how tone deaf people hear music

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  • Опубліковано 3 бер 2023
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 2,9 тис.

  • @HyperChamp
    @HyperChamp Рік тому +13010

    As someone who's not tone deaf I can't confirm anything

  • @bliss4492
    @bliss4492 Рік тому +16516

    I deciphered the morse codes! The first one is YOU'RE TONE, the second morse that's mixed with the boing sound is DEAF

    • @mikeiavelli
      @mikeiavelli Рік тому +266

      no way!

    • @silverandexact
      @silverandexact Рік тому +191

      ✨ algorithmic boost ✨

    • @Caerulean
      @Caerulean Рік тому +81

      Wait, for real? 👀

    • @Floodpelt
      @Floodpelt Рік тому +99

      ​@@Caerulean Nah, when I wrote it down, I only got the message "YOU'L TONE", so the first guy must've made a mistake somewhere

    • @temmiemew
      @temmiemew Рік тому +202

      @@Floodpelt
      R E = •-• •
      L = •-••

  • @kelseyswanepoel7056
    @kelseyswanepoel7056 Рік тому +7559

    For anyone wondering Tone Deafness is a real thing (generally caused by chronic ear infections as a child) but it does not mean that you cannot sing. We had a tome deaf boy in our choir who taught himself to sing by feeling how the vibrations changed in his throat. Very good singer

    • @ytcommentssuck4804
      @ytcommentssuck4804 Рік тому +290

      That’s impressive

    • @hughcaldwell1034
      @hughcaldwell1034 Рік тому +95

      Thanks. I's doing some shower singing the other day, paying super close attention to the sensations in my throat, and so was wondering about this.

    • @CaptainChard
      @CaptainChard Рік тому +10

      Very interesting!

    • @EmmaJohnsonShenanigans
      @EmmaJohnsonShenanigans Рік тому +80

      when i sing in the choir and can’t hear myself, i have to rely on the way a note feels to sing to tell if i’m off pitch, or even on the right note 😅

    • @aprilbennett4161
      @aprilbennett4161 Рік тому +90

      My older sister can sing pretty well, and, as a kid, was generally favored in her music classes. She was even decent at playing the flute. It wasn't until a few years ago, in college, that she found out that she was tone deaf. One of her professors uncovered it by accident. There was some demonstration that involved the use of tones. Naturally, she was totally confused and brought up her inability to tell the difference between the sounds. In a span of minutes, the professor ran an experiment and informed her that she's tone deaf.
      Funnily enough, I had chronic ear infections as a kid (swimmers ear from bad bathing habits), not her, and I'm not tone deaf.

  • @ProgThoughts
    @ProgThoughts Рік тому +3173

    As somebody who is deaf, I can confirm that I heard this video the same way I hear music.

    • @jasonwismer2670
      @jasonwismer2670 Рік тому +41

      Ha ha ha! Clever.

    • @ComicPans
      @ComicPans Рік тому +13

      Mind-blowing :0

    • @atreq
      @atreq Рік тому +23

      I know I probably shouldn't laugh but I lost it so much at your comment XDDDD

    • @Casey-c-m
      @Casey-c-m 11 місяців тому +13

      As a fellow deaf person who wears a cochlear implant and hearing aid, I disprove that fact. (I'm joking, I know some people do choose to live without them and that's fine. I really am deaf tho)

    • @baconrap3850
      @baconrap3850 10 місяців тому +1

      😂

  • @edenli9630
    @edenli9630 Рік тому +7613

    love how the phone's ringtone sounds perfectly normal, proof that it is the one sound that transcends all human ailments

    • @liger04
      @liger04 Рік тому +108

      Yeah, Fur Elise makes a surprisingly good ringtone.

    • @Shrooblord
      @Shrooblord Рік тому

      + x"D

    • @loganshaw4527
      @loganshaw4527 Рік тому +15

      Well he is still better then someone that does not think they are Tone deaf. BUT THEY ARE.

    • @PeterSitterly
      @PeterSitterly Рік тому +12

      The phone's ringtone? It was just static.

