@@maxgoldstein6309 who cares, if you spend 20-40 grand on a piano. I aint lettin anyone touch it without washing their hands, let alone write on it with sharpie
I can do the same thing. Having perfect pitch is not cool. It’s the worst thing ever. Cos every time you hear any sort of tone, you hear it as a note. Ambulance siren, school bell, car horn or even something as small as the different pitches in a keyboard when typing.
No because it comes off with a dry erase marker and the eraser for it draw over it with a dry erase then you can erase it because it wets the ink or just simply use rubbing alcohol there's many different ways to get sharpie off of those keys don't even complain
@@semjeunen3052 hold on so you have no idea that you can get sharpie off of stuff like piano keys anything that is a smooth surface it can be removed from anything non-porous like a damn igneous rock you can get it off of granite you can get it off of literally everything except for surfaces that pull in the moisture I mean literally come on guy you're probably 20 30 years old if not at the youngest like 15 this was something I was taught back in third grade I mean seriously come on it is literally effortless to get sharpie off of a key
@@whyme9501 never needed to erase sharpie from anything yet and never learned it in school so that explains why i didnt know it. It sounds logical but I just didn't think of it. Thanks for the information.
@@grogonator5485 why do you think people make a lot of episodes instead of one? So you can view the first episode while they’re working on the second. If they make all in one it will take a lot of time.
@@FirstnameLastname-uo3yu im not talking about those most of the videos i see people make part 2s even though they can clearly make it into one episode
Perfect pitch is literally impossible without already knowing music/frequencies which means you can’t be born with it. You can’t hear a sound and go “oh that’s an A” or “yeah that’s around 440 hertz” without having already established what those are. If someone plays music enough, especially in their developmental stages, they can pick up the ability to determine what note something is but it still requires some practice/a good memory
Well.. No. Most people with perfect pitch are born with it. Charlie Puth was born with perfect pitch and he described it as something always feeling a little off, like I could tell what something was or when people were talking to him he would hear more in his minds ears. Then when he started learning music he could put a name to those sounds. It's actually the opposite really. Past a certain age (really young) you can't learn perfect pitch, you can adapt really good relative pitch but that's about it.
Of course one wouldn’t pop out his mother’s womb and say “That’s a G!” Someone with perfect pitch may first make connections between songs and everyday sounds. *chair moves* “Oh! That’s superman theme!” as an example. If that person learns that that pitch, the starting note of the superman theme is G (or C if you recall the main part), then he may be able to trace that connection in either direction. With music training, if he is asked to produce a G, then he can think of the superman pitch. If he hears a pitch, he can think “Superman. G!” At its essence, perfect pitch is a group of connections that allows one to replicate and identify a particular note (I don’t say pitch because that is supplemented by musical training). It’s a sort of memory established sometimes through a ton of input, exposure to many sounds and combinations sounds in the form of music. I think that perfect pitch can only be learned to a near innate degree at a young age because such kids have super neuroplastic brains capable of establishing the connections needed to replicate and identify pitches essentially instantly. Perfect pitch can be learned by someone a bit older, but if only because of their greater experience or rather the age of their connections, and there are resources on youtube and elsewhere online that support this, people who were exposed to many different types of music, given many and various input, who developed those connections at a young age, who developed perfect pitch early in their lives can identify notes more quickly than those who learned the skill later in their lives. TL;DR: Yes, it is not an innate ability, but it is best developed early in life. While one still may not know exactly what notes are and to which pitches they correspond, musical training will clear that up, but those early perfect pitchers would be more adept than late perfect pitchers given similar training.
the correct term is actually absolute pitch, and there's many different varieties of it. there's absolute pitch, which you're born with or learn at a very young age like jacob collier or charlie puth. then there's quasi absolute pitch, which is the familiarity of learning a pitch over a long time due to how much it's played (this is what you're learning). it's usually common for clarinet players, since it's learned easiest through the distinct timbre of specific instruments. then there's relative pitch, where you moreso focus on the relationship between notes rather than identifying the notes themselves. then there's the untrained ear, where everything is foreign. all of these are learnable except for absolute pitch. you should check out adam neely's video on it, it's a really good vid with lots of interesting points.
