The funny part is 10 years ago, I could tune a guitar perfectly. I had no skill at this, I started by using tuners, and eventually after playing music with friends for so long I kind of just winged it with notes (and broken strings) until I got it right. And for a long time, I could hit the note a singer (within reason I'm a male so no soprano notes) could, especially those "throaty whispery/bon iver/sufjan" type songs. These days, I'm lucky that I even remember half of these notes, let alone my guitar playing has suffered greatly not only from not practicing (keep in mind my friends and I played almost every day for hours on end) but because I just lost interest. It's funny though, I've listened to about 20 minutes of this, and I just sang a scale and it was like nothing had changed, like time hasn't passed at all and I'm 23 again.
I started to listen to it on my earphones and singing the notes to a chromatic tuner. It has become easier to find the notes with my voice and I can identifi tunes on songs and voices better but I can not yet relate the sound to the names of the notes. My daughter is starting to do it as well, she actually likes it...
@@ameliajohnson8428 Much better, but it´s something you kind of lose with no practice. I can find the notes on the guitar and follow with my voice, but I can only name them after some effort. I was really getting good at naming the notes but stopped practicing.
Relative pitch has improved in a month's time of listening this for a few mins every day. Abs.pitch is not quite achievable for most of us. This is a good excercise for improving rel.pitch.
@@amartinezsilberstein It is becoz, after confirming on instrument, we can check the vid to confirm it, rather than the audio, which confirms it sometimes even before we get it.
I listened to this from time to time and the past 3 weeks ive listened nearly everyday. Im able to name the proper note within 5 to 10 seconds and one more week will improve this even further. Hopefully different types of scales soon after!
@matth_ac I was caught up with work and an upcoming surgery and am at a stand still. I do plan on reading books and have acquired other music knowledge recently. Thanks for the extra extra kick.
ImY’all Lé co the timber is different you idiot. There are degrees to perfect pitch. Many people have perfect pitch on their instrument, but get confused by the timber of other instruments and raw sounds.
Why don't you use notes from the pianoforte, harpsichord and stringed instruments? I seem to develop good pitch memory for several days from listening to these. Bach's Art of Fugue often has this effect as the D-minor lasts for several days. I do not believe that I have absolute pitch. but I seem to have that in between form of pitch memory that comes from dreaming about a piece of music and waking up to find I was recalling it in the right key, as checked with a score. I seem to have reliable pitch recall when I try the least.
Perfect pitch is understood by next to no one on internet. You probably do have it but the info out there is simply not true. Naming notes has nothing to do with it. It's more like you said, about exact location of sounds, not who has the fastest answers to mechanical quizzes that differ by instrument anyway. Most of internet is pure garbage and a waste of time.
I prefer this version to the other one because I've always learned with do re mi. But it's a shame that you don't announce the note 'cause I, not having perfect pitch, don't know what note I'm listening to, unless I look at the screen, and that not really the concept of the video. I'm supposed to listen to it while I sleep.😴(or any other time). Would it be possible to make a video of you announcing the do re mi while it goes on ? Anyway thanks for this video and all the other ones.
I saw these guys live in concert!! Great show but got monotonous rather quickly.😊 Thanks for the video. Helpful to try to be curious about the notes, like a child would...and notice characteristics of ea tone...even singing the tones along w the video is helpful. But as they say...time takes time...takes patience and regular listening put into ones schedule daily to see any improvement...like going to the gym but for yore ears.😊😊❤ Happy listening/God bless
What helps me open up my ear is to listen for the perfect 5th overtone, and then following overtones. Once I start hearing those I know my ears have opened up a bit. It's odd how just searching around in my mind while listening I can amplify or diminish the sounds of the overtones... I don't know how that crap works.
Maybe I'm weird, but with my eyes closed it's like the letter vibrates in my body and I know the note without looking I open my eyes and it's the correct letter or note.
Solfege refers to the Italian names of the 12 individual pitches in the chromatic scale. Notation is assigning letters from the English alphabet to represent the individual pitches.
Rania Menjour i do also believe you can develope somewhat of a perfect pitch as a teenager, i really started to work at my pitch identification at 14 for a few months by quizzing myself playing notes on a piano and guessing them
. I'm confused. Not enough explanation 4 newbie to know what the sounds and C do, G Sol etc mean. ie does the C rep C major? G rep G whatever. Little Better explained here ChocolateChipsMusic Still what the heck is weird sounds for.
Can’t wait to hear the live version of this
77777777
The funny part is 10 years ago, I could tune a guitar perfectly. I had no skill at this, I started by using tuners, and eventually after playing music with friends for so long I kind of just winged it with notes (and broken strings) until I got it right. And for a long time, I could hit the note a singer (within reason I'm a male so no soprano notes) could, especially those "throaty whispery/bon iver/sufjan" type songs.
