[pianotech] Perfect Pitch / Children

Paul T Williams pwilliams4 at unlnotes.unl.edu
Sat Mar 21 12:51:54 PDT 2009


Same thing with me, although not a tuning thing.  Ann Shine (Shein?) was 
here for a guest artist recital.  We listened to the piano....she was not 
pleased!  I moved the piano about three inches at the front of the piano 
toward the seats and she says, "yes, that really sounds better now".  Go 
figgur.  the stage manager and I just smiled and told her, "it probably 
has caught the best acoustics of the room!"  She agreed...and the show 
went on! <G>

I've had other weird things come from picky players as well, including the 
below blog, or just pretending to move something, taking the action out 
and moving a couple of jacks or rep springs, or what have you, and they 
say.."Oh, it DOES sound better now! How you did that is amazing!!!"  Again 
a grin

Paul




Ryan Sowers <tunerryan at gmail.com> 
Sent by: pianotech-bounces at ptg.org
03/21/2009 12:51 AM
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Re: [pianotech] Perfect Pitch / Children






I've wondered for quite some time about the limits of so-called perfect 
pitch. I've tried to research this on the internet and not gotten very far 
in the past. Can individuals with a high degree of this ability 
discriminate between 440 and 440.5? I imagine this has been researched, 
and it would be really interesting to know how refined this ability can 
be. 

Franz Moore told a story about Horowitz complaining that the pitch of the 
piano was off before a concert. Franz checked it and it was dead on. 
Nevertheless, he pretended to tune for a half hour or so and told the 
Maestro to try the piano. Ah! Much better! was the reply. 

Along the same line a tuning buddy of mine was tuning in the low bass for 
a music teacher who claimed to have perfect pitch. After tuning a note the 
teacher stopped him and said "are you sure that's correct?" My friend said 
"I'll move it a bit and you tell me where you think it sounds best." He 
put his lever on the pin and before he had even moved the pin the teacher 
said "There! That's it!". Of course my friend had not changed the pitch 
even slightly.

 There is an interesting gray area between externally perceived phenomenon 
and internally generated phenomenon: i.e. the imagination. 

On Wed, Mar 18, 2009 at 9:44 AM, <JimWilsonian at aol.com> wrote:
My friend Nate has a child Noah with perfect pitch.  From the age of 6 
he's been able to identify notes played on the piano -- without seeing 
what you're playing.  You can play any note and he'll tell you what it is 
without hesitation.  He's 8 now and this gift is even more refined.  When 
I was there 2 weeks ago, I tried it out.  I played random clusters of 
notes and without being able to see the keyboard he could instantly pick 
out each note -- even dissonant clusters. He's also becoming a really good 
pianist and beginning to compose. Really amazing.  Nate is an accomplished 
studio musician, so one assumes that genetics played a role.  ... Then you 
add to the mystery that Noah's twin sister Sarah, while being a promising 
musician, does not share the same gift.  Pretty wild, huh?

Jim Wilson


pianotech-request at ptg.org writes:

"Absolute pitch (AP), or perfect pitch, is the ability to name or
reproduce a tone without reference to an external standard".





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-- 
Ryan Sowers, RPT
Puget Sound Chapter
Olympia, WA
www.pianova.net
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