I would say I have absolute pitch because I’ve been able to do this since i started playin music but I wouldn’t say in perfect in it because I’m only able to do it with songs that I listen frequently or song I know pretty well (I’m saying this for when I play piano or guitar)
@Frans Jurin, Åk 8 instruments are private things, almost sacred-ish to those who play for hundreds of hours on them, not to mention they’re very expensive. One simply does not desecrate their instrument like that.
If I’ve practiced and performed a piano piece, or in a choir, I can nearly always start it in the right pitch without a reference. If you’ve sung in choirs or played in bands, there’s an entire repertoire that you may be able to start on the right note, unprompted.
I only played piano for a year as a kid ig and I'm actually the exact opposite like the teacher was amazed of my stupid perfect pitch like I can play by ear a whole fukin piece in 3 minutes kinda idk it's just my brain who is like that since a kid help
Quick story: so when I was in 7th grade I made it into varsity and mixed choir and my teacher would always ask me to set the key of what we where singing. I had no idea why until I asked and she said I had perfect pitch. I eventually lost it because I kinda stopped singing and dropped out of choir
@@_starlight_614 yeh but the guy in the vid said that if ur over the age of 3 ( which we are ) then you can’t learn it but we probably can it’ll just take a lot of time tho
You CAN learn this skill after the age of three, you just need to be constantly invested in music wether it be with vocalization or maybe playing guitar or piano. It ends up not being “perfect pitch” but perfect relative pitch which is as close to the same thing as you can get.
Another artist who has a perfect pitch is kpop group ENHYPEN’s oldest member Heeseung. He can even listen to multiple chords at the same time and would be able to tell the exact once’s. He said he discovered his talent when he heard his dad fart one day and it was a re
I was born without it. I wasn’t at all involved without music until I was 11. I started to remember random pitches in random songs and eventually, 2years later I have successfully developed perfect pitch. Nothing is impossible, Tyler.
I've been playing Trombone for a little over 5 years now and I can just hear concert b flat with A4 at 442 hz instead of 440 which is our tuning note. So it's pretty easy to just sing from b flat to the note I hear in my mind.
This is the only guy we can truly call built different Ok ik this is irritating but never got 200 likes and I just figured out thanks to a hate comment to this guy lmfao ight bye
No, he isn’t. He doesn’t do half of the things he says he does, he does not do the full workouts, he’s an entertainer, he makes videos you guys want to see regardless if he did the thing or not.
@@blob4345 the man has a good bod but he is not built different, not nearly close to his max potential. His routines are just too unreasonable. He had so many different projects going at once it just doesn’t seem reasonable to carry those out. I mean he listened to a song for 6 months before he posted that video? Nah. And his morning routine, 1000 jumping jacks, multiple hundred pushups, a morning run, then eat and to the gym, and he said he doesn’t take rest days. That is unreasonable at times
@@CowShagger69 yep, I am composing for music exams so I have learned to hear the different pitches, though it is a little difficult. It takes lots of practice.
@@W3lol1 i know. Just a trained ear. I was in band and the people who had perfect pitch said they sometimes wish they could turn it off, because if someone even talked in an off pitch they could hear it and it would be annoying
Oh man.. this is pretty interesting to me as a trained musician with a good ear. It takes little to no effort for me to hear a song, instrumentation, and melodies all at once as if it's playing in my head and recall it in a snap. Really cool to think about the process of "printing" a song to your memory when you don't have the initial skill to do it.. humans are crazy.
Fun fact: my piano teach has absolute/perfect pitch, he says that its great for theory and horrible for pieces as you dont hear the melody instead you hear the individual notes. He had to learn how to block out his perfect pitch
Don’t buy that, sorry. Perfect pitch people are extremely musical. It’s not something you magically develop. You develop it at a young age because you’re exposed to so much music and you continually train. If you had perfect pitch, you’d know it’s unusual because you’d practice music with others.
