Perfect Pitch: The Cognitive Benefits BEYOND Music

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  • Опубликовано: 16 окт 2024

Комментарии • 588

  • @enricopersia4290
    @enricopersia4290 5 лет назад +134

    This is deeper than just music education. Thanks for your work Rick, we all learn more and more and it's due to you

  • @BeThisBell
    @BeThisBell 5 лет назад +194

    Would like to see you do an intensive adult ear training class.

    • @Sp4zc0r3
      @Sp4zc0r3 5 лет назад +17

      Same, I would sign up for that without question

    • @franklehouillier8865
      @franklehouillier8865 5 лет назад +8

      Rick has been promising one for a couple months now. I'm hoping this video is a precursor to its release.

    • @debaser1042
      @debaser1042 5 лет назад +4

      Frank LeHouillier the ending makes that seem likely. Rick’s devotion to education is truly inspiring.

    • @henricomonterosa4534
      @henricomonterosa4534 5 лет назад +3

      Count me in 😊

    • @pedroguimaraesguitar
      @pedroguimaraesguitar 5 лет назад +2

      I’m in 100%

  • @justenfinch5911
    @justenfinch5911 5 лет назад +59

    You have done so much for your children. Their life paths are very different than what would have been had you not done all these wonderful things.
    I hope more parents and future parents watch this video and learn how to equip their children's brain for growth. Fantastic!

  • @NahreSol
    @NahreSol 5 лет назад +89

    Great video about a very significant topic. Something that can affect the next generations in so many ways. I love the clip near the end with Dylan - he's such a cool kid!

    • @colecorbett255
      @colecorbett255 5 лет назад +10

      Nahre Sol I couldn't agree more! Amazingly positive potential here. I want to devote my Neuroscience career to better understanding the mechanisms within this :)

    • @titmusspaultpaul5
      @titmusspaultpaul5 5 лет назад +1

      Very intelligent and well adjusted.

    • @zendogbreath
      @zendogbreath 5 лет назад +1

      absolutely. and ricks got the wisdom to forsee the problems that most kids get exploited and wrecked with. smarts doesn't always get wisdom. guess rick and now dylan are getting enough pressure testing from yt trolls to refine and build that wisdom. we owe them both more than we can ever repay.

    • @Bati_
      @Bati_ 5 лет назад

      @Nahre Sol I coincidentally encountered one of your great comments again Nahre! I think music is a big part of being human. And as in language acquisition, music is some sort of language as well in which your cultural exposure and environmental richness indicate your development.
      As great Oliver Sacks emphasized in “Musicophilia”: “One does not need to have any formal knowledge of music -- nor, indeed, to be particularly "musical" -- to enjoy music and to respond to it at the deepest levels. Music is part of being human, and there is no human culture in which it is not highly developed and esteemed. Its very ubiquity may cause it to be trivialized in daily life; we switch on a radio, switch it off, hum a tune, tap our feet, find the words of an old song going through our minds, and think nothing of it. But to those who are born in dementia, the situation is different. Music is no luxury to them, but a necessity, and can have power beyond anything else to restore them to themselves, and to others, at least for a while.”
      And as Darwin said in The Descent of Man: “As neither the enjoyment nor the capacity of producing musical notes are faculties of the least use to man…they must be ranked among the most mysterious with which he is endowed.”
      Language and music seem to be the main factors that make us quintessentially human.
      Greetings from Turkey! - Batı

  • @davidhatle5486
    @davidhatle5486 5 лет назад +92

    Rick Beato is lowkey one of the most prolific neuro scientists out here 😂
    Amazing stuff, really

  • @zendogbreath
    @zendogbreath 5 лет назад +2

    watching this kid grow up has been one of the most humbling and inspiring aspects of my life. thank you rick. please keep on.