    • @rixy_wolfwolfosjr9952
      @rixy_wolfwolfosjr9952 Рік тому +2

      Haha

  • @EileenSloane
    @EileenSloane Рік тому +33246

    I know I'm supposed to be laughing but I'm actually just terrified to find out that tone deafness is a real thing and not just a harsh insult thrown at kids who never made it into the school choir

    • @TeacupTSauceror
      @TeacupTSauceror Рік тому +2771

      can confirm i can't tell which note is higher unless they're an octave apart. i just learn which button on the piano means which dot on the paper

    • @_what._.
      @_what._. Рік тому +1012

      I feel so bad for tone deaf people

    • @VenomSERE
      @VenomSERE Рік тому +847

      I was been told that I have Perfect Pitch. When someone Sings a Note or two incorrectly I want to leave the room.

    • @woodybob01
      @woodybob01 Рік тому +691

      it's 1/20 really, though people often use the word often just to mean someone's "non-musical" where actual tone deafness is not present. As a rule of thumb, if you listen to music on a regular basis and enjoy it, then you're probably not tone deaf

    • @Kriistofor
      @Kriistofor Рік тому +194

      you and me both, simply terrified that people have this condition and are having such indescribable problems to fight with on everyday basis.

  • @Ichiy0k
    @Ichiy0k Рік тому +2167

    "Piano, piano, piano, piano, piano, piano" was truly insperational. The emotion and work that went into the quote was amazing.

    • @ronan-outoftime
      @ronan-outoftime Рік тому +27

      harmonica harmonica harmonica

    • @marktloy4740
      @marktloy4740 11 місяців тому +19

      guitar guitar guitar

    • @cynthiasilva7422
      @cynthiasilva7422 11 місяців тому +23

      "Yeah... I'm going to take my horse to the old town road." Lol

    • @marktloy4740
      @marktloy4740 10 місяців тому +8

      @@cynthiasilva7422 "OLD TOWN ROAD! THATS A GREAT SONG!"

    • @sophiegrey9576
      @sophiegrey9576 8 місяців тому +2

      That's not how it went...

  • @rosamy2017
    @rosamy2017 Рік тому +1733

    There was a very sweet woman at my synagogue growing up who was so horrendously tone deaf, standing next to her while singing was like being next to a tree trimmer. She made it difficult to even keep pitch yourself. But she desperately wanted to learn to read Torah, which is a very special and honorable thing to do. She studied for like 6 months with the rabbi, which is probably 5 months longer than average, and she eventually did it! It wasn’t amazing, but somehow she trained herself to sound boring instead of horrendous. We were all very proud of her!

    • @talia1628
      @talia1628 Рік тому +49

      that is so wholesome!!

    • @andromedatonks60
      @andromedatonks60 Рік тому +52

      I’m truly awful at singing, but the one benefit to chanting Torah is that there isn’t really a specific pitch to match (at least as far as I ever learned). You just have to go higher or lower when you’re supposed to. I could keep to within my pathetically small range too. I’m sure I didn’t sound great at my bat mitzvah, but way better than if I were trying to sing an actual song.

    • @kevinkarthik3329
      @kevinkarthik3329 Рік тому +10

      Such a motivating person !!

    • @ypsithepanda
      @ypsithepanda 11 місяців тому +46

      I know its beautiful story, but sentence "Sound boring instead of horrendous" as a winning situation makes me laugh so hard :-D

    • @SpeedcoreDancecore
      @SpeedcoreDancecore 5 місяців тому

      Aren't the women not supposed to learn it

  • @EchoLog
    @EchoLog Рік тому +11071

    My great grandmother was tone deaf, the rest of both sides of my family have a lot of aural disorders. Her encouragement to my creativity musically only became more meaningful when I learned she had no idea what I was doing.

    • @effmltalks
      @effmltalks Рік тому +321

      THIS IS SO SWEET WTH AAAAH

    • @kinzanadeem8654
      @kinzanadeem8654 Рік тому +92

      omg 🥰 thats so sweet

    • @SciFiSecrets
      @SciFiSecrets Рік тому +92

      Thats not tone deaf, thats just how grandkids music sounds to every older generation.
      (lol)

    • @EchoLog
      @EchoLog Рік тому +125

      @@SciFiSecrets You never met my grandmother and don't know what music i was playing. Why are you asserting it's "just the kids music these days" she was experiencing?