@@Aledharris I did develop it at a young age, I’ve had it my whole life, I said I FOUND OUT that it wasn’t normal, and also I have a very musical life, I’m a singer and my dad is a violinist, and I play a shit ton of instruments
@@Ch10eeBloom Yeah, so how didn’t you realise it was normal? You play with other people and they can’t do what you do. It’s the kind of thing that would be obvious.
@@Aledharris that’s because I was young, and I sang with my dad, and he only noticed when I was in about 6th or 7th grade. And plus, it isn’t very obvious- it’s just singing the right key of a song without having to be given the key. Like I could sing any song that I know and start off with the right note without the back track or anything.
@@Ch10eeBloom fair enough. I don’t know you. To me it sounds like someone saying “I could run faster than any of my friends but I didn’t realise until I was a teenager.”
Someone in my school band had perfect pitch and it was super cool. They didn’t have much trouble learning songs for us to play and usually didn’t even use sheet music but just watched RUclips videos.
If he’s using C as a reference then it is just true pitch then relative pitch to calculate the note. For perfect pitch there is no need for a reference, whether the reference is memorized or not
You can learn perfect pitch at any age. It is however much easier to learn by the age of 7, not 3 as stated in this short. It actually coincides with the ages we typically learn our native language, specifically the first 1,000 words.
My dad is a amateur musician, but boy does he knows things, thanks to him, I developed perfect pitch through the years of singing and practicing guitar and piano, I actually didn't knew that until six years ago, when I was 13, I heard and sang a perfect C on a school's choir rehearsal
Start with a g note, A basic clef circles it on sheet music. Also, My Chemical Romance fans never forget it! Found it on a piano and was able to teach myself some songs
Some people are born with perfect pitch, its not really a talent if it was given to you. But you can also defenitely learn perfect pitch overtime as well, its not impossible but its hard
i know G, D, A, and E as a violinist off the top of my head but i always start with A. from there i can get any other note. so i don’t have perfect pitch but i can get there through relative pitch pretty fast.
Having perfect pitch is way more common than that. Also, in spite of getting harder over the years, it is still possible to develop this ability over the years when added musical experience.
You can learn it if your over the age of 3, i started piano when i was 4 and I've been doing it for almost 11 years now, you can definatly learn perfect pitch it's just very difficult
This is actually kinda easy to learn, learn a song that starts one each note, and play the loving hell out of it until hearing that note causes you to play the rest of the song in ur head, here’s the list I used: C: heart and soul C#: Wait for it (from the Hamilton soundtrack) D: pirates of the Caribbean theme Eb: Demons (imagine dragons) E: seven nation army F: blinding lights F#: take on me G: SAD! (Xxxtentacion) Ab: moonlight sonata A: dear theodosia (Hamilton soundtrack) Bb: Tokyo drift B: better off alone (alice deejay) There you go There are some other examples you can use obviously, like I see a lot of people saying they memorized “G” from welcome to the black parade, but I never had an emo phase so everyone can use different songs for different notes
As a band student and someone that has memorized the G note because of a certain band breaking up… yeah, I get asked about perfect pitch a lot, and when someone pulls out a tri tone and expects me to say a note, it gets frustrating, lol
I can actually almost tell u any note of any sound u present to me. I grew up around music we would almost always have it playing in my house so I’ve come to learn it like a second language 🥰🥰😁
Watching you write with a sharpie on a grand piano blasted my sould into another dimension
You can literally rub it off, it's not some religious monument.
@@maxgoldstein6309 well go ahead and say that after buying a grand piano.
