Absolute Pitch Ear Training Podcast 08-20-07
August 20, 2007
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Topics covered:
The pleasure of finding things out, Richard Feynman, Dr. Kurt Fischer, dynamic skill theory, developmental levels, adult learning, ear training, and much more…
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(1 votes, average: 4 out of 5)Absolute Pitch Ear Training Podcast 04-27-07
April 27, 2007
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Topics covered:
Learning absolute pitch, your motives, absolute pitch disinformation, motivation to learn absolute pitch, and more.
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(1 votes, average: 5 out of 5)Absolute Pitch Ear Training Podcast 04-09-07
April 9, 2007
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Topics covered:
Singing what you hear, the body/mind connection in music, exercises to improve your musicianship, and more.
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(1 votes, average: 5 out of 5)There’s a perpetually propagated myth that if you have absolute pitch, then if you listen to music that is out of tune, you have a bad experience. If there is any truth to this myth, it’s definitely not an absolute. Some people may be disturbed by music that is out of tune. I believe this has more to do with personality type than anything else. But we have to deal with the definition of “out of tune.”
Most musicians with good relative pitch will notice immediately if a note is out of tune relative to its surroundings. If it bugs you, then there’s a lot of music you probably can’t listen to. If it doesn’t bother you, then you know how someone with absolute pitch is affected by sound. Sounds sound good or bad or somewhere in between based on your personal preference, whether you have absolute pitch or not.
Part of the problem with this myth comes from the sloppy use of language to describe an experience. A single note can be out of tune relative to the surrounding tones. That’s one example of being out of tune. A single instrument can be out of tune relative to the other instruments in an ensemble. That’s another example. But if all the tones or instruments are tuned differently than A440 kHz, it’s not out of tune. It’s just a different tuning.
History tells us that we haven’t always listened to music with the A440 kHz standard. In Mozart’s time, stringed-keyboard music music was meant to be played at a range of around A420 to A430. There are also different tuning systems and temperaments.
If this myth were true, then there would be quite a few people with absolute pitch who couldn’t listen to Miles Davis’ Kind of Blue, which on record was globally tuned a little sharp. And if you don’t like Kind of Blue, it’s got nothing to do with absolute pitch. It just means that you’re crazy!




(2 votes, average: 4 out of 5)Top Ear Training Articles for 2006
December 17, 2006
1 CommentI hope your ear improved in 2006. I know mine did. Just in case you haven’t been reading my blog all year, here’s my favorite ear training articles for 2006.
- Is Your Ear Suspect?
- Why Singing What You Hear Is Important To Your Ear Training
- Understanding The Art And Craft Of Absolute Pitch Hearing
- Shaolin Ear Training
- Hearing and Consciousness
- Absolute Pitch Ear Training Podcast 12-04-06
- Absolute Pitch Ear Training Podcast 10-06-06
- Absolute Pitch Ear Training Podcast 09-26-06
- Absolute Pitch Ear Training Podcast 08-14-06
- Absolute Pitch Ear Training Podcast 07-30-06
- Naked Pitch
- Ear Training Software and Freeware for Mac and PC
- Why Is Absolute Pitch More Refined Than Relative Pitch?
- The Ear Training You Do Today…
- Quit On A High Point
- Portals Into Absolute Pitch: Silence
- How To Hear Interval Quality Distinctions
- Ear Training With Your Cell Phone Ringtone
- Some Important Absolute Pitch Distinctions
- How To Be An Expert
- Ear Training Hack #3
- Ear Training Hacks 1-2




(1 votes, average: 5 out of 5)

