Absolute pitch - meaning of word
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Absolute pitch



Absolute pitch, widely referred to as perfect pitch, can refer the ability to identify a note by name without the benefit of a reference note. The term is also less commonly used to describe the exact pitch (music) of a note described by its number of vibrations per second. ==Definition== Musical historians Geoffrey Ward and Ken Burns defined ability of absolute pitch as: "The ability to attach labels to isolated auditory stimuli on the basis of pitch alone." A person with absolute pitch will be able to, at minimum, know when a piece isn't played in its original key. Persons who have absolute pitch, but who do not have strong musical training, will seem annoyed or unnerved when a piece is transposed to a different key (or played in nonstandard pitch), and will have difficulty transposing music without manually calculating intervals between known pitches. They may feel that such a piece does not have the intrinsic beauty of music, and in some cases will be physically uncomfortable; cases are known of musicians who had to tune every instrument or they would actually feel sick. They may have a harder time developing relative pitch than others, and for many musical tasks like transposition, lack of training in relative skills can trip up a musician with absolute pitch, who will attempt to use their absolute knowledge for what is clearly a relative task. Also, poorly-trained absolute pitch possessors can find it quite difficult to play in tune with an orchestra which is not tuned to Pitch_(music) A=440 Hz (e.g. "authentic" baroque ensembles that play in "chamber tuning" A=415 Hz, about a semitone below modern concert pitch). They may also have trouble when learning to play certain instruments, such as the trombone and the violin family of stringed instruments, where playing initially out of tune will be uncomfortable. ==Distinctions== ==="Passive" absolute pitch=== Musicians with passive absolute pitch are able to identify individual notes which they hear, and can identify the key of a composition (assuming some degree of musical training), but have trouble singing a given note on command. ==="Active" absolute pitch=== Musicians with active absolute pitch will be able to sing any given note when asked. Usually, people with active absolute pitch will not only be able to identify a note, but recognize when that note is slightly sharp or flat. Active absolute pitch possessors in the United States number about 1 in every 10,000. Most of these people started music training before the age of six. Musical training is necessary for full development of the auditory potential of a person with perfect pitch. ==Correlation with musical genius== Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Leonard Bernstein, Phil Spector and Paul Shaffer are four musicians who had perfect pitch; Igor Stravinsky, Maurice Ravel, and Richard Wagner are among those who did not. There is no necessary correlation between absolute pitch and musical genius: many with absolute pitch do not work in music, and it can be a liability when attempting to play an instrument without having had prior musical training (especially for those for whom out-of-tune music is uncomfortable). Absolute pitch alone does not make a great musician. ==Absolute pitch and biology== Absolute pitch is not limited to the realm of music, or even to humans. Songbirds and wolves have exhibited the ability. In fact, studies indicate that absolute pitch is more a linguistic ability than a musical one. Absolute pitch is an act of cognition, needing memory of the frequency, a label for the frequency (such as B-flat), and exposure to the common range considered a note. (A note, in modern musical tuning, can vary in its exact frequency.) It may be directly analogous to recognizing colors or other categorical perception of sensory stimuli (such as speech sounds). And while most people have been trained to recognize and name the color ''blue'' by its frequency, it is possible only those who have had early, somewhere between the ages of 3 and 6 (reviewed in Takeuchi and Hulse 1993), and deliberate exposure to the names of musical tones—usually musicians—will be likely to identify a middle C. Absolute pitch, may, however, be genetic, possibly an autosomal dominant genetic trait (Profita and Bidder 1988; Baharloo et al. 1998), though, "Absolute pitch might be nothing more than a general human capacity whose expression is strongly biased by the level and type of exposure to music that people experience in a given culture." In addition, perfect pitch is more common among speakers of the tonal languages Mandarin Chinese, Cantonese Chinese and Vietnamese language, which depend heavily on pitch-shifts for meaning. Such cultures have very few "tone deaf" people. On the other hand, there are a number of Japanese Language speakers who have perfect pitch as well, although Japanese is not a tonal language (though it does have a pitch accent). Speakers of Sino-Tibetan languages have been reported to speak a word in the same absolute pitch (within a quarter-tone) on various days. Until the middle of the 20th century, most people believed that musical ability itself was an inborn talent. Some scientists believe absolute pitch is due to genetics and are trying to map the gene for it; others believe most humans don't typically develop this ability because there is no social use for it, and are trying to teach adults how to develop it. The debate is not yet settled, as data on this highly specialized ability are quite scarce. It is nevertheless becoming increasingly apparent that people can acquire perfect pitch [at least for single instruments] through learning. Pitch recognition is now taught at the Eastman School of music and various "perfect pitch" courses have been offered since the early 1980s. Many musicians, and probably most jazz musicians, have quite good relative pitch, a skill which can certainly be learned. With practice, it's possible to listen to a single known pitch once (from a pitch pipe or a tuning fork) and then have stable, reliable pitch identification by comparing the notes you hear to the tonic pitch in your head. Unlike true perfect pitch, this skill can also be adjusted up and down as needed. ==Famous Possessors of Absolute Pitch== *Julie Andrews *Johann Sebastian Bach *Béla Bartók *Ludwig von Beethoven *Leonard Bernstein *Michelle Branch *David Lucas Burge *Mariah Carey *Frédéric Chopin *Nat King Cole *Bing Crosby *Mia Farrow *Jimi Hendrix *Glenn Gould *Yo-Yo Ma *Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart *George Frideric Handel *Niccolò Paganini *André Previn *Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov *Camille Saint-Saëns *Paul Shaffer *Frank Sinatra *Barbra Streisand *Yanni Additionally, a 1952 Peanuts comic strip implied that Charlie Brown had absolute pitch. ==Source== *Wallin et al. (2000). ''The Origins of Music'', p.12-13. Cambridge, Mass.: A Bradford Book, The MIT Press. **Ward and Burns (1982). ==External links== * [http://w1.570.telia.com/~u57011259/eng6.htm Absolute pitch as a general trait] Evidence that all, or nearly all, have a subconscious version of absolute pitch * [http://www.perfectpitchpeople.com/links Perfect Pitch Links] – resources on absolute pitch * [http://www.silvawood.co.uk/pitch-intro.htm Software for trying to acquire perfect pitch] * [http://www.acousticlearning.com Research on absolute pitch and music cognition] Musical terminology

