Комментарии •

  • @eulasshirt3457
    @eulasshirt3457 3 года назад +3322

    No one
    Me guesses one note: I think I have perfect pitch

    • @CampbellJTuba
      @CampbellJTuba 3 года назад +53

      I’m pretty sure i have close to perfect pitch because i got 9 right and the one I missed I chose c instead of c#

    • @defalt3260
      @defalt3260 3 года назад +41

      @@CampbellJTuba If you have perfect pitch, guest what note is it:
      *Touches A#* 🧐

    • @sankalpgupta157
      @sankalpgupta157 3 года назад +33

      @@CampbellJTuba I also got c instead of c#
      And other 9 wrong

    • @sankalpgupta157
      @sankalpgupta157 3 года назад +10

      @@defalt3260 umm... Sounds like a G

    • @ipayman5217
      @ipayman5217 3 года назад +2

      You may not have perfect pitch, but you do have vengence ❄🗡

  • @titus2181
    @titus2181 3 года назад +2903

    I feel like I need to understand how to read music before I can determine if I have perfect pitch

    • @thekidasher6429
      @thekidasher6429 3 года назад +65

      Same lol

    • @banmna
      @banmna 3 года назад +211

      yeah we won't know if we have it unless we know how to read music first lol

    • @walnoemispoyt5604
      @walnoemispoyt5604 3 года назад +134

      Actually truth be told you don't need to read music to hear sounds. I am a self taught pianist who can't read music to save my live but I can hear the differences with sound. By looking where your fingers press the keys and you remembering the sounds you can develop your "ear" for music. I do not have perfect pitch but I have developed my ear to a point where it is almost indistinguishable within specific octaves. I couldn't recognize easily the keys on the very low & high octaves but the central octaves I recognized instantly.
      Recognizing pitch requires you to control your mind to listen to a specific sound. I like to use the music studio imagery to convey to you that is what my mind looks like when it is trying to recognise the structure of music and the pitches.
      Summary you can mentally develop your brain to be a music studio for as long as you have imagination, listen to a lot of music and try to control your mind to look for other elements besides the obvious sounds.

    • @smellybonk
      @smellybonk 3 года назад +120

      I swear people say you’re born with it but if I never played music, then how was I supposed to even know the note names to “use” that gene? Same with how I can determine the note names, but I’m not good with chord names because I literally don’t know chord names to begin with, but I could tell you the notes in it

    • @walnoemispoyt5604
      @walnoemispoyt5604 3 года назад +16

      @@smellybonk Even if that person with perfect pitch does not play music they would still hold the ability to differentiate between different frequencies of sound. Being able to name a note by itself does not mean that you have perfect pitch what it is saying is that you subjectively can "sense" the subtle difference between different qualities of sound.
      Here is an example: I can tell you any note on the keyboard between the middle C octave because I am familiar with those sounds. Someone with perfect pitch can also tell you the name and whether if it is sharp or flat by an even finer detail.

  • @eithan20
    @eithan20 3 года назад +327

    "This audio attempts to remove any relative pitch references from your memory"
    *R2-D2 droidspeaking sounds*

  • @catmims1985
    @catmims1985 3 года назад +331

    Me for every note: C

    • @fitri1026
      @fitri1026 2 года назад +4

      Haha same 😩

    • @foresthill8462
      @foresthill8462 2 года назад +4

      Lol, I guessed different notes each time but got them all wrong. Should have guessed C each time and increased my chances

  • @emmanuelcastaneda4811
    @emmanuelcastaneda4811 3 года назад +599

    Heard g# and started playing fantaisie impromptu

  • @ames1714
    @ames1714 2 года назад +485

    I don’t think a lot of you understand perfect/absolute pitch. Perfect pitch, or absolute pitch, is the idea that one can identify any given note without having another note to reference. In other words, they have a long-term memory of notes.
    Relative pitch is the ability to identify notes when given an identified note to reference. E.g., if I play you a C# and tell you it’s C#, and then play you an E, you can identify E by mentally climbing up the scale.
    Absolute pitch is rare. But if you can, you can. Some people are really good at it and can hear and identify notes from stomping your foot or hitting a wall. But not everyone.

    • @blursedvark4973
      @blursedvark4973 2 года назад +5

      Can you train to HAVE perfect pitch, rather than absolute pitch?

    • @jefferylusk2550
      @jefferylusk2550 2 года назад +31

      You can have perfect pitch and not know the notes to identify but you'd have to learn the notes eventually so that you can put a label to what you're doing

    • @HannahJNicdao
      @HannahJNicdao 2 года назад +18

      Is it possible to have “partial” absolute/perfect pitch? I barely have musical training (none since childhood) but have had hints in life that make me wonder. I can sing and identify C D and E from memory 100% accurately with no other context. On tests like this, I can figure out what the note is based on that memory. Though sharps/flats throw me off a bit…

    • @Rickkhry
      @Rickkhry 2 года назад +4

      Aka its about training, like muscle memory but way harder

    • @FredrickTheMoose2007
      @FredrickTheMoose2007 2 года назад +6

      @@blursedvark4973 I'm pretty sure you can train your ears to recognize a specific pitch

  • @HeilJake
    @HeilJake 2 года назад +957

    I don’t exactly have perfect pitch, but I definitely created a state for myself where I can figure it out in under a second usually. I know all the notes by heart and I kind of match them super fast. It’s not like an on the fly thing, but more like a on the thought.

    • @jibicusmaximus4827
      @jibicusmaximus4827 2 года назад +16

      It's new to me and yes, it's bizarre, a combination of things maybe.

    • @jibicusmaximus4827
      @jibicusmaximus4827 2 года назад +51

      Thinking of a song in a particular key helps, like associate each key with a tune, good way to get started on it, was for me at least.

    • @felipepicat9187
      @felipepicat9187 2 года назад

      👍

    • @alexanderprince8032
      @alexanderprince8032 2 года назад +23

      That’s relative pitch

    • @Sarah-nf8kj
      @Sarah-nf8kj 2 года назад +2

      I experience the same with 4 notes that I have memorized (but did not get a perfect score on this test)- I have been told that this is relative pitch!