    • @SciFiSecrets
      @SciFiSecrets Рік тому +58

      @@EchoLog < doesn't understand jokes....

  • @RealFanplayer
    @RealFanplayer Рік тому +9181

    As a tone deaf person I can confirm this is how i hear music

    • @oivariini7
      @oivariini7 Рік тому +195

      But you can still appreciate Daddy Daddy Do 👌

    • @markiyanturyk7626
      @markiyanturyk7626 Рік тому +24

      @Don't Read My Profile Photo Ok I won’t

    • @NTN_music
      @NTN_music Рік тому +50

      @@oivariini7 A man of culture I see

    • @hiddenalien
      @hiddenalien Рік тому +29

      @@NTN_music fellow men of culture, good to see you

    • @pmel9912
      @pmel9912 Рік тому +1

      💀💀💀💀

  • @jimh4375
    @jimh4375 Рік тому +695

    I am tone deaf (among other auditory issues). Since my condition is congenital it is impossible to describe because I've never heard sound any other way. I love music so much even though I can never hear it the way many people do. it is impossible for me to distinguish many similar notes, the higher the frequency the more difficult this becomes. Many music lovers have attempted to "show" me the difference. I know they mean well and just want to share with me what they deeply enjoy, The hardest part for me is I can't sing, it sounds good to me but everyone else suffers like it's a horror movie.

    • @flinfake
      @flinfake Рік тому +35

      Not sure if it would be worth it, but there are pitch detector softwares out there. You might be able to trial and error out something through a mixture of tactile and visual feedback. Would probably take a few weeks of practice to get a basic scale down though, and it would do nothing for your hearing, but you might be able to eventually sing off of sheet music.
      It would be like learning how to type without looking at your hands on an unfamiliar keyboard with a strange layout.

    • @WouldntULikeToKnow.
      @WouldntULikeToKnow. Рік тому +16

      I wonder if tone deaf people singing to other tone deaf people would sound good to them... 🤔

    • @jimh4375
      @jimh4375 Рік тому +2

      @@WouldntULikeToKnow. It depends upon how far off the person singing is. If they can get close to the note but not quite I will never know. On the other hand if I listen to a recording of me singing it sounds horrible. It will also depend on where they are off since I hear better in lower ranges I would notice a bass singer being off way sooner than a soprano.

    • @jimh4375
      @jimh4375 Рік тому +1

      @@flinfake Tactile feedback can detect sound, but I can't see how it could possibly detect tone. I went through years of speech therapy during elementary school to overcome speech difficulties to say nothing of singing. (Like I said its a complex series of auditory issues)

    • @flinfake
      @flinfake Рік тому +5

      @@jimh4375: If tactile feedback couldn't detect tone, how do other people's ears work? Ears are merely specialized structures for receiving tactile feedback.
      Can you feel the difference between the vibrations of wood, metal, and stone when you strike it?
      A sound is not a singular averaged value, it is a complex formula with variables for how it grows, interacts with the various component frequencies, and eventually decays, not to mention echoes and how it resonates with its surroundings and the sensor.
      All of this can be felt by the skin of your hand once you know it is there, barring neurological oddities.
      Learning tone is all about deciphering a complex melange of shifting frequencies. I am naturally monotone and took speech classes myself. I was taught to wear earplugs when practicing and focus on the vibrations in my throat.
      If you just want to learn how to use pitch, the rate of vibration IS pitch. A higher note on a guitar vibrates faster than a lower one. Find the right vibrations for the right note and you're done. Tone, of which pitch is merely a part, is harder.

  • @iDoit4LoLz
    @iDoit4LoLz Рік тому +295

    As someone who is tone deaf. Those were some phenomenal pieces. That piano and guitar solo were great.