@@lazyshakah5625 Talk to me after you learn about alcohol lol
@@maxgoldstein6309 who cares, if you spend 20-40 grand on a piano. I aint lettin anyone touch it without washing their hands, let alone write on it with sharpie
@@lazyshakah5625 Ok
Him: writing on the keys
Pianists: why are we still here... just to suffer
I agree
Agree
Bruh bignners do that
@@NUKEBOI and your spelling is bignner level lol
I was just gonna comment that same thing
My dad farts and my brother can tell him exactly what note/pitch his fart was. If that’s not talent I don’t know what is
I can do the same thing. Having perfect pitch is not cool. It’s the worst thing ever. Cos every time you hear any sort of tone, you hear it as a note. Ambulance siren, school bell, car horn or even something as small as the different pitches in a keyboard when typing.
@@ripbozo2991 But like, do you just see the note G in front of you or do you think of it automatically? How can I visualize this?
This made me laugh
@@simianto9957 its like when you see the color red, you know that its red. Absolute pitch the same
@@simianto9957 no it's like hearing a voice of someone you know and you don't see them, bit you still can tell who it is.
Is no one gonna talk about how he wrote sharpie on HIS PIANO
A little bit of alcohol normally wipes it straight off
Dude I gasped as I saw him do it. But if its easily wiped of I guess its ok.
No because it comes off with a dry erase marker and the eraser for it draw over it with a dry erase then you can erase it because it wets the ink or just simply use rubbing alcohol there's many different ways to get sharpie off of those keys don't even complain
@@semjeunen3052 hold on so you have no idea that you can get sharpie off of stuff like piano keys anything that is a smooth surface it can be removed from anything non-porous like a damn igneous rock you can get it off of granite you can get it off of literally everything except for surfaces that pull in the moisture I mean literally come on guy you're probably 20 30 years old if not at the youngest like 15 this was something I was taught back in third grade I mean seriously come on it is literally effortless to get sharpie off of a key
@@whyme9501 never needed to erase sharpie from anything yet and never learned it in school so that explains why i didnt know it. It sounds logical but I just didn't think of it. Thanks for the information.
“Part 2 is out so you can see where I am”
*No No I Don’t think I will*
I hate how people make part 2s and crap
@@grogonator5485 why do you think people make a lot of episodes instead of one? So you can view the first episode while they’re working on the second. If they make all in one it will take a lot of time.
@@FirstnameLastname-uo3yu im not talking about those most of the videos i see people make part 2s even though they can clearly make it into one episode
@@grogonator5485 well its probably to you to visit their TikTok page i guess
it feels like they are scamming us out of our time
I have perfect pitch but only with the note “g”
**welcome to the black parade intensifies**
Haha thats what i said lol
SJEJDJDJ NOT THE MCR REFERENCE
when i was a young boy
@@ecikitten my father took me into the city
@@elluh2 to see a marching band
Perfect pitch is literally impossible without already knowing music/frequencies which means you can’t be born with it. You can’t hear a sound and go “oh that’s an A” or “yeah that’s around 440 hertz” without having already established what those are. If someone plays music enough, especially in their developmental stages, they can pick up the ability to determine what note something is but it still requires some practice/a good memory
Thank you. Some my friends and I are learning It but it is a little difficult. It is a great help in composing and performing.
Well.. No. Most people with perfect pitch are born with it. Charlie Puth was born with perfect pitch and he described it as something always feeling a little off, like I could tell what something was or when people were talking to him he would hear more in his minds ears. Then when he started learning music he could put a name to those sounds. It's actually the opposite really. Past a certain age (really young) you can't learn perfect pitch, you can adapt really good relative pitch but that's about it.
Of course one wouldn’t pop out his mother’s womb and say “That’s a G!” Someone with perfect pitch may first make connections between songs and everyday sounds. *chair moves* “Oh! That’s superman theme!” as an example.
If that person learns that that pitch, the starting note of the superman theme is G (or C if you recall the main part), then he may be able to trace that connection in either direction. With music training, if he is asked to produce a G, then he can think of the superman pitch. If he hears a pitch, he can think “Superman. G!”
At its essence, perfect pitch is a group of connections that allows one to replicate and identify a particular note (I don’t say pitch because that is supplemented by musical training). It’s a sort of memory established sometimes through a ton of input, exposure to many sounds and combinations sounds in the form of music.
