
    @controlledburst 2 месяца назад +4

    I remember the vid of Ricks boy doing this. That vid is when I discovered the channel. Amazing

  • @franciscocatalan8513
    @franciscocatalan8513 2 месяца назад

    Great video!
    I dont have perfect Pitch, but somehow I also remember the tones halfstep.
    I used to play 100 years old piano as a kid, and always thought that was the reason that happen to me. Thanks Rick for all the amazing Interviews! Hope you come one again to Berlin!

  • @BlindGordie
    @BlindGordie 2 месяца назад +3

    Hi. Love the channel! First of all, I also have perfect pitch and I've been blind since birth. Like your friend, mine goes off too when I get sick and usually the lower notes that go wonky on me so, if I hear a base note below the first octave Like an a, or a bee flat or a really defined note in a song, it sounds much lower than actually is. Otherwise, I pitch is fine and I am also amusician and the only one in my family with perfect pitch, or any musical ability. Keep up the great work and thanks for everything you do on both channels.

  • @johnnyeaton
    @johnnyeaton 2 месяца назад +1

    It's videos like these that get me curious about theory. I've never dived into it much, and pretty much rely on my ear to tell me what's going on, but I dig this nerdy stuff. :)

  • @EddieG1888
    @EddieG1888 2 месяца назад +4

    I'm exactly the same as Pierre in how he hears certain notes and chords, and how he ascertains what he's hearing. But rather than being trained on piano or in jazz lessons, I trained my ear as a kid subconsciously because my mum used to have Radio 1 on all the time, and they used JAM Creative Productions to make their jingles for them. I was fascinated by how one voice sounded like four or five, and I would sit and work out what the notes were that they would begin a section on and follow one of the intervals to see how it worked against the others, how it would push one of the other parts to go to a note slightly outside of what the "melody" was they were singing because it fit the others, and how individual parts would work to make chords like major 7ths or augmented and diminished chords.

  • @fernsehdesign
    @fernsehdesign 2 месяца назад +5

    can we appreciate how good the synth-piano sounded in direct comparison…🖖🏽🍀

  • @luckymeyer1014
    @luckymeyer1014 2 месяца назад +1

    Love this❤ thank you very much....

  • @Exemplar9
    @Exemplar9 2 месяца назад +1

    Loved this! Would be so cool next time to split the screen so we can see both keyboards in the same orientation, and all four hands at once!

  • @tymeryder7264
    @tymeryder7264 2 месяца назад

    Fascinating! another interesting video.

  • @xanowner123
    @xanowner123 2 месяца назад

    Hi Rick. New to your channel. I suppose I have been ghosting you but I finally subscribed. Love your content. Little about me, I am 57 years old and finally decided to get over my fears of failure and bought a takamine, epiphone dove and a fender telecaster fmt hh . I am still catching up on your videos, so if I missed this please forgive me. I would love to see an episode about under rated country players like Steve Warnier, Jerry Reed , Don Rich and others. Thanks for your time and I am happy to have found you.
    All the best 👍

  • @universalmeditation8631
    @universalmeditation8631 2 месяца назад +3

    Derek Paravicini is my favorite perfect pitch player and the 20,000+ songs he can recall at the drop of a hat! And only needs to hear it once! ❤

  • @davidfleuchaus
    @davidfleuchaus 2 месяца назад +4

    I found Pierre a bunch years ago. I was super impressed with a transcription and performance he did. Years later his curated book on Lyle came out. I’m really glad the world now has multiple opportunities to appreciate his contributions to this important music.

  • @rileyjackfansmithandjones8238
    @rileyjackfansmithandjones8238 2 месяца назад

    Absolute Fascination! I have the Ear to hear the "Haunting Notes" but no Vocabulary to explain why i find Music so Satisfying......across all Genres....Classic, Jazz, Rock, Pop, Country, and to a lesser Degree R&B and Rap?, and Swing, Big Band, ShowTunes, and Timeless American Standards.....all make Lyrical Sense to my Untrained Ear.
    Thanks Rick........there must be Rhyme for the Reason!

  • @Charlie-Oooooo
    @Charlie-Oooooo 2 месяца назад

    ❤ This was awesome guys! Made me think - how bout a quick short return of "the Dylan"! ;-) Would love to see those golden ears in action again and also maybe see where he's at musically, or whatever.

  • @JonnyBoyOfficial
    @JonnyBoyOfficial 2 месяца назад +1

    It's awesome learning more about what I have. Thank you for this video, Rick!

  • @JohnVC
    @JohnVC 2 месяца назад

    Great study Rick, thanks

  • @pamr4040
    @pamr4040 2 месяца назад

    This was really wonderful!! ❤🎵🎶❤

  • @Zerofluffsgiven
    @Zerofluffsgiven 2 месяца назад

    Very cool. I've never understood the concept of perfect pitch but now it makes perfect… sense! 🎉

  • @sundarlimbu150
    @sundarlimbu150 2 месяца назад

    Awesome Personals......Mindblowing.. Best wishes..........

  • @Frank-nKansas
    @Frank-nKansas 2 месяца назад +2

    Amazing that some people have this talent.

  • @Zack-Hates-Youtube
    @Zack-Hates-Youtube 2 месяца назад +3

    Subbed to his channel. Seems like a really cool dude. Thanks rick!