  • @DavidDiMuzio
    @DavidDiMuzio 5 лет назад +8

    I'm so thankful for your Nuryl program and for all these videos you've made. At 6 weeks old you've already changed my daughter's life. My baby is the most calm and attentive (might I even say thoughtful) 6 week old I could possibly imagine. We've been doing your Nuryl program with her religiously since since she was the size of a sesame seed. I'm excited to bring her down to ATL in a couple years so she can jam with your kids while they speak Chinese AND English together :) thank you Rick!

    • @zendogbreath
      @zendogbreath 5 лет назад +1

      nuryl program?

    • @DavidDiMuzio
      @DavidDiMuzio 5 лет назад +1

      @@zendogbreath it's Rick's app for babies that helps them develop perfect pitch.

    • @zendogbreath
      @zendogbreath 5 лет назад +1

      @@DavidDiMuzio wow. how much i've missed. thank you.

  • @travispearson2784
    @travispearson2784 5 лет назад +34

    This is one of the reasons why I decided years ago not to become a teacher. After working in my local school for a number of years (as a sub. teacher) I noticed the disparity between the haves & have nots, the gifted & those who had to work harder to learn & the curriculum beginning taught to students. I came to the conclusion that our system just wasn't giving students enough to succeed & our society & educational system was not committed to making improvements. Unfortunately our society needs more examples like this to show society the promise & the importance of fine tuning our educational system. Society needs to understand, a chain is only as strong as it's weakest link. Our educational system should be focused on giving each child the best possible chance to learn as much as possible & ultimately succeed. Great video Rick, keep up the good work.

    • @tragicallycanadian8317
      @tragicallycanadian8317 5 лет назад +10

      Wait...so you seen a system that was unfair and broken and your solution was to just give up? Or were you hoping to change the world with RUclips comments?

    • @jamesc60
      @jamesc60 5 лет назад +3

      The parents need to be educated or at least motivated to prime their children for education.....many parents are not prepared for this, for a variety of reasons. Schools and teachers can only do so much....what the students come to school with matters a lot. But hey, if they watch a few Beato videos, they are well on their way to giving their kids good prep for success in life.

    • @RickBeato
      @RickBeato  5 лет назад +9

      My education for my kids began long before school. All it cost was a stereo, music and me interacting with them. Kids can thrive given proper early music intervention.

    • @samroyproductions3476
      @samroyproductions3476 5 лет назад

      @@RickBeato how many languages your son speaks and is he born left-handed

    • @joeshmoe7967
      @joeshmoe7967 5 лет назад +4

      @@RickBeato I think it is a shame a lot of parents seem to have kids just for the sake of it, instead of being hands on and engaged with their children right from the start. Your kids are lucky to have an awesome dad.
      Although us old guys can't develop perfect pitch we sure can learn and be inspired from your content

  • @evadesc
    @evadesc 5 лет назад +9

    What you said at 12:25 is extremely intriguing about adults being able to improve cerebral function via ear training. Definitely talk more about that.

  • @marcscordato4385
    @marcscordato4385 5 лет назад +16

    Dylon is amazing! I’ve been blessed with a good ear but he is in another zone . Such a bright talented young fellow!

  • @abeljamesshow
    @abeljamesshow 5 лет назад +32

    This is a beautiful explanation, Rick (and Dylan). Looking forward to more videos about music and the brain!

  • @musicaartedossons590
    @musicaartedossons590 5 лет назад +1

    Man...congrats. Its touching and beatifull to see you as a father doing this with your kid. Very good!

  • @Ortemon
    @Ortemon 5 лет назад +198

    You should make a TED talk yourself

    • @theshadowman
      @theshadowman 5 лет назад +3

      ssSeLdeR Excellent suggestion

    • @dukeofmacarthur3636
      @dukeofmacarthur3636 5 лет назад +1

      Yes!

    • @RickBeato
      @RickBeato  5 лет назад +20

      You have to be asked or nominated

    • @ilya1kravchenko468
      @ilya1kravchenko468 5 лет назад +4

      @@RickBeato I believe you'll be nominated soon. Are there any links to download the improvisation pieces you played for Dylan? Would be very interested to listen to them.