These days, I'm lucky that I even remember half of these notes, let alone my guitar playing has suffered greatly not only from not practicing (keep in mind my friends and I played almost every day for hours on end) but because I just lost interest.
It's funny though, I've listened to about 20 minutes of this, and I just sang a scale and it was like nothing had changed, like time hasn't passed at all and I'm 23 again.
I started to listen to it on my earphones and singing the notes to a chromatic tuner. It has become easier to find the notes with my voice and I can identifi tunes on songs and voices better but I can not yet relate the sound to the names of the notes. My daughter is starting to do it as well, she actually likes it...
Marco Ferrao How’s the progress going after 2 years?
Nice story but. Hows the pitch?
Marco Ferrao
How is the pitch after 4 years of doing it
@@ameliajohnson8428 Much better, but it´s something you kind of lose with no practice. I can find the notes on the guitar and follow with my voice, but I can only name them after some effort. I was really getting good at naming the notes but stopped practicing.
@Mjay I really didin´t count it, but it takes time. Also I had guitar practice and singing exercises, which were more efficient for me.
Relative pitch has improved in a month's time of listening this for a few mins every day. Abs.pitch is not quite achievable for most of us. This is a good excercise for improving rel.pitch.
Thank you for making one without speech!
Just curious. Why did you want one without speech?
@@amartinezsilberstein It is becoz, after confirming on instrument, we can check the vid to confirm it, rather than the audio, which confirms it sometimes even before we get it.
To me it's because the C note is prounced the same way the B note (si) is pronounced in my language. I use the Do-re-mi system 😅
Welcome to the elite who is musically advanced enough to look up pitch training god bless it
I listened to this from time to time and the past 3 weeks ive listened nearly everyday. Im able to name the proper note within 5 to 10 seconds and one more week will improve this even further. Hopefully different types of scales soon after!
How are you now?
@matth_ac I was caught up with work and an upcoming surgery and am at a stand still. I do plan on reading books and have acquired other music knowledge recently. Thanks for the extra extra kick.
@@fgh2756 I hope everything's gonna be well in your surgery and studies! you´re welcome.
I have absolute pitch for piano, but not other sounds. So this exercise is perfect for me. I will try to do this every day, and see what happens :)
Suoyung Tempestuoso any improvements?
Lmao 😂 all frequencies are the same ! U probably lying just to boost ur self esteem
ImY’all Lé co the timber is different you idiot. There are degrees to perfect pitch. Many people have perfect pitch on their instrument, but get confused by the timber of other instruments and raw sounds.
@@CC-hz8ry He has absolute joke
its called relative pitch dumb
Please a make a similar exercise except for pitch intervals. I am really benefiting from this video. Thanks for your upload and work.
Why don't you use notes from the pianoforte, harpsichord and stringed instruments? I seem to develop good pitch memory for several days from listening to these. Bach's Art of Fugue often has this effect as the D-minor lasts for several days. I do not believe that I have absolute pitch. but I seem to have that in between form of pitch memory that comes from dreaming about a piece of music and waking up to find I was recalling it in the right key, as checked with a score. I seem to have reliable pitch recall when I try the least.
Perfect pitch is understood by next to no one on internet. You probably do have it but the info out there is simply not true. Naming notes has nothing to do with it. It's more like you said, about exact location of sounds, not who has the fastest answers to mechanical quizzes that differ by instrument anyway. Most of internet is pure garbage and a waste of time.
I prefer this version to the other one because I've always learned with do re mi. But it's a shame that you don't announce the note 'cause I, not having perfect pitch, don't know what note I'm listening to, unless I look at the screen, and that not really the concept of the video. I'm supposed to listen to it while I sleep.😴(or any other time).
Would it be possible to make a video of you announcing the do re mi while it goes on ? Anyway thanks for this video and all the other ones.
claire b thats why you need perfect pitch silly
No
It's base on the circle of fifths
So you don't need to look at the screen
You should know and memorize them as a musician.
Mahdi Naderi while you sleep? the circle of fifths isn't quite as deeply engraved in the human mind as speech
Similarly, enabling interstitial ads was a bad choice.
I saw these guys live in concert!! Great show but got monotonous rather quickly.😊 Thanks for the video. Helpful to try to be curious about the notes, like a child would...and notice characteristics of ea tone...even singing the tones along w the video is helpful. But as they say...time takes time...takes patience and regular listening put into ones schedule daily to see any improvement...like going to the gym but for yore ears.😊😊❤ Happy listening/God bless
I couldn't understand though, if we don't look at the screen how do we know which note is being played?