    • @sherissetheafropunkentrepr3127
      @sherissetheafropunkentrepr3127 2 месяца назад +2

      He’s a very cool dude. I play in a wedding band with him and we have so much fun cuz we hear the same type of jazz reharms of pop tunes. He throws in very tasty stuff and I’m just trying to keep up With his ears. 🤘🏾

  • @mjmcnult
    @mjmcnult 2 месяца назад +1

    This is such a genius music channel. I've been listening to and playing music (guitar, piano, voice) for nearly sixty years and I still learn something new almost everytime I watch a video here.

  • @Indibluu
    @Indibluu Месяц назад

    the title and Video Idea catched me pls more Videos Like this 🎉

  • @danieldavismusic
    @danieldavismusic 2 месяца назад

    This is a great depiction of absolute pitch. Would love to have been able to articulate this ability this well growing up.

  • @DusanPavlicek78
    @DusanPavlicek78 2 месяца назад

    This was fascinating and very illuminating.

  • @JohnCaddell
    @JohnCaddell 2 месяца назад

    Thanks for having Pierre on. I love his Lyle songbook even though I can't play a lick of piano. I try to channel Marc Johnson or Bill Frisell on those tunes.

  • @joelance
    @joelance 2 месяца назад

    I’m glad I’m not alone in hearing pitches just a little flat in my head. I also don’t have the jazz “vocabulary” to draw on, so some of the chords are more difficult for me to get right away. Great video on a topic I have thought a lot about.

  • @NotFinancialAdviceRG
    @NotFinancialAdviceRG 2 месяца назад

    Super interesting to watch and humbling at the same time.

  • @davidpapendorf6764
    @davidpapendorf6764 2 месяца назад

    Very interesting. A truly astounding gift which has always amazed me.

  • @fuel20
    @fuel20 2 месяца назад

    I watched your greatest sounding albums video last year and I became a big fan of Gino Vannelli because of that video. I'd like to see you interview him someday.

  • @johnpeeler2733
    @johnpeeler2733 2 месяца назад

    I say this and mean is it the absolute best possible way. You guys are musical FREAKS and I love it. ❤

  • @sevennofficial
    @sevennofficial 2 месяца назад +1

    Those Event 20/20s back there. Best of the best !

  • @angelabell7182
    @angelabell7182 2 месяца назад

    Congratulations You are cool. That is why your channel is still flying. I really liked your. Michael Beinhorn interview. THANK God grunge came along. I switched to all R and B during the hair metal phase

  • @sharxboy
    @sharxboy 2 месяца назад

    I've never been a musician, nor do I have any real musical knowledge, but I find your channel fascinating. I tend to understand what you are saying even though I'm not technically literate. Thanks for the vids!

  • @ac27934
    @ac27934 2 месяца назад +1

    I was so looking forward to hearing Pierre's thoughts on how he experienced this and thinks about this, but then it just turned into an extended remix of the original party trick that made me want to learn more of his experience.

  • @irishpsalteri
    @irishpsalteri 2 месяца назад

    Enjoyed this.

  • @RichSpencer-tl6or
    @RichSpencer-tl6or 2 месяца назад

    Thank you Rick and friends... Reminds me of the theme song to Little House on the Prairie 🎵🎶

  • @catholicstance9661
    @catholicstance9661 2 месяца назад

    Amazing!

  • @SuperLocrian
    @SuperLocrian 2 месяца назад

    Thanks Rick! Thanks Pierre - extremely interesting!!

  • @justinkump3092
    @justinkump3092 2 месяца назад

    I'm still learning, but was trying to sing the root notes within those chords-
    A tutorial in that realm with explanation and demonstration, would certainly be appreciated
    Thanks for all that you do, I've absorbed a lot

  • @bshot_slays6851
    @bshot_slays6851 19 дней назад

    i related/learned alot from this ty

  • @nathanielbarry
    @nathanielbarry 2 месяца назад +1

    You are approaching 4 million subscribers RB!

  • @fullscanproductions
    @fullscanproductions 2 месяца назад

    Another great video Rick. At 0:31 you mentioned the octave. I don't have perfect pitch, but the octave thing sure gives me fits.

  • @johngilligan7336
    @johngilligan7336 2 месяца назад

    Love this so much

  • @john3892
    @john3892 2 месяца назад

    Very interesting video. Good topic to explore.

  • @douglasweston126
    @douglasweston126 2 месяца назад

    WOW - that is a talent. Amazing !!

  • @Jkdrs
    @Jkdrs 2 месяца назад

    Great video!
    It would be interesting to see if there's any difference if chords were played from top to bottom or that the notes in the middle are accented. Like how much the fact that we've learned to hear chords' very ends clearly helps.

  • @SGPriv227
    @SGPriv227 2 месяца назад

    I’ve never seen this angle of ricks studio before. I love the sabbath poster

  • @tylermcleod9964
    @tylermcleod9964 2 месяца назад

    Rick! You're killing it man! Please interview MORAY PRINGLE!!

  • @americasfirstmobiledrive-i305
    @americasfirstmobiledrive-i305 2 месяца назад

    NICE JOB RICK...PAY IT FORWARD!

  • @997steve
    @997steve 2 месяца назад

    Wow, really insightful.

  • @kelownapianoconsult5354
    @kelownapianoconsult5354 2 месяца назад

    Rick - those of use who have it, were born with it. I remember my piano teacher at age nine- she told me that I could hear what the keys were - and I said, “well, doesn’t everybody?” Apparently not. Anyway, kudos to Pierre for the amazing Lyle Mays stuff. I just performed the Highland Aire with one of my talented students! Love your channel.