    • @danielthalen3055
      @danielthalen3055 5 лет назад +1

      This would be fantastic information to share through Ted. And I think Rick is the coolest guy for the job.
      Doesn’t Ted work through universities and other institutions? Who do I have to call? Haha.
      Would you accept if Ted asked you, Rick?

  • @dadungee
    @dadungee 5 лет назад +2

    Wow! Thanks Rick! I am in my third career, teaching HS math (first two were IT and Finance). What happens when a school district comes under financial difficulties?...they cut music and art. I have always noticed that students involved in music are better at extended periods of concentration than those that are not involved. This speaks volumes to the importance and long term benefits of having a well rounded education! I thoroughly enjoy your channel!

  • @julianseubert4352
    @julianseubert4352 5 лет назад +54

    Rick Beato building the ultimate Army of Perfect-Pitch Musicans to take over the Music Industry confirmed

  • @xil.sanctified
    @xil.sanctified 5 лет назад +1

    This is awesome -- my wife and I did this as well, but with other music. Saw the ted talk -- and we were hooked. Now he's literally running around replicating every sound he hears... it's awesome.

  • @i_live_pain8420
    @i_live_pain8420 5 лет назад +1

    Rick, seeing you just grinning ear to ear while Dylan goes off, reciting back those notes to you is priceless. The look on your face is so warming to see you so proud of that little stinker!

  • @Saiph
    @Saiph 5 лет назад +4

    The kids are amazing. Your dedication as a teacher/parent is even more so.

  • @gtartrek9453
    @gtartrek9453 5 лет назад +2

    What a gifted child you have, Rick! And how fortunate he is to have a father who helps him to realise his potential.

  • @Jason-bg7jc
    @Jason-bg7jc 5 лет назад +6

    That's amazing. Dylan's a lucky kid to have a dad willing to put in that work.

  • @DrGray_Drummer
    @DrGray_Drummer 5 лет назад +1

    This is so pertinent to me right now. Like you, I played music for my daughter while my wife was pregnant. I do not have perfect pitch, but in school I had to learn my intervals, however I did have a professor with perfect pitch. Anyway, she's almost 2 now. I got a keyboard for her, and would call out notes I played. Thanks to this video, I've been much more informed, and will use the info you shared. Like I said, I do know some theory (what I remember from school), but this video was incredible. It also explains why children that have parents that are musicians tend to be musically inclined. I hope you continue with these kinds of videos. Great stuff

  • @trguitarlesson
    @trguitarlesson 5 лет назад +3

    I love these vids because I am a music instructor with a child with perfect pitch. And training someone with perfect pitch is a different beast in and of itself. Thank you.

  • @gulfcoastbeemer
    @gulfcoastbeemer 5 лет назад +1

    Rick Beato and his RUclips channel are a treasure trove of knowledge. Videos like this are more thought provoking than your average college class. We are so fortunate to be exposed to this. I just wish there were more Rick Beato’s in this world.

  • @juliushahn4435
    @juliushahn4435 5 лет назад +1

    Thank you so much for your honest and quality contributions Rick.
    Each video is so helpful....!

  • @pjmorley5785
    @pjmorley5785 5 лет назад +3

    I'm looking forward to follow-up videos on this topic! Speculation: if complex and ordered information (like music) can shape the brain in beneficial ways, does this imply that simple chaotic information has a deleterious effect? Thinking social media, endless notifications on phones, etc. (Yes, I know that is a tired cliche, but....)

  • @stevesloan5935
    @stevesloan5935 5 лет назад

    You have one of the best channels on RUclips for any topic, and this is perhaps your most intriguing and inspiring video yet. Thank you very much!

  • @JoeLewis14
    @JoeLewis14 5 лет назад

    Not only am I always impressed by you, I am thoroughly impressed by your son. What a great dad for exposing your son to such things at such an early age. I want to do this with my son. Great job!