  • @johnsorensen8622
    @johnsorensen8622 3 года назад +506

    I got 9/10 notes. That first octave g was the one that got me

    • @TheProGamerMC20
      @TheProGamerMC20 3 года назад +11

      same

    • @kingsk0133
      @kingsk0133 2 года назад +187

      the low octave G was not a G, it was A so you're good lol

    • @cracked586
      @cracked586 2 года назад +108

      @@kingsk0133 that’s what I’m saying that shit sounded like A not G

    • @omsiravvel7805
      @omsiravvel7805 2 года назад +7

      Yea no way

    • @turnleftaticeland
      @turnleftaticeland 2 года назад +31

      That’s the only one I missed, I thought it was an A too! But then the actual A1 played and I was like shit, _this_ is obviously the A1. Very weird experience. Must be something to do with the frequencies
      OR! Theory that just occurred to me - did y’all grow up on the piano like I did? A1 is the lowest note on the piano; maybe that’s the lowest pitch we have memorized, and anything below it just sounds like a weird A1 to us?
      (Edit: they’re actually G0/A0 but I’m calling it what the video calls it)

  • @badarchive
    @badarchive 3 года назад +503

    "Do you have perfect pitch?"
    Me: yes
    Me:
    Me: lemme watch this video just to make sure

  • @TJ-ov4ld
    @TJ-ov4ld 2 года назад +362

    I was off by one semi-tone for nearly every single one. I don't have perfect pitch, but I am normally pretty good at identifying notes due to pretty advanced relative pitch, so this experience was definitely really weird to me.

    • @ethanfrancis4527
      @ethanfrancis4527 2 года назад +41

      I was exactly the same
      But for some reason I can always, without fail, identify E

    • @olau5478
      @olau5478 2 года назад +4

      @@ethanfrancis4527 omg same

    • @PirateXandarrr
      @PirateXandarrr 2 года назад +4

      @@ethanfrancis4527 guitar player?

    • @ethanfrancis4527
      @ethanfrancis4527 2 года назад +12

      @@PirateXandarrr Yes, I am. I think playing seven nation army a million times just drilled that E into me

    • @ricofung5371
      @ricofung5371 2 года назад

      Same here!

  • @kexaman
    @kexaman 2 года назад +94

    Here’s my list for references that help with identifying each note (as someone who thinks they have absolute pitch to some extent):
    D - first chord of Killing In The Name / Everlong / any song in Drop D tuning
    D# - first chord of Basket Case
    E - first chord of Take Me Out / Where Is My Mind? / Seven Nation Army
    F - first chord of Smells Like Teen Spirit (3rd chord of In Bloom also helps as a back up)
    F# - first chord of I Bet That You Look Good On The Dancefloor
    G - first chord of Ziggy Stardust / You Shook Me All Night Long
    G# - 3rd chord of Where Is My Mind?
    A - first chord of Highway To Hell / 4th chord of Where Is My Mind
    A# - first chord of In Bloom
    B - the pedal note of the Thunderstruck riff (think the bass note playing beneath it)
    C - first chord of Space Oddity (yes there’s a lot of Bowie songs here)
    C# - 2nd chord of Where Is My Mind?
    Hope that helps anyone trying to train this skill

    • @k1l_o372
      @k1l_o372 Год назад +4

      This would be relative pitch not absolute

    • @MechanicalMarketer253
      @MechanicalMarketer253 Год назад +3

      Lol that’s basically what I do too, but the songs are different.

    • @castellers531
      @castellers531 Год назад +2

      You can learn note A by listening while my guitar gently weeps by the beatles

    • @navi.blueguy3
      @navi.blueguy3 Год назад

      rush E just helps me with E (obviously, what else could it be), and I know C really well

    • @Stormy575
      @Stormy575 Год назад

      ​@@k1l_o372only if you played the chords and guessed from there. Even absolute pitch has to have a reference. As a singer I've had people suspect I may have perfect pitch, but I can't verify it because I don't know where any of the notes lie on the scale. I just sing them as I hear them.

  • @AndresPozosComposer
    @AndresPozosComposer 3 года назад +267

    Your audio to "remove relative pitch from your memory" was useless 100% of the time lol

  • @shmoeg
    @shmoeg 4 года назад +395

    Yeah this thing has wrong notes. I thought I was losing perfect pitch but I think you labeled some wrong.

    • @basketballclips7778
      @basketballclips7778 3 года назад +88

      Nope. I checked this with my keyboard. Everything is right besides number 6 is a not g. That’s it

    • @shmoeg
      @shmoeg 3 года назад +52

      @@basketballclips7778 yes exactly. I thought some were off but I was just hearing overtones

    • @noahb9916
      @noahb9916 3 года назад +7

      I thought note 8 was B, but the video said it was A.

    • @v_anh_b6474
      @v_anh_b6474 3 года назад +1

      @@noahb9916 but it is B, we hear a F# overtone and if it were an A it wouldn't be so clear

    • @generalolive9197
      @generalolive9197 3 года назад +7

      you can lose perfect pitch?

  • @bicycleshelter4818
    @bicycleshelter4818 2 года назад +156

    For people her trying to train you ears, I trained my ears with these songs (they are kind of weird so be prepared) I hope these will help!
    C (first note of the pvz 2 demonstration mini game)
    C# (the third note before the really low part of wet hands)
    D (first note of megalovania)
    Eb (to me it sounded a lot like E which was my first note so I don't really have a song for this one)
    E (start of tetris)
    F (the second part of megalovania)
    F# (this was my hardest note but thanks to someone in the comments jojo's theme is this one now)
    G (first note of motzarts eine kleine nachtmusik)
    Ab (first note of wet hands)
    A (This will be hard to explain but it's the second part of the second part of megalovania, it just sounds like the start of the second part but higher)
    Bb (This one probably won't be too helpful but we played the Bb major scale like every day at the end of 6th grade and like all of 7th grade band so it's kind of just engraved into my head)
    And finally b (the spaming note at the start of somethingunreal's song with only windows sounds)

    • @upbeatboy8354
      @upbeatboy8354 2 года назад +2

      smells like teen spirits first chord is f

    • @jibicusmaximus4827
      @jibicusmaximus4827 2 года назад +1

      F sharp crazy train and a lot of rage against the machine, play an f sharp and let it sustain, as the decays you can here the oscillations, f sharps are easiest to hear, they are the fastest, this is why riffs in this key kick arse, I love that note! Lol. E flat is the slowest wave.. it gives an almost major or minor feel to one single note, f sharp being brighter e flat being slower wave or sadder, confusing to use that language in that context though probably.

    • @XaveProductions
      @XaveProductions 2 года назад +2

      That’s the exact same way I do it, with different songs of course

    • @taffles7498
      @taffles7498 2 года назад

      i use hopes and dreams for F but i like megalovania

    • @tyko_hair111
      @tyko_hair111 2 года назад

      f# for the first note of jojo

  • @rednose_7928
    @rednose_7928 2 года назад +74

    I’ve been training my ear to identify notes by memorizing C as a relative pitch. I was curious how well I can do without it… not too well, apparently 😂 Thanks for the test!