  • @gilagal777
    @gilagal777 Рік тому +6706

    I love slowly collecting the obscure, unimportant "lore" of Daniel's characters. Dennis is tone deaf(??)? Good to know lol

    • @james14294
      @james14294 Рік тому +217

      we just need matpat to make a wild theory about it all at some point

    • @justanaveragebuzzsaw
      @justanaveragebuzzsaw Рік тому +174

      Time to create a Danielverse wiki

    • @-Ramona.Flowers-
      @-Ramona.Flowers- Рік тому +32

      @@justanaveragebuzzsaw Yess

    • @dallinorr6929
      @dallinorr6929 Рік тому +45

      SIX SEASONS AND A MOVIE!!!!!
      wait... did I do that right?

    • @profex.
      @profex. Рік тому +74

      Oh my goodness, this explains why in the housewarming video, he didn't have a keyboard in his house! You wouldn't need one if you were tone deaf!

  • @OkashiiAmerican
    @OkashiiAmerican Рік тому +6020

    Just now realizing being tone deaf is like being color blind but for your ears. That's a lot of beauty in the world those people are missing out on. Kinda makes me want to cry cause I love music a lot.

    • @hagelslag9312
      @hagelslag9312 Рік тому +338

      Aphantasia is wild if you don't know about it but it's very real. The first time I learned there are people with no inner monologue or who are not able to imagine anything, I was shocked. Meanwhile those with Aphantasia learn the inner monologue in anime series is an actual thing for people and are equally shocked. It's crazy how few people know about something with such a huge impact.

    • @boserboser6870
      @boserboser6870 Рік тому +95

      -me with visual snow
      Wait all of you guys dont have flashing lights overlaying your vison. How did you invent pixel screens then?

    • @hagelslag9312
      @hagelslag9312 Рік тому

      @@boserboser6870 Rip that sucks. I have it as well but not too intense. It gets worse when I didn't have enough magnesium intake, it works for me to use supplements (also related to my migraines, which are also related to magnesium for me). It might be worth a try.

    • @Lil_Yuri
      @Lil_Yuri Рік тому +37

      ​​​@@hagelslag9312 that one's weird because I kinda picture stuff, but when I try to go into detail intentionally it sorta gets all funky (like being super duper stoned). Similarly, I can definitely think without any inner monologue because I know I do it for a good portion of my day (which also makes meditating a bit easier despite having pretty severe ADHD) but I can't simultaneously think about inner monologues and not have one verbalizing my thoughts-- I can only turn it off if I don't try to. Basically, I can think in only vivid pictures, without any verbal thoughts, but only if I don't think about my thought processes too much 😅

    • @kathleendavidson3316
      @kathleendavidson3316 Рік тому +93

      @@hagelslag9312 aphantasia is when you can't imagine pictures in your mind. It's totally different from not having an inner voice. I have aphantasia and have had a strong inner voice (which honestly never shuts up). I listen to music inside my head too.

  • @jana31415
    @jana31415 Рік тому +294

    the morse code at 1:20 says
    first section:you're tone
    second: deaf
    took me really long to realize .----. is supposed to be a '

    • @amritas2400
      @amritas2400 5 місяців тому +11

      Thanks a lot for this!
      I'd never have figured out that .____. stood for an apostrophe. Lol.
      I also didn't understand that there was a second section due to the funny noises.

    • @aiex314
      @aiex314 5 місяців тому +7

      ​@@amritas2400Same! I also thought it just said "You're tone"

    • @johjoh9270
      @johjoh9270 5 місяців тому +5

      ​@@amritas2400yeah, went back immediatly to listen to first time after it caught me off guard, heard the "you're tone" and I was like "huh, guess he forgot to add the rest" at first 😂

    • @Yoshistar238
      @Yoshistar238 2 місяці тому

      @@amritas2400 I just use it as a smil lol

  • @mikeylol3141
    @mikeylol3141 Рік тому +77

    I actually met someone who was tone-deaf once. she worked as a nurse at a hospital I was staying at at the time, and loved listening to my singing. she really wanted to hear me do a specific song, but said that she literally could not sing it back to me to help me figure out which one it was. i thought she was just nervous to sing in front of others, but she told me that she's just always been literally tone deaf. she talked about how she would listen to pop songs in her car and recognize them but have no ability whatsoever to repeat it back correctly. she knew lyrics, but not their melodies.
    crazy stuff man.