  • @m4rio0710
    @m4rio0710 5 лет назад +22

    Dylan with the lowkey roast to his 5th grade band

  • @ruslankonysheu2512
    @ruslankonysheu2512 5 лет назад

    I’ve recently became a father, and this video is really inspirational! Thanks Rick for sharing this, I will definetly try some of this tips with my little daughter. Will wait for next videos, you are making the future of this world a little bit brighter and a little more musical!)

  • @musicgeek246
    @musicgeek246 5 лет назад +1

    This is the most fantastic video I've ever watched. Thank you Rick for what you are doing for society.

  • @aguzman11189
    @aguzman11189 5 лет назад +63

    Oh my god did you get a new video camera? The quality is godly :O

    • @PunkCoverMoose
      @PunkCoverMoose 5 лет назад +1

      Andres Guzman-Ballen maybe. His lighting looks great in this one. Some of his older ones I think he may have been learning still.

    • @DarkSideofSynth
      @DarkSideofSynth 5 лет назад +3

      Maybe Rett changed something last time he was there as he often says he does :))

    • @RickBeato
      @RickBeato  5 лет назад +8

      I have a new camera that Rhett had nothing to do with thank you :)

    • @DarkSideofSynth
      @DarkSideofSynth 5 лет назад

      Great, thanks. I was just joking, by the way

  • @Sp4zc0r3
    @Sp4zc0r3 5 лет назад

    Hey Rick, I really appreciate your last few comments. As a musician and dad, I often watch your videos and feel very put out that I wasn't able to give my kids similar experiences. Lately I have been working on my own ear training, and have recently made a commitment to my kids that I will provide them a better music education than I had.

  • @jamminwithjambo7729
    @jamminwithjambo7729 5 лет назад +2

    OMG!!! Thanks for sharing. I am really amazed at what you did with Dylan. I am thankful for the research you have presented. This information should be propagated everywhere.

  • @marcoapdias
    @marcoapdias 5 лет назад +2

    Rick - this is absolutely amazing! You deserve an honorary PHd for that. I would like to have known that before my kids grown up (they are 9 and 14 now) but I'm leding them into music and they love it.

  • @abrahamoconc.1544
    @abrahamoconc.1544 5 лет назад +1

    Amazing video, both about how you have raised your children and the explanations of the results!!
    Way to go!!

  • @davidjoel5606
    @davidjoel5606 5 лет назад

    Human potential is far, far, far beyond what we experience within the world we live in. The points touched on and considered in this video are only the ethers of the possibilities of the human spirit. Thanks Rick, fabulous work!

  • @nerukas86
    @nerukas86 5 лет назад +1

    i havnt watched your videos for a while, but now i see the quality is miles up, it is looking amazing!

  • @IanSamit
    @IanSamit 5 лет назад

    One of the most profound experiences of my youth was listening to recordings of Bernstein's lecture series: The Unanswered Question, where he attempted to use Chomsky's theories as an analogue to analyse music. You have taken this so much further and your remarkable children are hopefully just some of the first to benefit from your work.

  • @neurons0nfire
    @neurons0nfire 5 лет назад

    Thanks for the inspiring video! My wife and I just welcomed our firstborn to the world 5 weeks ago, and you have me thinking more about the music exposure I can already offer her. All parents have something to pass down, but music education is an exceptionally powerful gift with wide-ranging cognitive benefits. I am a secondary English teacher, and it thrills me to know I can give my little girl an advantage in the literary realm because I have gained knowledge and skills that some do not possess. For me, my blue-collar dad taught me about shooting a basketball at a young age. Guess I missed out on perfect pitch, but I can hit three pointers like nobody’s business! Props to all the parents enriching the lives of their progeny. Thanks again! And thanks to neuroplasticity, I can watch Mr. Beato’s videos and learn about a topic, music theory, I learned nothing about as a child. Let’s keep studying, everyone. Set in a context of love, our expanded minds can work wonders on this world.