  • @jonkflurgen6975
    @jonkflurgen6975 3 года назад +38

    "This audio attempts to remove any relative pitch references from your memory" and succeeds at being a funky little lick in Ab

  • @yatyayat
    @yatyayat 4 года назад +309

    The sixth one is actually G0, and it's out of range lol. 😀

    • @cinna_cappu
      @cinna_cappu 3 года назад +19

      G0 is 24.5Hz, so you can still hear it

    • @DiegoJGorzynski
      @DiegoJGorzynski 3 года назад +70

      thougth that was an A

    • @ha3vy
      @ha3vy 3 года назад +15

      @@cinna_cappu yeah, but the note's spectrum on the piano makes the pitch inaudible in it's true nature. Some harmonics sound stronger than the fundamental (Bb).

    • @maestroanth
      @maestroanth 3 года назад +12

      it's an A0 over my speakers.

    • @yatyayat
      @yatyayat 3 года назад +5

      I used a video to mp3 converter, then used pitch shifter online to shift one octave higher. All the notes were correct, including the sixth one. The sixth note was clearly G1 using those converters.
      Given that the notes were shifted one octave higher, it's clear that the sixth note here is actually G0. The fundamental frequency of the sixth note (G0) is lower than the one of the eighth note (A0) though.

  • @ruby994
    @ruby994 3 года назад +80

    E is the only one I can get instantly cos it's the first note of this random song that my piano that my keyboard plays

    • @lululipes4382
      @lululipes4382 3 года назад +3

      Same because of tetris

    • @arihayden9349
      @arihayden9349 3 года назад +1

      Fur elise

    • @r3ni_
      @r3ni_ 3 года назад

      Halo theme

    • @Petrolosis
      @Petrolosis 3 года назад

      E

    • @jamesmccourt9782
      @jamesmccourt9782 3 года назад

      "C" is the bell on "The Price Is Right"...That should be drilled into your brain forever... :)

  • @chloec2515
    @chloec2515 3 года назад +96

    Me taking this test anyway even though I know damn well I don't have perfect pitch

  • @lewshoneytoast
    @lewshoneytoast 2 года назад +22

    if you're going to test a note in the first octave, you should aim to minimize harmonics and use a sine wave or similarly smooth waveform because a string instrument has too many harmonics at that frequency and the note becomes fogged

    • @ar_i_an_a9014
      @ar_i_an_a9014 Год назад

      Thank youuu

    • @MyNipplesArePointy
      @MyNipplesArePointy Год назад +1

      So it wasn't just my hearing ability? I WAS able to hear the A1 but I struggled with G1 because it was so low that I was hearing a bunch of different notes from different frequencies. I kind of just assumed that people with even greater level of absolute pitch might still be able to hear them or something.

    • @heliumfire
      @heliumfire 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@MyNipplesArePointyI would be unsurprised if there were people capable of finding the root note, but even if that is the case, you should be proud of your skill!

  • @pancakeexpert
    @pancakeexpert 2 года назад +53

    I'm actually curious about people who remember notes and recognize sounds that way.. how did you remember them? Here's how I picked them up
    _I also have developed some other ways to associate with them_:
    C - from Fly me to the moon, tends to go to B and vice versa
    C# - It was one of the basslines from Zutomayo's Study Me
    D - Papers please theme
    Eb - Take five or sometimes the C blues scale
    E - No reference here, tends to want to go to F
    F - I remember it from Flight of the Bamboo Cutter, has a light blue-ish color, fine texture
    F# - Boondocks opening, has a metallic punchy texture
    G - (low octaves) Violet Evergarden - The Voice in my Heart, (high octave) Le Cygne, has a deep orange color and grainy feel
    Ab - Tea for two jazz arrangement - Timothy Gondola.. light and feathery, white-ish color
    A - Just recently learned it from the Stairway to Heaven riff - it has a heavy feel
    Bb - Also take five, brown
    B - either that song that starts off with a piano and goes down and up an octave a few times or fly me to the moon, light yellow - tends to C
    Tell me yours!

    • @33Pokenerd
      @33Pokenerd 2 года назад +1

      this is pretty funny i use fly me to the moon as C reference as well
      its just that sometimes its out of tune thats the problem

    • @The-Cookie
      @The-Cookie 2 года назад +4

      For E and D sharp i use the beginning of Für Elise

    • @TacoBellYoutube
      @TacoBellYoutube 2 года назад

      I have no idea exactly about how I did it, but I just started hearing notes through voices and background music, then learned all the concert pitches, and finally learned all of them by ear. After that I started matching the notes to songs so that I could sing them more accurately and now here I am. One song I matched is Spongebob’s “Gary Come Home”, which starts on a flat Eb or sharp C#

    • @lukero5502
      @lukero5502 2 года назад +2

      A - La Grange
      B - it’s kinda like ‘A’ but a bit more lmao
      Bm - My favourite chord
      C - Twinkle Twinkle little star
      D - Fluff - Black Sabbath
      E - Seven nation Army
      Em - Obvious chord
      F - we don’t talk about Bruno
      F# - no reference
      G - Mole from the ministry

    • @alexm.6533
      @alexm.6533 2 года назад +1

      For me it’s
      C- i don’t really have one lol I just kinda get it sometimes.
      C#- it’s the first note I’m never gonna give you up by Rick astley
      D - part of a song I used to play in middle school band called reindeer rag
      D#- the second note of the Rick astley song
      E - the first note in the halo theme song, I can usually recognize that one pretty fast.
      F - hail to the president of the United States
      F# is the one I can name the best, I think of crazy train, but the main on is the first note in allstar by smash mouth.
      G - is the one I have the most trouble with, but I think the jeopardy theme song.
      G# is the other one I struggle with, but I think of part of the main chorus in Africa.
      A- i think of the beginning of the main chorus in Africa or crazy train
      A# i sometimes know because that’s the scale I used to practice most in band
      B - that one part from bring me to life when I used to listen to that song.

  • @americangoose9416
    @americangoose9416 3 года назад +361

    the superpower we wish we all had

    • @pennymikk
      @pennymikk 3 года назад +38

      the superpower i have

    • @spyderwanted8642
      @spyderwanted8642 3 года назад

      Can you learn it or are you born with it

    • @hatsunemikusleftnostril
      @hatsunemikusleftnostril 3 года назад +11

      @@spyderwanted8642 Most people are born with it, but also had to develop their skill somewhat. From what I've read, it's impossible to develop REAL perfect pitch after the age of seven. However, you can develop something called "true pitch" at any age with enough practice, which can provide a similar effect.

