What are the benefits of having perfect pitch?

Moderator: kcleung

What are the benefits of having perfect pitch?

Postby AudreyL » Wed May 02, 2012 1:04 am

I do not have perfect pitch. I have been playing piano, playing sax, and studying music for almost 20 years. I have familiarized myself with music enough to have developed relative pitch. I can find my way around any song when listening to it, I just don't know off-hand which key it is in.
All this to say, I have a potential student wanting to learn piano for the purpose of learning perfect pitch. I cannot decide how to reply.
I think it is cool some people have this naturally, but I can probably count on one hand the times I would have needed perfect pitch.
What are the benefits?
AudreyL
 
Posts: 4
Joined: Mon May 11, 2009 2:56 pm
Location: Northwest Indiana

Re: What are the benefits of having perfect pitch?

Postby jossuk » Mon May 07, 2012 1:53 am

I would recommend reading the excellent Wikipedia article on Absolute Pitch. There is no significant indication that it can be taught.

My own experience: absolute (perfect) pitch has definite drawbacks. The "A" known as such to one possessing this ability is linked to a particular number of vibrations per second (Herz). If one's "perfect" A equals 440 Herz, then exposure to variations (higher or lower) will cause distress sufficient to negate any previous advantage. Such variations can be historical (Baroque tunings), regional (local traditions of tunings higher or lower than 440), and situational (a cappella choral performances where the pitch drops during a piece).

Of far greater value is the development of relative pitch that you mention. Aural recognition of scales and intervals is essential. Ditto knowledge of chord progressions. And, if you are a singer, comparing an unknown pitch to your own vocal range can be a quite useful tool, as the vocal muscles do have memory.
jossuk
active poster
 
Posts: 171
Joined: Tue Oct 27, 2009 1:48 pm

Re: What are the benefits of having perfect pitch?

Postby aris_berd » Fri May 25, 2012 2:17 pm

Perfect Pitch is a human ability very similar to Relative Pitch. Both are usefull in playing-enjoying music and both have to do with the way someone hears. But, perfect pitch is mistaken sometimes as born-wth ability or othertimes as less usefull.

More or less, I will gently disagree with jossuk. There are no drawbacks in learning Perfect Pitch. There are benefits, that together with relative can develop a very good hearing ability!

These are : 1. to be able to hear what's the different between pitches (why A sound like an A, what Bb sounds like, why that music piece is writen in that tonality, what happens in music when you tune higher or lower) , 2. to be able to identify pitches without a relative one (that means you can tell what a pitch is without starting with a known one, because of no1), 3. to be able to sing pitches without get a known pitch, 4. improves your musical memory (because your mind has another way to remember music). That what I can think for now.

And for the drawbacks, let me explain. If you have both relative and perfect pitch, there is no music confusion. There is no "I can't stand listening to this music because it is tuned lower", because the only thing you hear is pitches, you can not only tell what's reference between them, but also tell what the sound like. In other words, you feel like tuning yourself lower and listen that way.

Of course, it can be tought! To be precise: of course, anyone can recall that ability, because it is something we are born with, but none tell us to practise.

I think I helped!
aris_berd
 
Posts: 1
Joined: Fri May 25, 2012 1:50 pm

Re: What are the benefits of having perfect pitch?

Postby jossuk » Sat May 26, 2012 7:52 pm

Aris, your gentle disagreement is noted. Perhaps I wasn't precise enough in my posting.
(1) Please read the entire Wikipedia article on "absolute pitch"; otherwise, we're not close to sharing the same basis for discussion.
(2) The article seems to confirm my own experience, as I have not met any musicians who claim to have developed "perfect" pitch. Any testimony from musicians claiming to have done so would certainly be of interest.
(3) I have worked with musicians whose "perfect" pitch (innate) was not at all helpful in the situations I mentioned earlier (another point of agreement with the article) and I respect their conclusions. Again, it would be interesting to hear from anyone with contrary experience, i.e., that absolute pitch was ...always... a benefit, no matter what the local circumstances.
jossuk
active poster
 
Posts: 171
Joined: Tue Oct 27, 2009 1:48 pm


Return to Music Related

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 4 guests