I think that perfect pitch can only be learned to a near innate degree at a young age because such kids have super neuroplastic brains capable of establishing the connections needed to replicate and identify pitches essentially instantly.
Perfect pitch can be learned by someone a bit older, but if only because of their greater experience or rather the age of their connections, and there are resources on youtube and elsewhere online that support this, people who were exposed to many different types of music, given many and various input, who developed those connections at a young age, who developed perfect pitch early in their lives can identify notes more quickly than those who learned the skill later in their lives.
TL;DR:
Yes, it is not an innate ability, but it is best developed early in life. While one still may not know exactly what notes are and to which pitches they correspond, musical training will clear that up, but those early perfect pitchers would be more adept than late perfect pitchers given similar training.
Small children with perfect pitch often associate notes with songs like how the video suggests.
@@crookbrother Yep
Challenge: "Do something that's impossible"
Him: "That's impossible!"
Me: "yup."
@Spike- same, I love having it it really impresses people
the correct term is actually absolute pitch, and there's many different varieties of it. there's absolute pitch, which you're born with or learn at a very young age like jacob collier or charlie puth. then there's quasi absolute pitch, which is the familiarity of learning a pitch over a long time due to how much it's played (this is what you're learning). it's usually common for clarinet players, since it's learned easiest through the distinct timbre of specific instruments. then there's relative pitch, where you moreso focus on the relationship between notes rather than identifying the notes themselves. then there's the untrained ear, where everything is foreign. all of these are learnable except for absolute pitch. you should check out adam neely's video on it, it's a really good vid with lots of interesting points.
Thank you, very cool
I would say I have absolute pitch because I’ve been able to do this since i started playin music but I wouldn’t say in perfect in it because I’m only able to do it with songs that I listen frequently or song I know pretty well (I’m saying this for when I play piano or guitar)
There’s also perfect pitch where you can tell exactly how sharp or flat a note is
So this is why my music teacher loved my in middle school
Thanks, that's really cool
me, with perfect pitch: *i n t e r e s t i n g*
Same lol
Same here
You will always know when there is someone with perfect pitch around because they will always tell you one way or another
Make sure to learn relative pitch too because everyone loses perfect pitch after some time
@SMILE am trying to train myself but not as actively, people with it tend to tell you tho xd
I physically cringed when he wrote in Sharpie on the piano
At least put tape over it, but even then I would still cringe
when I saw that, I immediately scrolled down and looked for this comment
I KNOWWW
@Frans Jurin, Åk 8 instruments are private things, almost sacred-ish to those who play for hundreds of hours on them, not to mention they’re very expensive. One simply does not desecrate their instrument like that.
@@nuloom their fault, who cares
If I’ve practiced and performed a piano piece, or in a choir, I can nearly always start it in the right pitch without a reference. If you’ve sung in choirs or played in bands, there’s an entire repertoire that you may be able to start on the right note, unprompted.
I only played piano for a year as a kid ig and I'm actually the exact opposite like the teacher was amazed of my stupid perfect pitch like I can play by ear a whole fukin piece in 3 minutes kinda idk it's just my brain who is like that since a kid help
Quick story: so when I was in 7th grade I made it into varsity and mixed choir and my teacher would always ask me to set the key of what we where singing. I had no idea why until I asked and she said I had perfect pitch. I eventually lost it because I kinda stopped singing and dropped out of choir
If you can lose it that means you can learn it.
@@HelloThere..... yeah but I’m lazy lol
@@_starlight_614 yeh but the guy in the vid said that if ur over the age of 3 ( which we are ) then you can’t learn it but we probably can it’ll just take a lot of time tho
@@HelloThere..... hi other James
it’s not really something you can just lose
"Do something impossible"
Heeseung: my dad farted and it was sol (g)
You CAN learn this skill after the age of three, you just need to be constantly invested in music wether it be with vocalization or maybe playing guitar or piano. It ends up not being “perfect pitch” but perfect relative pitch which is as close to the same thing as you can get.