    • @thelambsaucee
      @thelambsaucee 3 года назад +1

      @@hatsunemikusleftnostril yes most people (1 in 10k)

    • @s0mep3rs0n-o8w
      @s0mep3rs0n-o8w 3 года назад

      @@spyderwanted8642 you can learn it but people with certain types of synesthesia can see different notes as colored circles so you can have been born with it or you learned it

  • @Rayenn_19
    @Rayenn_19 Год назад +11

    0:43 This instantly reminds me of Chopin's Fantasie Impromptu. I actually came here to test my natural notes pitch, but for this one I immediately say G#

  • @Kcoolin
    @Kcoolin 3 года назад +21

    I can relate these pitches to songs that I know the first note of.
    Like I use a cheat sheet:
    A: Drinkee by Sofi Tukker
    B: Disturbia
    C: Heart and soul
    D: Megalovania
    E: Fur elise
    F: Crossing Field By LiSA
    G: Wellerman, The longest Johns.

    • @Jabersson
      @Jabersson 3 года назад +16

      That's basically how you develop perfect pitch. Just reference the first notes of songs until it becomes muscle memory and you don't need the references anymore.

    • @emiliotrevinoresendis332
      @emiliotrevinoresendis332 3 года назад +2

      I get G with Happy Birthday (G,G,A,G is the start)

    • @Thatguy-md5ve
      @Thatguy-md5ve 3 года назад +3

      I’ve heard megolovania so many times I can hear a D from anywhere,

    • @saltandlight2379
      @saltandlight2379 3 года назад +1

      @@Thatguy-md5ve same I memorized D from Megalovania lol

    • @miajc6606
      @miajc6606 3 года назад +1

      Yeah same here are some
      C: Home Sweet Home by Mötley Crüe or most of the time it's instantly recognizable for me
      D: Lights by Journey
      E: Nothing Else Matters/Enter Sandman by Metallica
      F: Wheel in the Sky by Journey
      G: Paranoid by Black Sabbath
      A: Instantly recognizable because I tune my violin
      B: Iron Man by Black Sabbath or About a Girl by Nirvana

  • @andredelgado2511
    @andredelgado2511 3 года назад +18

    #6 it's out of piano range, only bossedorfer imperial 290 has that note (G0)

    • @TheProGamerMC20
      @TheProGamerMC20 3 года назад +3

      same. i never use those notes bc imo it sounds ugly

  • @8curred72
    @8curred72 3 года назад +46

    Btw "perfect pitch" is something that you get by training its not necessarilly being born with it. Me, however having chromosthesia or whatever basically wiring different sounds to colours helps a lot. I have a clear image of the a minor triad (A-C-E) and i move up or down the scale to find the note that's played.
    Edit: The whole thing is actually called pitch memory/relative pitch my bad

    • @mr_sandman1082
      @mr_sandman1082 2 года назад +6

      Nah you cant just practice to get it, you do have to be born with the potential, and then practice it

    • @8curred72
      @8curred72 2 года назад +2

      @@mr_sandman1082 true lol but there are a few cases where it's done without any weird shit on the ears or brain. If you want to do it you can but it will be hard af, it's just that most people won't even bother.

    • @agent_artifical
      @agent_artifical 2 года назад +1

      @@8curred72 i've discussed this with a friend yesterday he told me its not possible to "just" learn it as an adult but i think it is possible somehow. But we are both clueless so if you yould tell me on od those cases? would be very nice :) thank you

    • @8curred72
      @8curred72 2 года назад

      @@agent_artifical well you need to make yourself fluent with music in general. If you're not into music and then suddenly in your teens you're like ok I'm gonna learn pitch memory you can't. You need to train your ear from a young age just by listening to a lot of music

    • @grogu9906
      @grogu9906 2 года назад +1

      It’s really subjective and depends on the person. A lot of people are born with it, and some, depending on the strength of their memory and familiarity/experience with music, can develop it.

  • @yourlocalmculover6664
    @yourlocalmculover6664 3 года назад +28

    Here my list for every note for you guys if you wanna get perfect pitch:
    C: Blue Danube by Strauss/Haydn Surprise Symphony
    C#: HR2 (Hungarian Rhapsody No.2) by Liszt
    D: Mozart Violin Concerto No. 4
    Eb: La Campanella by Liszt
    E: Chopin Etude “Winter Wind”
    F: ???
    F#: Gymnopedie No. 1 by Satie
    G: Sibelius Violin Concerto
    G#: Chopin Fantasie Impromptu
    A: Tchaikovsky Violin Concerto
    Bb: ???
    B: Mendelssohn Violin Concerto: 1st Movement
    Feel free to listen to these if you havent and give some suggestions!

    • @Wendy31019
      @Wendy31019 2 года назад

      I remember B from Mendelssohn Violin Concerto if you know that one

    • @yourlocalmculover6664
      @yourlocalmculover6664 2 года назад

      @@Wendy31019 Oh yeah.
      Kinda forgot about that one-

    • @dogaccnararat9040
      @dogaccnararat9040 2 года назад +3

      "F#: Gymnopedie No. 1 by Satie" its G but thanks a lot for the liszt.

    • @Misuladasa
      @Misuladasa 2 года назад

      B♭: Grand Valse Brillante Frédéric Chopin

    • @JakeBerryMusic
      @JakeBerryMusic 2 года назад

      Bb - Sound of Music… I know it’s cheesy but it should work

  • @Hats-On-Tv
    @Hats-On-Tv 2 года назад +7

    As someone who has never looked at a piece of sheet music or played an instrument in my life, I feel like I did pretty good for 100% random guessing based on vibe:
    D, G, E, A, D, G, B, E, B, F

    • @MedhatithiGuha
      @MedhatithiGuha 4 месяца назад

      Question I have is - if you have not seen sheet music or played an instrument, then how do you know the notes by their names? 😀 You are a singer most likely in that case

  • @MusiCatsKing
    @MusiCatsKing 11 месяцев назад +4

    I nailed the first one and thought i had the 2nd, but was off by a semi-tone. From there it was all downhill for me except the last one. I immediately recognized that note as the first note of November Rain! It prompted me to play/hear in my mind the next high chord and the subsequent chord progression.

  • @rohankapoor773
    @rohankapoor773 3 года назад +15

    The last time I did this test was 2 days ago and I got 3 out of 10, today I did it again after only half an hour of practice and I got 8 out of 10 so don't give up guys. STAY STRONG!

    • @KoHaGames_
      @KoHaGames_ 3 года назад +4

      It is possible to strengthen the ability if you have it, but if you dont, you cant get it...

    • @rohankapoor773
      @rohankapoor773 3 года назад +1

      Konst24.12 I believe in destiny and hard work, if you’re really willing to work, you can get it, dont let anyone tell you otherwise, I didnt have it but now I can guess every note correctly, I’m no mozart who can guess correctly in a second but give me 5 seconds and I’ll ace this shi

    • @KoHaGames_
      @KoHaGames_ 3 года назад

      @@rohankapoor773 its scientifically proven that you can get this ability in the first 2 - 3 years of your life, after that you can just improve it. If your quite talented you could do it without actually trying to, but because you and me aren't that talented, we got to do something to have that skill. But in no way anyone could just get it.