  • @aleksandar.vrhovec
    @aleksandar.vrhovec 5 лет назад +2

    doing nuryl with my daughter since 6 months prenatal, she is now 7 months old :) we love you Rick!!

  • @Modwiz125
    @Modwiz125 5 лет назад

    This video was one of the most uplifting ones I've ever seen on you tube. Lifted my spirits and then I went and read some comments that brought me back to reality. We can't fix stupid. Thank you, Rick, for helping this world out with good parenting. Stupid, or smart, begins at home.

  • @jimmypalavi
    @jimmypalavi 5 лет назад

    The results of Rick's totally beneficial experiment with his children is truly impressive. I wish I'd had the foreknowledge and tools to have provided this training to my own children as well. I think this begs the question about whether children are truly born with "gifts" vs. what Rick has provided his children unlocked a skill innate in all of us but largely remains untapped. Not everyone could even offer this to their children due to lack of resources or skills of their own to provide this out of the home, plus obviously Rick's and his wife's diligence and commitment to sustain this regiment for a long time is very unique - and not at all easy to do. Rick's children must get some of their ability genetically from Rick and their mother, but it's incredibly tantalizing to think of how much of what the kids can do can be taught to any infant. Kudos to you and your wife, Rick.

  • @jpnavarromusic
    @jpnavarromusic 5 лет назад

    Rick your channel is even more brilliant every day. I truly believe I'm a better person everytime I learn something from you and your family. Thanks for sharing all of this!

  • @churchhymnsandpsalms
    @churchhymnsandpsalms 5 лет назад +1

    Thanks, Rick! I'm a primary music teacher and I'm always trying to get my building colleagues to understand how important these early years are, musically...

  • @danielsalasmusic
    @danielsalasmusic 5 лет назад +1

    Amazing episode Rick !! I'm really happy and motivated to make more music with your teachings and your book (of course I bought it). I can't wait for the next videos about ear training for adults !! Keep it up !!

  • @fivewattworld
    @fivewattworld 5 лет назад

    Incredible and important video. Examining the uniqueness of the human brain function. This is particularly germane as we daily hear of the inevitability of AI. What can the “wetware” do that the hardware cannot/will not.
    Great conversation starter. Thanks Hypes.

  • @stephencaird4040
    @stephencaird4040 5 лет назад +1

    Dylan rocks. Love his attitude.
    The one person in my life whom I know for sure had perfect pitch -- my mother, an orchestral musician and concert pianist -- was also not bothered by notes that were "out of tune." She used to laugh about that. In fact, she played in orchestras that had different concert "A"s (440 Hz is a somewhat recent standard), and in Baroque ensembles where in many cases, equal temperament was not used (and the concert "A" was considerably lower than what we use now, because of gut strings).
    She was also a deep student of the microtonal music of Harry Partch, which boggles my mind for many reasons. It took me many years of careful listening to begin to hear harmonies in that stuff, but she claimed it always made sense to her.
    She was never able to explain how she could, given some pitch framework, know what notes belonged and which did not, nor could she explain how she could identify or play/sing, with equal facility, a pitch "correct" in a given framework. Nor explain to why stretch-tuning a piano (no acoustic piano that sounds good is perfectly intonated in equal temperament across all octaves) didn't drive her crazy.
    What *did* make her grit her teeth was when musicians were not "in tune" (for a given framework) with each other. And blues music, and a lot of jazz, disgusted her, because of all the bent notes, deliberate not-quite-on-pitch tricks, and the fact that certain instrumental parings like clarinet and piano don't quite line up with each other due to various vagaries of the physics of (say) aerophones versus struck strings, and the jazz and blues folks didn't seem to care, or know how to make it better.

  • @androidzguitar6131
    @androidzguitar6131 5 лет назад

    Rick, you never fail to inspire & give hope to even hack musicians. Thank you.