Yeah and you need to know about music before learning it.
True pitch is basically a learned version of PP. Go check out Saxlogic’s channel
This guy has learned so many things over the years, respect.
Another artist who has a perfect pitch is kpop group ENHYPEN’s oldest member Heeseung. He can even listen to multiple chords at the same time and would be able to tell the exact once’s. He said he discovered his talent when he heard his dad fart one day and it was a re
OMG YESSSSSSS PLS ENGENES I LOVE THAT YOU BRING THEM HEREE 😭😭
Thank you for mentioning me dear 🤍
ok
Slot of musicians have it
BAHAHAHHAHAHGHAHAHAHAHAHA WHAT IS THIS
I was born without it. I wasn’t at all involved without music until I was 11. I started to remember random pitches in random songs and eventually, 2years later I have successfully developed perfect pitch. Nothing is impossible, Tyler.
My old choir teacher had perfect pitch. She was amazing, it's always a bitter sweet to see teachers retire.
Your dog is fricking cuteeee
I've been playing Trombone for a little over 5 years now and I can just hear concert b flat with A4 at 442 hz instead of 440 which is our tuning note. So it's pretty easy to just sing from b flat to the note I hear in my mind.
Dude major respect for listening to fun.
This is the only guy we can truly call built different
Ok ik this is irritating but never got 200 likes and I just figured out thanks to a hate comment to this guy lmfao ight bye
He is
No, he isn’t. He doesn’t do half of the things he says he does, he does not do the full workouts, he’s an entertainer, he makes videos you guys want to see regardless if he did the thing or not.
@@Antony.Martinez prettyyy sure he does, he shows proof on some of his vids aswell
@@Antony.Martinez ur just mad he's stronk and built diff 😒
@@blob4345 the man has a good bod but he is not built different, not nearly close to his max potential. His routines are just too unreasonable. He had so many different projects going at once it just doesn’t seem reasonable to carry those out. I mean he listened to a song for 6 months before he posted that video? Nah. And his morning routine, 1000 jumping jacks, multiple hundred pushups, a morning run, then eat and to the gym, and he said he doesn’t take rest days. That is unreasonable at times
Remember he did nothing because nothing is impossible! 🤜🏻🤛🏻❤️
Bruh just learn an instrument, then you can see how much having perfect pitch ISNT a flex-
I agree. Also it’s mindless to train yourself to have perfect pitch. You get a feel for it by sight reading and writing music.
@@CowShagger69 yep, I am composing for music exams so I have learned to hear the different pitches, though it is a little difficult. It takes lots of practice.
Having perfect pitch usually just makes you the most annoying musician im the room lmao 😂
@@Terra654 yep, especially when learning because they keep pointing out the most subtle changes which can stress others
But being famous because of it is a flex? 🤔
My brother has perfect pitch. The perfect pitch that you can learn isn’t actually the same, some people consider it better and some consider it worse.
Charlie: ThaTs ActUaLly a G
Eddy: *am* *I* *a* *joke* *to* *you* ?
Ha ha😐
@@Teenfrmpg doesn't mean your funny either
@@weirdopatato9286 Never said I was
Twoset
AAA TWOSET
Ur videos are so helpful
"Do something impossible"
If you achieve something, its not impossible just difficult
It's not absolute pitch he gained tho
@@W3lol1 i know. Just a trained ear. I was in band and the people who had perfect pitch said they sometimes wish they could turn it off, because if someone even talked in an off pitch they could hear it and it would be annoying
I watch all your vids your my favourite inspiring youtuber
Oh man.. this is pretty interesting to me as a trained musician with a good ear. It takes little to no effort for me to hear a song, instrumentation, and melodies all at once as if it's playing in my head and recall it in a snap. Really cool to think about the process of "printing" a song to your memory when you don't have the initial skill to do it.. humans are crazy.