    • @Ohde3d
      @Ohde3d 2 года назад

      @@KoHaGames_ okay, so I’ve been kinda confused, I know that I don’t have perfect pitch, but for some reason I just know the pitches right Away, it’s like a weird mix of knowing it and not knowing it, I can automatically know a note without a reference in my head, I just hear it and I know it, but sometimes I get notes wrong every once in a while, so do I just have very strong relative pitch where I need less of a reference?

    • @madman7544
      @madman7544 10 месяцев назад

      I've got 3 today lets see

  • @HanaHajiian
    @HanaHajiian Год назад +7

    A year ago i couldn’t even try to guess one note. I did this test again and got all of them correct. You might ask what made me develop perfect pitch:
    I started studying at a music conservatory where we have solfège 3 one hour classes in a week. If you can and have the possibility, seek professional teachers for solfège and ear training and music theory. And also since last year i’ve been wandering through classical pieces (any period and style and form) alot and I rarely listen to pop which I always used to. And I also went to our local orchestras concerts and performances.
    The most important thing is to have passion for music.

    • @alyssert1743
      @alyssert1743 Год назад +1

      While it is possible to develop perfect pitch, it is EXTREMELY difficult. My guess is that you have true pitch, which is very similar and can easily be mistaken for perfect/absolute pitch. They have very few differences and work mostly the same. I’m not an expert on this stuff so if you want to learn more you should do some research. That’s very cool though and I’m very happy for you! Congrats

    • @snickpickle
      @snickpickle Год назад

      Solfege is a real bummer for me. I gripe about it because, for starters, I have perfect pitch, so then I have to learn the solfege AND the tune/part. I think the major advantage of solfege is learning intervals between notes, not the actual pitches, but then again, I've never had a need to learn solfege.

    • @HanaHajiian
      @HanaHajiian Год назад

      @@snickpickle yes solfège is great for learning intervals, what our teachers did were teach us to sing tonal intervals and after learning the intervals they taught us to sing atonal intervals that helped us with pitch recognition.

  • @nathanbarnes8535
    @nathanbarnes8535 2 года назад +8

    7 out of 10. I have something known as Chromesthesia so it kinda makes the notes appear a little weird, but easier to pinpoint. I struggle when I can't "colorize" the sound.

  • @megam1ne
    @megam1ne 2 года назад +2

    The sound in between sounds like it’s laughing at my wrong answers 😭🤣

  • @DustyStarrs
    @DustyStarrs 2 года назад +7

    I tried to do this off of the vibes of the note alone and I got close but not correct with most of them 😅 safe to say that while I can sometimes notice the differences between notes, I don't have perfect! I feel confident that I can train my brain to have a certain "trained perfect pitch" through enough effort though. Thank you!

  • @robertehle1316
    @robertehle1316 Год назад +5

    Absolute pitch is one of very few behaviorial traits that can be tested with total precision. It can be documented numerically.Thus it is very important to behavioral research.
    When I was in China in 1993 I observed young people being given group piano lessons. This would give them AP because all of them already met the prior condition of speaking a tone language: Mandarin Chinese.

  • @kovici7226
    @kovici7226 3 года назад +3

    I just guessed F on all of them.

  • @grackisnotalive
    @grackisnotalive 4 месяца назад +3

    I feel the ones with insanely low notes are unfair, the overtones produced on the piano are confusing so even though I do have perfect pitch I still got them wrong.

    • @Glurmp
      @Glurmp 4 месяца назад

      Agreed 😅

  • @basictransportenthusiast4386
    @basictransportenthusiast4386 2 года назад +7

    Well I got all of them right, and I’ve always been told that I had perfect pitch, so I wasn’t too surprised. It’s one of the gifts I greatly treasure, despite not being heavily into music yet. (I only play basic piano).

  • @jeromem.evardome10_kr15
    @jeromem.evardome10_kr15 3 года назад +9

    I got a 9/10 since the G1 sounds more like a D#2 harmonized with F1

  • @rtg0025
    @rtg0025 3 года назад +44

    7/10. Missed all of the ones in the low bass register.

    • @anselerol2956
      @anselerol2956 3 года назад +2

      same, everything above second octave is easy. This test definitely oversampled lower registers.

    • @GongsBrandCube
      @GongsBrandCube 3 года назад

      Same, I’m a soprano voice

    • @lauren9536
      @lauren9536 3 года назад +1

      I can't identify low range sounds -_- not a lot of people can, actually, so those were definitely more tricky than the others. It would take a lot of practice, but I bet you it's not impossible!

    • @yudelrox
      @yudelrox 3 года назад

      I missed the g in the low octave

    • @yolandachen5709
      @yolandachen5709 3 года назад

      Same…

  • @miwami.
    @miwami. 3 года назад +14

    I only got one right 😩 I think I have perfect pitch besties

  • @sharkboss97
    @sharkboss97 3 года назад +29

    its super hard for me to tell the extremely low notes and extremely high notes on piano but other than that I think im pitch perfect

    • @jackson.6282
      @jackson.6282 2 года назад +5

      Then you don’t have perfect pitch, called perfect for a reason, if you can’t identify lows and highs then it’s not perfect

    • @joebamabiden1325
      @joebamabiden1325 2 года назад +3

      Same except I get the high ones easy and I absolutely cannot hear the low ones

    • @joebamabiden1325
      @joebamabiden1325 2 года назад +1

      @@jackson.6282 I’m not quite sure but I think there’s a difference between not being able to identify frequencies that you are able to hear and being physically unable to hear extremities of sound

    • @rueplchen
      @rueplchen 2 года назад

      @@joebamabiden1325 I'm the same in this regard. I think I don't actually have perfect pitch, but just really well trained ears as I played the violin from a very young age. So everything in the violin range I hear immediately and everything else I will have to move up octaves in my mind. It also goes for the instrument. Violin and piano, no problem, but play a timpani and I will really have to think about it

    • @flswttr
      @flswttr Год назад +2

      @@jackson.6282 the piano has too many overtones at low frequencies making it harder to tell the note, if it was a pure sound like a sine wave then we would be a lot more objective

  • @danielrennie8444
    @danielrennie8444 4 года назад +18

    All of the pitch classes were correct except possibly number 6 which I couldn't tell. However all of your octave labeling is too high by 1 octave, so the B2 in number 4 is actually a B1 and the A1 in number 8 is actually an A0 (bottom note of a full piano) as well as all the rest, so just subtract 1 from each octave number. So number 6 was in the 0 octave as well, but I'm not entirely sure it was a G. If so it was a G0 and not a G1.