  • @peterjansen4826
    @peterjansen4826 5 лет назад +4

    Dylan shows how much a talented person can train his ear with proper training. Most first generation musicians start practicing this when it already is too late to get that perfectr pitch. He combines it with any combinaiton of tones. I hear when a piano note is false and I can tune a guitar by ear, I have the ability to recognize notes but this, I don't think it is possible to learn that at a later age. The brain just isn't sufficiently plastic any more.

  • @markkaravan4245
    @markkaravan4245 5 лет назад +3

    Great vision, Rick. Thanks for all that you do.

  • @rudyrodriguez3125
    @rudyrodriguez3125 3 года назад

    I'm In awe of such a gift you are as an educator. Not only are you an exceptionally gifted musician but also an equivalently gifted educator. Mr Beato, here, take all my money. Where were you when I was paying all that money for University cost. Bravo Maestro..

  • @andyp123456
    @andyp123456 5 лет назад +1

    I wonder how many people are watching this channel and trying to emulate what you've done to give your kids a head start. It will be very interesting to see if more research in this area is done in the future and whether ear training will become common. You should try teaching some kids that aren't yours and see if you get similar results.
    Looking forward to the next video!

  • @timbryant1621
    @timbryant1621 5 лет назад +1

    So interesting Rick. Makes sense that having an ear so attuned to notes and rhythm would directly correlate with speech and language. Awesome stuff.

  • @ralphballinger2159
    @ralphballinger2159 5 лет назад

    Wow I’m amazed. You’re a genius Rick This has to be “the” best video I have ever seen in my entire life

  • @KennethGonzalez
    @KennethGonzalez 5 лет назад

    Absolutely fascinating, Rick! I love the topic and what is possible here. Anxiously awaiting the next installment

  • @glennmikes1726
    @glennmikes1726 5 лет назад

    Cant wait for part 2 so I can start training my ear to be better... Thanks so much Rick, so happy I found your channel when I did.

  • @attilaali2060
    @attilaali2060 5 лет назад +1

    Dear Rick! Thank you for this fantastic video again. I found your channel a few months ago. A play tenor sax since my childhood, but i learned more about music in this short period, than the last ~20 years. My parents always helped me with everything by their best, and always said that music makes you a better person, and here is a great example with you. My wife is in the 2nd trimester. She watched your video too and wants me to get that playlist from you that you made for Dylan. Pls help. You know: pregnant ladys and hormones... :) (joking)
    We would like to give our baby the same opportunity as you gave your kids, and i had. Thanks and greetings from Hungary

  • @portal432
    @portal432 5 лет назад

    I just started trying to learn piano after 24 years of guitar playing. I can already hear a difference in how I write music.
    I can’t wait to hear the next part of this

  • @dksarj
    @dksarj 5 лет назад +3

    this is the episode I'm longing for!

  • @debvalle7466
    @debvalle7466 5 лет назад

    I loved this. Profound on multiple levels and yes, something of a vision for humanity. Playing and listening to music really does seem to reorient the whole brain. Well done.

  • @suretobelost
    @suretobelost 5 лет назад

    Great video, Rick! Felt like a throwback to some of the older content. Thx for all you do. Cheers!

  • @FenderBlender1908
    @FenderBlender1908 5 лет назад +1

    WOW. This one blow my mind !!! Respect Rick. I have two children - boy (11) is a drummer - he work hard and he`s very good but girl (7) is even better. Now i think she has a perfect pitch because of brother`s exercises in music and also because me & my wife are also a musicians and we play a lot in a home. This is amazing. and its much deeper than music only.Thanks a lot for this video! :-)

  • @gillesflorid
    @gillesflorid 5 лет назад

    Excellent video! Congratulations Rick for all the work you do. I hope folks in charge of education programs for school watch it.

