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Is Absolute Pitch A Waste of Time or the Holy Grail of Aural Training?

By Scott Edwards


As they study ear training, many musicians worry that they will never achieve success because they do not have perfect pitch. If you are one of them, don't be.

Perfect pitch is a tonal memory, which permits somebody to recognize a note without reference to another. It has some uses, but re performance or composing, it provides tiny benefit. It basically acts as just a reference pitch. Once you have developed a powerful sense of relative pitch, you will be ready to understand any music that you hear in terms of its relationships, and so after you have a reference pitch, you'll be on the same level as someone with excellent pitch.

The main thing to learn about perfect pitch is that it doesn't allow you to become a great musician, it happens as a consequence of being one. Folk who have perfect pitch sometimes develop it at a tender age because a child's brain acts like a sponge.

As we develop, we learn differently: by organisation. So when a young kid spends a big period of time playing and studying music, they develop relative pitch and perfect pitch together. When we are learning a few years down the line, we have to learn by associating each new piece of information with one we have already developed.

Relative pitch provides us with the tools that we need as musicians, and so we must struggle for that. Apparently developing a strong sense of relative pitch will help you to develop a reference pitch. Many musicians with great relative pitch begin to recognize tones and develop a feeling of perfect pitch. This is solely because they have been exposed to those sounds so frequently that they start to stick.

Now that you understand the distinction between perfect pitch and relative pitch, you can better appreciate why attempting to learn perfect pitch is a waste of time if you truly want to achieve better musicianship.




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