    • @shmoeg
      @shmoeg 4 года назад

      I heard a D1 on number 6 HBU?

    • @danielrennie8444
      @danielrennie8444 4 года назад

      @@shmoeg I honestly can't tell the pitch class, but it's definitely in the 0 octave and not the 1st. It's too low to be in the 1st octave...

    • @shmoeg
      @shmoeg 4 года назад

      @@JasmynePorter there is definitely a little bit of B in there

    • @julianxmichael
      @julianxmichael 4 года назад

      @@shmoeg i heard e1

    • @shaharsaydof5045
      @shaharsaydof5045 3 года назад

      @@shmoeg A,B,G Mixed in my opinion, it was out of tune i think.

  • @Derpity
    @Derpity 3 года назад +34

    Bruh I keep getting everything a half step wrong

  • @oneandonlycox
    @oneandonlycox 3 года назад +8

    I got all of them right except the 6th one. I keep hearing an A

    • @Gianna-ff2mg
      @Gianna-ff2mg 3 года назад +4

      I feel like it is an A

    • @thedivinezero4117
      @thedivinezero4117 2 года назад +1

      dude me too. it’s a

    • @laiyemoboys9255
      @laiyemoboys9255 Год назад

      Number 6 is G0. That's why I say it makes sense that the piano only goes down to A0, since it's the lowest easily distinguishable note. The lowest note that's audiable is E0.

  • @Minnie_the_Shinobu_fan
    @Minnie_the_Shinobu_fan 2 года назад +1

    I got 8/10 I can’t really determine the really low notes I can barley hear them but when it’s high I can

  • @yassinejalal9511
    @yassinejalal9511 3 года назад +26

    am i the only one form kyle's video

  • @_mochiii_
    @_mochiii_ Год назад +1

    I got all right
    The 1st octave notes were a bit of a challenge tho because in my composing, I don't/have never used them before

  • @Kettvnen
    @Kettvnen 2 года назад +15

    I'm really sorry but the interval audio is creepy and unnerving

    • @MarmadukeDormedius
      @MarmadukeDormedius 6 месяцев назад

      It's supposed to be all over the place so you're "reset". It being all over the place is weird for our ears because it's so chaotic and not rhythmic.

    • @maggiezhou4467
      @maggiezhou4467 5 месяцев назад

      It worked for me! 😅

  • @franklind.roosevelt5644
    @franklind.roosevelt5644 Год назад +1

    note number 3
    " when i was, a young boy"

  • @TRodge2495
    @TRodge2495 3 года назад +11

    I think now, going through the video, I'm probably 3 for 12, but I did get *some* right, so for any guitarists who are scared, you may never have perfect pitch, but you can learn, and I hope we can all take reassurance in that. I'd like to see them test Keith for perfect pitch 🧐

  • @chrisgill326
    @chrisgill326 Год назад +2

    I'm pretty sure your octaves are 1 higher than they should be. C4 (Middle C) is where you have C listed in the 5th octave.

    • @Nini_bats
      @Nini_bats 3 месяца назад

      Yeah, literally all the octaves were off by one lmao, all one higher than normal

  • @kay5314
    @kay5314 3 года назад +20

    this is my first time doing this and i was surprised by how many i got right. i dont even play an instrument

    • @mememanfresh
      @mememanfresh 3 года назад

      anika is that you

    • @KoHaGames_
      @KoHaGames_ 3 года назад

      Me neither, but I have a "10 Years not tuned piano" at home that I sometimes play with, but just funwise and not with finger training or the "I wanne learn that instrument" stuff

  • @Shark-pj8in
    @Shark-pj8in Год назад +2

    Perfect pitch is more so the ability to actually sing the notes.

  • @GB-rb1up
    @GB-rb1up 2 года назад +3

    I developed relative pitch as soon as I started playing the guitar. I compare notes I hear in reference to the first open string which is E. I'm usually within 50 cents of the actual notes.

    • @chandler2927
      @chandler2927 Год назад +1

      That is exactly what I do, when I try to guess a note, I first start with an E in my head, then work my way up the scale.
      For some reason, E is a very powerful and out standing strong note for me.

  • @pavankharche5460
    @pavankharche5460 2 года назад +1

    Legendary work has been done here.

  • @snickpickle
    @snickpickle Год назад +3

    This test was disturbing for me, because back in the day, my accuracy was around 96% (F# and Ab were usually my most troublesome notes). I am now in my early 60s, and have noticed that my perfect pitch ability has started falling off, almost to the point where I would say "dramatically." In this test, I only got two of them right! ARGH! But I was never off by more than a full step (which is also alarming to me). In some fairness, I have a talk radio station on in the background, it is 4:15AM and I'm tired from my evening/nighttime job, and I'm listening through my laptop speakers, instead of better headphones or my stereo. But the fact is, many, many other people like myself, as we get older, do oftentimes start losing our perfect pitch. The great vibraphonist, Gary Burton, found out the hard way that he had lost some of his perfect pitch as well, so I know I'm not alone in this.
    Along the way, over the last several years, I have also noticed that my sight-reading abilities have fallen off dramatically. I now get frustrated when I miss notes as I sight-read music in our church choir, and I think that in large part, it is due to the fact that I relied extensively on my perfect pitch to nail the notes without even having to listen to the accompaniment or to the other voices in the choir. Over the last decade, I find myself doing extensive writing in my parts, circling notes I miss more than once, writing in intervals that I miss, and so on. While others remark at my abilities to this day, it is embarrassing and frustrating to me that I am making "so many" mistakes in my sight-reading, especially since I oftentimes carry the section, at least in the early goings.
    On a related note: I can't remember the guy's name, or what talk show I saw, but he described having perfect pitch like this (paraphrased): "It's like saying, 'This desk is brown,' or 'This grass is green' [at which point the host interrupts him about his analogy before letting the guest finish; so the guest continues]... So this is a G [he sings it, then the band's keyboardist plays the G], and this is an E [sung in pitch, repeated by keyboardist]." I've known that for almost all of my life, except that some of that ability has fallen off, now that I'm in my early 60s. Tinnitus may not be helping, either, but my tinnitus isn't nearly as bad as what I hear about others who have tinnitus.