  • @TheLookingGlassAU
    @TheLookingGlassAU 5 лет назад

    Ive been singing and playing music for my little guy since he was born 3 month premature. He had a stroke and a brain bleed when he was born, he has cerebral palsy - but he is showing that he is over coming it and developing with minimal issues. He is very alert and aware and I think its because of the music and singing and face to face time we have given him. In hospital we would do 3-5 hours of kangaroo care - physical skin to skin touch and babies ear over parent's heart, we also printed out high contrast b&w photos of our faces so he could look at them when he woke up and we weren't there.
    Im going (because of this video) step up and organise a listening program for him - he is 9 month corrected age - so im sure it will help.

  • @orbitaljellyfish808
    @orbitaljellyfish808 5 лет назад

    Awesome stuff. Rick, you’re now my all-time favorite human being. Rock on dude.

  • @zendogbreath
    @zendogbreath 5 лет назад +1

    THE BEATO EFFECT. there, we have a name for this for generations to come.

  • @TheChadPad
    @TheChadPad 5 лет назад +2

    You're such a good dad. Look at his little hands moving with the piano at 3:20!!

  • @nickvareymusic
    @nickvareymusic 5 лет назад

    This felt really heartfelt. Amazing job on the video and incredibly interesting and insightful

  • @zuenplantman901
    @zuenplantman901 5 лет назад +1

    This is a great video to show how humans will evolve in to much more intelligent beings. Thanks to time and smart people like you!

  • @hectorbecerra2991
    @hectorbecerra2991 5 лет назад

    Amazing and deep insight about the powerful effects of music to our brain! Thanks, Rick. Inspiring!

  • @johnwattdotca
    @johnwattdotca 5 лет назад +1

    In the 1970s, when I was a lead guitarist-vocalist playing six-nighters in bar bands and show-bands in Toronto,
    I would practice during the day with keyboard players who had synthesizers. We'd take turns playing notes,
    me with my heavy electronic effects, and the keyboardist with his synth sounds, trying to guess what it was.
    We had to do that so we could tell not only what key the song was in, if we were jamming out a request,
    but also be able to tell what chord was used, sometimes hard to tell the difference between major and minor.
    When you are playing with pitch-bending effects, you can develop a stronger sense of pitch yourself.
    Scientific tuning, using an oscilloscope to tune guitar intonation, is different from tempered tuning.
    It would be interesting to see if you can produce more videos with this information in mind.
    I recommend "This Is Your Brain On Music: The Science of a Human Obsession, by Daniel J. Levitin,
    a Montreal, Canada, professor who also records as a guitarist. His next book was also a best-seller.

  • @ParisblueCos
    @ParisblueCos 5 лет назад

    Incredibly fascinating stuff Rick! Thank you for all of your awesome videos!

  • @rexchidgey7911
    @rexchidgey7911 5 лет назад

    Astonishing tutorial. Masterful musical education Rick...

  • @moidiaz2824
    @moidiaz2824 5 лет назад

    Hey Rick this is an enormous contribution, imagine these kind of skills applied in anothe areas

  • @michaelbrown3586
    @michaelbrown3586 5 лет назад +2

    As always the information you provide is valuable. Thank you.

  • @micheleparker657
    @micheleparker657 5 лет назад

    I'm an OLD adult-- PLEASE have more videos on how someone like me can change our brains thru music!!! Fantastic concept!!

  • @eranzilber1
    @eranzilber1 5 лет назад

    Ear training as means to heal the world! What a concept... I can totally relate. Cheers man! My own ed-system-detected-gifted son don’t care much about music being a video game designer by passion, but he can play his ideas of music for his games on the family piano for me if he so desires and it really makes me a proud dad.

  • @dennisbenedictos9915
    @dennisbenedictos9915 5 лет назад +4

    Wow! This is mind blowing! Thanks for the video!

  • @Justme77400
    @Justme77400 5 лет назад +1

    This is amazing. The best I could do for my sons was play a lot of Mozart and Bach when they were babies and they’re both pretty musical now. I wish I had more knowledge to pass on to them but it was the best I could do.

    • @spinnis
      @spinnis 4 года назад

      Mozart is not really "high information" tho. His compositions are extremely tonally simple. Bach is more "high information".

