Have some of you experiences with programs like Earmaster?
Shout

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I believe that perfect pitch is learned rather than an "inborn ability", but some people have a greater affinity toward it than others. Have you ever known a non-musician with perfect pitch?fluteguy18 wrote:I am one of those lucky people who have "perfect" pitch. You play something to me, and I can play it back. Ask me to name the pitch, and I am almost always right.
So, I would say: Yes. I have an ear for music. But no, I don't train it. I was lucky and had the inborn ability.
This is exactly what I was describing. I don't think anyone is truly born with perfect pitch, but some do learn it at such a young age that it seems that they were born with it. We weren't born able to walk, but we were born with the ability to LEARN to walk. We weren't born able to talk, but we were born with the ability to LEARN to talk. Since we don't often remember our very early years, someone who hears a lot of music as an infant learns to identify pitches. There are even theories a fetus can learn while still in the womb. If we stretch this to perfect pitch, then perhaps some are "born" with it, but even then, I would still say it is learned.c_otter wrote:Interestingly enough, I didn't consciously try to learn this. I just started being able to do this over the past few years.
Just as some people are colorblind, some are tonedeaf to varying degrees. Odds are that some of these people become musicians and they learn to cope with that - some better than others.fluteguy18 wrote:I know a lot of musicians who practice many more hours a day than I do [and that's saying something], who can't do that without some trial and error.