  • @paulgilbert3139
    @paulgilbert3139 Год назад +1

    If you a guitarist or saxophone player you will hear:
    Not #6 as G# + C
    Not #8 as Bb + D
    I assume the piano is out of tune, because no way it sounds like 2 not at the same time ? As a guitarist im confused

    • @paulgilbert3139
      @paulgilbert3139 Год назад

      If you have a tuner app in your phone you can check it yourself, not #6 and not #8, theres no way it would show up a G and A

  • @ggukjj5681
    @ggukjj5681 3 года назад +6

    8/10! Missed the low ones

  • @mg_2851
    @mg_2851 2 года назад +1

    Mine's kinda weird (pd: i love pop music lol)
    C: Save your tears (The Weeknd) first sung note or the first note on All Too Well by Taylor Swift
    C#: First note on Shape of you
    D: First note on Minuet in G
    Eb: First note on traitor by Olivia Rodrigo
    E: First note on Fur Elise or Jingle Bells
    F: First note on the instrumental part of Happier by Marshmello
    F#: First note on Faded by Alan Walker
    G: First note on Havana by Camila Cabello
    G#: First note on the piano ending of Chiquitita by Abba
    A: The first bass note on The breakup song by Greg Kihn Band
    Bb: First piano note on Drivers License by Olivia Rodrigo
    B: First note of Hedwig's theme (Harry Potter main theme)
    Hope it helps :D

  • @joebo1041
    @joebo1041 3 года назад +6

    I can learn lead guitar parts by ear very quickly yet I got every one of these wrong. With an instrument in front of me I can find the notes immediately, just can't name them in my head with no instrument for reference.

  • @j.dsimpson8142
    @j.dsimpson8142 2 года назад +1

    I have been one of the lucky ones to be blessed with the rare gift of perfect/absolute pitch. I got 10/10!

    • @j.dsimpson8142
      @j.dsimpson8142 2 года назад

      @@curfewsurf Same and all my friends ask me to teach them. they always but on a song and ask me what chords they play/what key the song is in etc!

    • @solanaceous
      @solanaceous 2 года назад

      Absoloute pitch is different from perfect pitch. It means that you can relate notes to a certain comination of colours, and whenever the note is played you can visualize it in your mind.

    • @j.dsimpson8142
      @j.dsimpson8142 2 года назад

      @@solanaceous Thanks for letting me know man! I guess it turns out that I have both😎

    • @solanaceous
      @solanaceous 2 года назад

      @@j.dsimpson8142 DAMN. Two people both with absolute pitch. That is really rare.

    • @j.dsimpson8142
      @j.dsimpson8142 2 года назад

      @@solanaceous WOW! Pretty amazing! did you get 10/10 as well?

  • @Ast-o5d
    @Ast-o5d 2 года назад +5

    The notes from 1st octave were very hard,the rest was easy though.

  • @eugenebertsantiago1701
    @eugenebertsantiago1701 Год назад +1

    The notes are correct but wrong in some octaves. It's D3 not D4

  • @Skooshikun
    @Skooshikun 3 года назад +24

    Bruh I don’t know the notes I’m not a pianist I just wanted to see what perfect pitch was lol

  • @twitchelue571
    @twitchelue571 5 месяцев назад +1

    i was always like 1 off or 2 😭😭😭

  • @mitsukiuchiha1109
    @mitsukiuchiha1109 3 года назад +10

    Omg do i have perfect pitch? I guessed this all correct.
    I didn’t even need a reference note.

  • @davidbakke9293
    @davidbakke9293 2 года назад +2

    Real perfect pitch means you're able to tell what key a song is in without knowing, being able to hum pitches, and knowing what chords are when played.

  • @jahnhendrixbonnit2738
    @jahnhendrixbonnit2738 3 года назад +6

    I have relative or true pitch but I'm able to recognize those notes. Some of them are labeled incorrectly

  • @aobingli3671
    @aobingli3671 10 месяцев назад +1

    Perfect pitch kid: get all of them correct.
    Me: get 2 correct.
    Also me: MOM! OMG I HAVE PERFECT PITCH!

  • @GabriTell
    @GabriTell 2 года назад +5

    2:11, That wrong ❌
    Dude, there's no way this is a *"G"* (just check it out in any piano, it's an *"A"* :P).

    • @thomaspoon1
      @thomaspoon1 Год назад +1

      Really? I guessed as G and got it right.

    • @petert1595
      @petert1595 6 месяцев назад

      @@thomaspoon1That’s because the video said you were right, but you were wrong In actuality

    • @elidavid8097
      @elidavid8097 5 месяцев назад

      That shits 100% A. The videos on something

  • @silencewench6104
    @silencewench6104 28 дней назад +1

    i miss most of them by 1 note :((

  • @עידואבידן
    @עידואבידן 3 года назад +3

    I absolutely have no absolute pitch.

  • @charliekirby_
    @charliekirby_ Месяц назад

    It's actually really easy for me, I didn't know it was some special skill that few people have. It's like each note is a different color. If you play the note C, the pitch will be the same every single time, as with all the other notes. Same with colors, looking at red, you'll see red every single time. With some people, I'll play them a G and tell them that it's a G, then I'll
    play another note and ask them if it's a G or not, to my surprise more people couldn't hear the pitches and guessed that it was still a G. But for other people, they can learn the notes and then learn to differentiate them. There such an interesting science behind all of this.

  • @booki8610
    @booki8610 3 года назад +4

    I guessed all of the notes correctly but mixed up the octaves

  • @beez1717
    @beez1717 Год назад +2

    I’m someone who can quickly figure out the melody of a song on the piano quite quickly. I may not quite get it but I know when I have the wrong notes and I can usually figure it out somewhat easily. I can’t name the notes on a piano even though I can read music, but if someone were to play something and then had me figure it out, I’d get the melody right quite fast as long as it’s just single notes.

  • @mgsquared5204
    @mgsquared5204 3 года назад +3

    Is it possible to have perfect pitch and not know about it? I’m getting a scary amount of these right. I’ve played music for a long time but I didn’t think I had it. The ones I get wrong im only a half step off. I don’t think it’s relative but really don’t know. I’m legitimately slightly spooked.

    • @nakual2064
      @nakual2064 3 года назад

      Perfect means perfect. You may have good relative pitch

  • @wump9066
    @wump9066 Год назад +1

    The octaves are wrong, or at least displayed in a strange way that makes it confusing to interpret which octave you mean. Also for notes as low as that G0 (not a G1), you should minimize the other tones. I was hearing D ringing more prominently than the G itself

  • @elyucong4325
    @elyucong4325 3 года назад +4

    Hey, to the ones that do have it, do you first need to learn and memorize the note sounds because I can mimic every note in different frequency but I don’t know them

    • @elyucong4325
      @elyucong4325 3 года назад +2

      @@CloudyCat2306 I meant like, you can recognize the notes but you don’t know them if you don’t learn music theory right ?