  • @AirGuitar
    @AirGuitar 5 лет назад

    Amazing video Rick. I just love watching your progress with Dylan, it's just fascinating.

  • @franklehouillier8865
    @franklehouillier8865 5 лет назад +17

    So when is the ear training course coming?

  • @scubapekka7741
    @scubapekka7741 5 лет назад +1

    This was a total surprise video. Amazing Rick!

  • @MrBHBjr
    @MrBHBjr 5 лет назад +4

    This video was full of excellent insights! Thank you sir!

  • @humanseekingtruth6080
    @humanseekingtruth6080 5 лет назад

    This was a great video and I really enjoyed this. One of the best examples demonstrating the incredible capabilities of the human body, heart, mind, and soul when nearly fully using all that is possible for humans. Seeing how you trained your kid from very early on and how he is able to use the vast complexity, organization, storage of information, and precise recall humans are able to accomplish is truly awesome. Humans are such amazing unique beings able to achieve the most outstanding things in history.

  • @patrickoakes8014
    @patrickoakes8014 5 лет назад +1

    This is really really cool!!! Hope to see more content like it in the future

  • @yoz2k25
    @yoz2k25 5 лет назад

    Thank you for all of this research you’ve uncovered and done

  • @brotimes3334
    @brotimes3334 5 лет назад

    Amazing video! Can wait see you expand on this topic more.

  • @brianlake3507
    @brianlake3507 5 лет назад

    Outstanding video. Something that should be shared with all future parents!

  • @chakstandsup
    @chakstandsup 5 лет назад

    Thank you for that last message.
    Every child deserves this experience and we'd have a much more musical, creative, peaceful and harmonious world if that was the case. Music can be the universal communicator between all people and it really does look like a skeleton key for higher learning and language at a young age, which I'm sure many of us raised around it would attest to.

  • @jaumepp1975
    @jaumepp1975 5 лет назад

    As a psychiatrist I must say that Rick is very wise when he adresses neurobiologic topics, he’s not only well informed (seems to be, at the very least) but he also understands and exposes the information properly. Well done, man!

  • @joekyleboston
    @joekyleboston 5 лет назад

    "Imagine a world..." Thank you Rick. Probably my favorite of all your videos.

  • @sirbaronvoncount4147
    @sirbaronvoncount4147 5 лет назад +3

    Rick! The only thing more amazing than your sons talent is an old cat like you still having kids! Good on you man.

  • @RandallLakedogpix
    @RandallLakedogpix 5 лет назад +1

    Brilliant! Hey Rick, I can only buy so many copies of your book.
    Thanks

  • @Danthedrummer09
    @Danthedrummer09 5 лет назад

    This is truly inspiring. I really wish I was raised through music so much younger. I really want to retrain my ears to hear music better. I feel I started way too late!

  • @anderson.ziemmer
    @anderson.ziemmer 5 лет назад +1

    Awesome content and research! Thanks a lot, Master Rick!

  • @soulmas520
    @soulmas520 5 лет назад

    The first time I watched one of your videos, I thought "uhhh who is THIS guy..."
    Now you're my main source of music information, like.... MAIN source.
    Love your channel, brother!

  • @gr328
    @gr328 5 лет назад

    Fascinating video! I learn to hear sounds in another laguage over time, it's not instantaneous at all, the ability is still there to some extent, but probably greatly diminished.

  • @joelperez5891
    @joelperez5891 5 лет назад

    As always, another incredible video Rick.

  • @dustsky
    @dustsky 5 лет назад

    Rick, would you please consider a video about the approach (guidelines) adults should take to achieve similar results of musical understanding and mastery. I know perfect pitch is out of the question, but I'm talking understanding and appreciation of good quality music regardless of genre.
    Your kids a phenomenal, and seeing the pride on your face is quite heartwarming.

  • @Tiogan
    @Tiogan 5 лет назад

    Rick, this is brilliant and insightful. I hope you can develop this into a TED Talk, or something equivalent. Thank you, well done.