You are so dedicated to your RUclips channel, you deserve so many subscribers.
imagine not being part of the perfect pitch gang
Lmao couldn’t imagine
imagine even having perfect pitch 😩
Song name?
@@genericahhname lmao, what are you talking ablut
@@eivindsorteberg2460 the background music in between
Do a video helping poor & homeless people❤Let's spread some love🙂
“do something impossible”
*does something completely possible*
It's actually impossible
@@malmosma2301 Then how'd he do it?
i love that it was “some nights.” it’s one of my favorites 🤩
sameee Nate Ruess is the best
Him taking six months memorizing the C note:
*Me remembering the G note from my emo stage* :
I was looking for this comment
I don’t get it is this a Rick and morty reference?
@@Humiliated1234 No, it's a reference to a My Chemical Romance song
Some nights by fun is literally one of the best songs
As a person with perfect pitch, I always thought everyone had it until last year 💀
charlie is like my second fav artist aaaaa (also fyi im also learning perfect pitch and its coming along great)
These “doing things with your mind” and “impossible” stuff makes no sense to me 🤣 he’s so good 👌
Yup that's how I learned it, but with every single note. Keep going man ! My pitch is not perfect but it is still getting better.
Fun fact: my piano teach has absolute/perfect pitch, he says that its great for theory and horrible for pieces as you dont hear the melody instead you hear the individual notes. He had to learn how to block out his perfect pitch
Can we talk about his dog tho? ITS SO FLIPPING CUTE
“Part two is out so you can see where I am”
Yeah… this ain’t TikTok, no thanks
Literally every post is from tiktok so you might as well say you have tiktok
is no one talking about the song he played as a reference? seriously an underrated band
*"If i seen a clip once, i would never seek for the second"* -me
Some nights is one of those songs you can’t get enough of
I have perfect pitch and I only found out it was normal like a few years ago lol, I didn’t know it was so rare 😳
Don’t buy that, sorry. Perfect pitch people are extremely musical. It’s not something you magically develop. You develop it at a young age because you’re exposed to so much music and you continually train.
If you had perfect pitch, you’d know it’s unusual because you’d practice music with others.
@@Aledharris I did develop it at a young age, I’ve had it my whole life, I said I FOUND OUT that it wasn’t normal, and also I have a very musical life, I’m a singer and my dad is a violinist, and I play a shit ton of instruments
@@Ch10eeBloom Yeah, so how didn’t you realise it was normal?
You play with other people and they can’t do what you do. It’s the kind of thing that would be obvious.
@@Aledharris that’s because I was young, and I sang with my dad, and he only noticed when I was in about 6th or 7th grade. And plus, it isn’t very obvious- it’s just singing the right key of a song without having to be given the key. Like I could sing any song that I know and start off with the right note without the back track or anything.
@@Ch10eeBloom fair enough. I don’t know you.
To me it sounds like someone saying “I could run faster than any of my friends but I didn’t realise until I was a teenager.”
Someone in my school band had perfect pitch and it was super cool. They didn’t have much trouble learning songs for us to play and usually didn’t even use sheet music but just watched RUclips videos.
If he’s using C as a reference then it is just true pitch then relative pitch to calculate the note. For perfect pitch there is no need for a reference, whether the reference is memorized or not
Wow as a guitarist this would be awesome to learn
Him: all i need to do is memerise one note.
Me: G
I was looking for this comment
Choir instructors: And I took that personally
Fun fact: Heeseung from enhypen found out he had a perfect pitch after knowing that his fathers fart was sol
Ok but that's funny 😂
My uncle used to be able to do this. He would just play any songs he just heard from the tv with any musical instrument nearby, he was so awesome.
Heeseung from enhypen has a naturally perfect pitch and he can recognise many notes at once
You can learn perfect pitch at any age. It is however much easier to learn by the age of 7, not 3 as stated in this short. It actually coincides with the ages we typically learn our native language, specifically the first 1,000 words.
But age of 7, yes, but not later. As an adult, you cannot get PP.