    • @superfriends8336
      @superfriends8336 3 года назад +2

      @@CloudyCat2306 yeah guys she’s right. as soon as you learn to talk, while you’re still learning the alphabet, someone says ‘A, B, C, D, E, F, G’ and you immediately start humming C major scale... because even though you just learned of the letters existence, you were born already knowing those letters were naturally attached to those exact frequencies. there’s no need to learn what middle C is or even how notes are labeled on a scale. that’s for normies. in fact, if you show this test to a millennial that’s never studied music but was born with perfect pitch, their answer for the number two would be “G hashtag” because they were just born with it and there’s no need to learn about irrelevant things like music theory to answer properly. that’s for peasants.
      brendella, you’re a fucking moron.

    • @CloudyCat2306
      @CloudyCat2306 3 года назад

      @@elyucong4325 yes

  • @_saphix0101
    @_saphix0101 4 месяца назад +1

    I cannot hear the very low notes

  • @SamuelHikida
    @SamuelHikida 2 года назад +4

    So I know I have perfect pitch, but boy, the G0 I missed because I wasnt able to hear enough harmonics to identify it perfectly. A0 was perfectly fine though
    I was also wondering why the octave notation was 1 number higher than it is (i.e. B1 written as B2, etc.)

    • @TameyTaming
      @TameyTaming 2 года назад +2

      Same, can’t even believe it was a G. Sounded more like an A flat to me.

    • @aleksandramiasma9047
      @aleksandramiasma9047 2 года назад +1

      hey, checked alongside a virtual 88 key piano, it was Ab

    • @laiyemoboys9255
      @laiyemoboys9255 Год назад

      ​@@aleksandramiasma9047I pitched it up an octave and heard G1.

  • @kso.7590
    @kso.7590 2 года назад +1

    I got half of them right, and the other half i got wrong i missed by a half tone and maybe 1 by a whole tone. Pretty proud of myself

  • @stef_ii8880
    @stef_ii8880 4 года назад +19

    This video is super wrong

    • @ezay8694
      @ezay8694 3 года назад +2

      It isn’t though. I checked every one with my piano (except #6) and they all matched

    • @yatyayat
      @yatyayat 3 года назад +1

      @@ezay8694 The sixth one is out of range. You won't find in your piano.

  • @Anna-hs3ef
    @Anna-hs3ef Год назад +1

    i got none of them right but for some I guessed it the right at first but then doubted myself so I changed my answer and the rest I guessed so close to the correct answer

  • @atharvapallikulam9743
    @atharvapallikulam9743 3 года назад +4

    My reference note is C as usual😂 but yeah if u wake me up frm sleep itself I'll be able to tell C within a sec
    Other notes
    I relate to C 👍

    • @samarth1906
      @samarth1906 3 года назад +1

      I relate everything to G because it’s the first note in welcome to the black parade 😂

    • @atharvapallikulam9743
      @atharvapallikulam9743 3 года назад

      @@samarth1906 yeah oh I get it😂
      Nice 🔥

  • @ivannasha5556
    @ivannasha5556 2 года назад +1

    You can't just play notes without establishing which is which first. It's like giving someone a math test before you've shown them the numbers and operators.

  • @RandomDays906
    @RandomDays906 3 года назад +6

    Anyone else get A0 for 6?

    • @-cubeiac-6686
      @-cubeiac-6686 3 года назад

      I did

    • @laiyemoboys9255
      @laiyemoboys9255 Год назад

      Number 6 is G0. That's why I say it makes sense that the piano only goes down to A0, since it's the lowest easily distinguishable note. The lowest note that's audiable is E0.

  • @xcruxifiedx3477
    @xcruxifiedx3477 Год назад +1

    why are your octaves wrong?

  • @umapessoa6051
    @umapessoa6051 2 года назад +4

    There is no such thing as "perfect pitch", anyone can study and know what the notes sound like, no big deal...

    • @TheYoutubaki
      @TheYoutubaki 2 года назад +1

      That's incorrect 😅

    • @umapessoa6051
      @umapessoa6051 2 года назад +2

      @@TheYoutubaki no, that's not, that's just a way of saying "wow, look at me, i was built different...".
      I wasn't born with "perfect pitch", i've studied music for a few years and nowadays i can get 100% of the notes in songs right, just like on this video.

    • @TheYoutubaki
      @TheYoutubaki 2 года назад +1

      @@umapessoa6051 science disagrees with you

    • @TheYoutubaki
      @TheYoutubaki 2 года назад +1

      @@umapessoa6051 also anyone who boasts about having absolute pitch is really shallow. You can be an excellent musician and not have it. It's just a useful tool to help you. There are multiple hypotheses behind perfect pitch. Most of them agree that you are born with it, and that you need to exercise it in order to take full advantage of it.

  • @noodleleopard
    @noodleleopard 2 года назад +2

    i got about 6/10 by mentally climbing up the fretboard of an e string on a guitar. im pretty proud of myself tbh.

    • @ifutureman
      @ifutureman 2 года назад

      I think a lot of guitarists develop at least a strong sense of E just based on their instrument's "home base" - unless of course you play in E-flat standard :D

  • @peterhuge3918
    @peterhuge3918 3 года назад +3

    Yeaahhh, 0/10 how do i do this

  • @void7217
    @void7217 2 года назад

    1: D4
    2: G#3
    3: F6
    4: B2
    5: E3
    6: G1
    7: C#5
    8: A1
    9: A6
    10: wrong: E2
    I got one wrong. Does this count as pitch perfect?

  • @LoganWindham
    @LoganWindham Год назад

    Holy shit I did NOT know I had perfect pitch til now. I literally got every single one right. Blowing my own mind

  • @andreashoppe1969
    @andreashoppe1969 Год назад

    Glad to know that my perfect pitch is still working.

  • @patrickallenpimentel3062
    @patrickallenpimentel3062 3 года назад +2

    When the first 1st note was played, it instantly reminded me of the first note of Canon in D therefore I chose that answer and I was correct

  • @peeleandro
    @peeleandro 2 года назад +1

    You playing 1 octave below and u r saying thats its 1 octave high

  • @SAVO-hp4yq
    @SAVO-hp4yq 3 года назад +1

    All the notes were off by an octave higher

  • @luis4290
    @luis4290 8 месяцев назад

    Quick question, I don't know much about notation, but hearing just once each sound, I was able to press the keys on a piano we have at home until I heard the exact same one, didn't fail even once, would that be perfect pitch or close to it? Or I just have good memory?

  • @wanibenedith5757
    @wanibenedith5757 3 месяца назад

    Until now, I wasn’t sure that I had perfect pitch, but I got nine out of 10 of them correct, so I’m glad I surprised myself.

  • @BenjiDarius
    @BenjiDarius 2 года назад

    My answer: D3 Ab3 F5 B3 E2 A1 C#5 A1 A7 E2
    Good at notes, terrible at octaves. I dont know how I learn these, but I do have some references for some notes