Circle of 5ths
Lmao silly yall need p3rf3ct pitch
this video is so powerful that you don't need to look at the screen to recognize the note
perfect pitch is achieved by recognizing pitches..... the note association comes later.
La obcesion vence al "talento" siempre
very nice! would appreciate a video specifically for male singalong. I'm using this to improve my vocal pitch.
Que bom que não tem palavras em inglês, assim eu que falo português posso aprender também :)
I know right!
Great ear training video. Thank you
This is a great idea! 👍🏾 I will have to make one for myself being that I tune my instruments to A = 432.
Michael Carlisle b
00:05 F - 1:02 C - 2:02 G - 3:02 D - 4:02 A - 5:02 E - 6:02 B - 7:02 F# - 8:02 C# - 9:02 G# - 10:02 D# - 11:02 A#
Great! I can just tap and I get random notes
Do it in order for Christ sake
I hear the notes or note not matching the same pitches many times by wavering.
Me too! I thought that was Weird
This gave me sleep paralisis
excellent training but need random one.
H
the piano is consistently sharp.....
Alex Wright I feel so too
What helps me open up my ear is to listen for the perfect 5th overtone, and then following overtones. Once I start hearing those I know my ears have opened up a bit. It's odd how just searching around in my mind while listening I can amplify or diminish the sounds of the overtones... I don't know how that crap works.
solfege allow you to sing notes with proper grammer and functionality of the tone at hand
Gerald roberts forgot what solfege meant
Tejas Appana music theory
The G# cello sounds a little off to me but otherwise very nice
*immediately goes to comments*
Maybe I'm weird, but with my eyes closed it's like the letter vibrates in my body and I know the note without looking I open my eyes and it's the correct letter or note.
Chevy Gurl01 Congratulations! You've perfect pitch
Audrey Sung thank you! 😊
U should start doing music, if u dont do it already.
Not weird just good!
tf when I keep falling asleep during the first few minutes of the video so I have F down but none of the others
can you make a talking sound with this so my brain can hear fa and associate it with F and the sound
Those deep bass note are for the hip hop crowd.
Depois de assistir 1 horas .
Peguei o violão e acertei quase tudo encontrando o tom
notation is notation ie sheet music notes on a grandstaff
Thank you so much
It works
awesome!
what's the difference between solfege and notation ?
Solfege refers to the Italian names of the 12 individual pitches in the chromatic scale. Notation is assigning letters from the English alphabet to represent the individual pitches.
Solfege is the note relative to the scale (Do, Re, Mi)
Can I learn to sing with this,? It is good to learn singing?
Please do make a relative pitch version
This is too short I wish there was an extended version .
Muito bom
Twoset ?
Of course
Yas
Yup
Cleary, my dear friend.
They used the other video, (the one with speech) but you have the right teaching channel.
❤❤❤❤❤❤
Can anyone tell me how long they recommend you do his for instead of a whole HOUR
Six hours
10 hours
A life time.....
10 years?
Just listen until its done with the circle of 5ths
Try it for a whole hour.
Try only 60 min
If i can sing any white notes without a reference note do i have perfect pitch?
if _only_ white notes, no.
The notes modulate.
Agreed. They're not stable. They bend, especially toward the end of each pitch. :-/
Well, I'm confused, because the video's title says it's C-D-E that's being played, but you have other notes written in the screen.
CDE and Do Re Mi identify the kind of notation used, typically known as Alphabet notation and Solfege notation.
musicwithnopain ok, thought it was only. These three notes
Are the notes spoken subliminally on this?
Each note gets played 5 times
I am 13 can I get perfect pitch?
No
Yes if you believe you can you will, patience and perseverance are key! :D
hope this helps =)
Rania Menjour i do also believe you can develope somewhat of a perfect pitch as a teenager, i really started to work at my pitch identification at 14 for a few months by quizzing myself playing notes on a piano and guessing them
This is some weird ASMR
What is CDe stands for
thx
Fa Do Sol Re La Mi Ti Fi/Se Di/Ra Si/Le Ri/Me Li/Te
Show
Circle of fifths?
helping me
Post up one with guitar, for us guitarists.
there are guitar strings sounding here!
@@arseniyonline1234555 was about to say.
hmm my relative pitch is actually not improving much
Off tune though
No one:
Everyone: I may just be the special type of autistic to actually get this as an adult!
. I'm confused. Not enough explanation 4 newbie to know what the sounds and C do, G Sol etc mean. ie does the C rep C major? G rep G whatever. Little Better explained here ChocolateChipsMusic Still what the heck is weird sounds for.
the A B C D E F G are just the notes that are being played. The Do Re Mi Fa Sol La Ti are just a way to help sing the note correctly
cory rider and in France we don't use ABCDEFG but DoReMiFaSolLaSi
Google perfect pitch.