My dad is a amateur musician, but boy does he knows things, thanks to him, I developed perfect pitch through the years of singing and practicing guitar and piano, I actually didn't knew that until six years ago, when I was 13, I heard and sang a perfect C on a school's choir rehearsal
he is gonna go so far in life
"do something impossible? thats impossible! lets do it"
Some nights is a great song too!
i don't have perfect pitch either but sometimes i can just discern notes and find them on an instrument with just intuition
i love this guy
The background music reminded me of the cinema ,goodtimes before corona
Can we talk about how talented this dude is
Him: impossible
Me and a bunch of other pianists: am is joke to you?
As a musician that plays every day it is easy to understand after a while
Nice dude keep it up
You can also develop a type of perfect pitch based of the tone of different notes on instruments!
Just going to say the song you started on was God tier
Simple, you just find c and work up or down through the scale pitches until you find a match, its not instant but it works
I love that song it kinda old but it brings back times
Climb mount evrest plz I’m subscribed and been watching for a long time since I got my phone
Good job man
"Do something impossible? That's impossible!"
Wow👏👏👏
C is a natural note to start on
Start with a g note, A basic clef circles it on sheet music. Also, My Chemical Romance fans never forget it! Found it on a piano and was able to teach myself some songs
I was looking for this comment
Now I am happy that I do have perfect pitch without having to listen to the same song two billion times
Do a realistic painting🎨
Some people are born with perfect pitch, its not really a talent if it was given to you. But you can also defenitely learn perfect pitch overtime as well, its not impossible but its hard
I can recognize every single note. It's the clarinet version though, so if I hear a concert f, I hear a g
Those are the most iconic headphones in history
Are we not gonna mention the amazing song he used for his pitch? Like I’m just sitting there like-
“SOME NIGHTS I STAY UP-“
This man is going to turn himself into superman with all these weird skill/fitness based challenges
Ive been laughing for 30 mins now at the "do sth impossible? Thats impossible. "
i know G, D, A, and E as a violinist off the top of my head but i always start with A. from there i can get any other note. so i don’t have perfect pitch but i can get there through relative pitch pretty fast.
Having perfect pitch is way more common than that. Also, in spite of getting harder over the years, it is still possible to develop this ability over the years when added musical experience.
He's gon be the perfect human if he continues
I hear songs once and in a few months I can hear the middle, end and beginning on loop for a hole day I cant stop it it just repeats
Eddy from TwoSet:
Well, well, well...
That song is an OG BANGER
You can learn it if your over the age of 3, i started piano when i was 4 and I've been doing it for almost 11 years now, you can definatly learn perfect pitch it's just very difficult
This is actually kinda easy to learn, learn a song that starts one each note, and play the loving hell out of it until hearing that note causes you to play the rest of the song in ur head, here’s the list I used:
C: heart and soul
C#: Wait for it (from the Hamilton soundtrack)
D: pirates of the Caribbean theme
Eb: Demons (imagine dragons)
E: seven nation army
F: blinding lights
F#: take on me
G: SAD! (Xxxtentacion)
Ab: moonlight sonata
A: dear theodosia (Hamilton soundtrack)
Bb: Tokyo drift
B: better off alone (alice deejay)
There you go
There are some other examples you can use obviously, like I see a lot of people saying they memorized “G” from welcome to the black parade, but I never had an emo phase so everyone can use different songs for different notes
That song is litteraly my favorite song and I know all the lyrics.
I think I would die if I listened to some nights over 10 times.
I love the song but holy cow.
Ultra instinct for musicians
As a band student and someone that has memorized the G note because of a certain band breaking up… yeah, I get asked about perfect pitch a lot, and when someone pulls out a tri tone and expects me to say a note, it gets frustrating, lol
Son when you grow up will you be the savior of the broken the beaten and the damned?
I can actually almost tell u any note of any sound u present to me. I grew up around music we would almost always have it playing in my house so I’ve come to learn it like a second language 🥰🥰😁
I wasn’t aware perfect pitch was that uncommon.
Well now I feel special.