Absolute pitch



Semitone = Half step in the States. Should it be notated or change? User:Ich 00:47, Jul 7, 2004 (UTC) ---- My father told me the names of the white notes on a piano when I was five years old. For many years after that, I could identify white notes on a piano when I heard them, but with black notes, I could tell only that they were black notes. And it didn't work with other instruments. During my 20s, "C"s on a piano began to sound almost, but not quite, a full tone higher than "C"s, and ever since then I get confused and cannot identify notes. How does that fit into theories about the origin and nature of this phenomenon? -- Mike Hardy :Different pianos may be tuned a semitone higher or lower than "concert pitch", which may cause this phenomenon. -- tk1@despammed.com "Usually, people with active absolute pitch will not only be able to identify a note, but recognize when that note is slightly sharp or flat." You need not actually identify the black keys to have perfect pitch, but only know that they are indeed black keys, if that makes sense. User:Jendeyoung 18:33, 26 May 2005 (UTC) ---- This article uses the oft considered inaccurate term perfect pitch throughout its text. Any reason?-User:Hyacinth 21:04, 19 Feb 2004 (UTC) :Probably because it is in more common usage, even though it is irritatingly imprecise. I tried to train my students to use the term "absolute pitch" but it was a losing battle. Google for perfect pitch = 87,000; absolute pitch = 20,000, as of today. User:Antandrus 17:04, 6 Sep 2004 (UTC) ---- It is possible that you learned to name tones (a collection of characteristics) instead of pitches (a single characteristic of a tone). When musical contexts change-- most typically, timbre and harmony-- the perception of a tone also changes. Perfect pitch and absolute pitch have become interchangeable terms. I suspect that "perfect pitch" is used throughout the article because it is a less clumsy term than "absolute pitch"-- it's alliterative and has a nicer rhythm. cheers chris http://www.acousticlearning.com :But the pitch is the fundamental, unless it is a bell or something with an irregular overtone series. When I hear a C# I first hear the C#, whether it is a piano, an oboe, a tire squeal or a modem trying to connect; the perception of timbre comes later. Interesting though. User:Antandrus 05:41, 1 Nov 2004 (UTC) ---- The melody trigger technique is now being used (successfully) to gain absolute pitch at Prolobe.com -Pete == 1 in every 10,000? == : Active absolute pitch possessors in the United States number about 1 in every 10,000. I am somewhat doubtful that this is actually true. Throughout my secondary school life I've known quite a number of people who can sing whatever note you tell them to. I can too and even now in a small choir of only roughly 20 people there is also someone else who can. Although I was in Hong Kong in secondary school and in Australia now, surely even in the United States there are many more than 1 in 10,000. -- User:KittySaturn 09:55, 2005 May 14 (UTC) ::I also see this statistic mentioned frequently. My own experience (which I can't put in to the article, since it's original research) is that possessors of perfect pitch may be far more numerous than this, based on how many I knew in graduate school. I taught at a large music conservatory, and I'd say that maybe 1 in 20 of the students in the advanced theory/sight-singing sections that I taught had "active" perfect pitch, and maybe one in ten had "passive". No students in the lower sections did. Overall, maybe one in 50 or 100 students in the school had the ability. The 1:10,000 statistic holds up only if it possible that the students in the school were a tiny subset of the general population. I also observed that students from East Asia (China, Korea, Japan, Singapore especially) were much more likely to have pitch than those from the west; I have no idea why, since not all those places have tonal languages. User:Antandrus User_talk:Antandrus 15:47, 29 May 2005 (UTC)


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