  • @ked49
    @ked49 Рік тому +2252

    Tone deaf myself I can confidently say this guy gave the most accurate depiction of our condition. I also have tinnitus so all I hear is bell, bell, bell constantly

    • @object-official
      @object-official Рік тому +38

      bell, bell, bell, bell

    • @Servant_of_Yeshua96
      @Servant_of_Yeshua96 Рік тому +40

      Aw I will pray the Lord heals your ears.

    • @F0rger513
      @F0rger513 Рік тому +37

      eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee

    • @petethecat3750
      @petethecat3750 Рік тому +26

      I got the unlucky whistle whistle whistle type tinnitus. Sometimes it's just an all out squeal that turns my world into a death metal type production. Isn't it just great?

    • @Floccinaucinihilipilificator
      @Floccinaucinihilipilificator Рік тому +15

      Bell, bell, bell, bell, bell, bell, bell
      Guitar, guitar, Bell, bell, bell, bell, bell, bell,Guitar, guitar,
      Bell, bell, bell, bell, bell, bell, Drums *Mississippi Queen*

  • @JewishMusicToronto
    @JewishMusicToronto Рік тому +2339

    I was literally having a conversation with someone, barely two hours ago, about the extreme rarity of true tone deafness, and how most people believed to be tone deaf just need help to train their brains to properly hear music and then produce vocally.
    This was an astoundingly good representation of true tone deafness as described by the person with whom I was speaking (with the added hyperbole at the end, of course).

    • @brianthesnail3815
      @brianthesnail3815 Рік тому +63

      I had to laugh " just need help to train their brains to properly hear music and then produce vocally".
      That what my music teacher thought when he decided I was a perfect candidate for a starring role in musical theatre. See my comment above further up thread. Poor man. He had to admit defeat (eventually) and I was trying so hard to please him.

    • @JewishMusicToronto
      @JewishMusicToronto Рік тому +48

      @Brian theSnail to be VERY clear, it's a REALLY slow process. Minimum of one year, usually. I've been teaching one student for just over two years this Feb., and he has only just started really being able to stay in key to sections of songs.
      The commitment to practice is a major help, though.

    • @brianthesnail3815
      @brianthesnail3815 Рік тому +29

      @@JewishMusicToronto Wow! A minimum of a year? That is dedication.
      To be honest, I wish I wasn't tone deaf because I do like music and singing (very badly). I also was a church bell ringer in England and was in charge of a team of 20 bell ringers and I used to teach people to ring. I would have been much better at it if I had been able to easily distinguish the notes of the different bells although we don't ring tunes only 'changes' which are just permutations.

    • @JewishMusicToronto
      @JewishMusicToronto Рік тому +21

      @Brian theSnail it DOES take dedication, for sure. It helps when students have goals. As for my side, teaching tone hearing, production, and control is very rewarding, and that's why I chose it as my specialty with vocal students when I started teaching (though I teach regular vocal lessons too).
      If you enjoy music, it's unlikely you're TRULY tone deaf. (As Daniel presents here, true tone deafness is very different from not easily copying notes.)
      If you want to test something for yourself, I'll give you one exercise you can try that I use to assess and then train students. While using a voice recorder app, use a piano (or piano app) to play notes, and try to sing them back. Then listen back and see if you can tell whether or not you're able to tell where you're on and off.
      You've got nothing to lose.

    • @AS-iu8hr
      @AS-iu8hr Рік тому +2

      Morgan Freeman

  • @LaniTayvl
    @LaniTayvl Рік тому +85

    Thank you for posting this. As a person who completely understands music and tone that lives with someone who is tone deaf, this has given me a better understanding of what he goes through whenever I try to play music for him.

  • @uncroppedsoop
    @uncroppedsoop Рік тому +68

    a good friend of mine is like this and it _baffles_ me how I can play the same tune for them in Phrygian Dominant and in Major and they'll genuinely hesitate to think before guessing which is which. I'm almost impressed they still enjoy music because I feel like I'd go absolutely INSANE if it was that hard to figure out for me. they've described it as being like the closer two notes are, the less they can tell the difference (and the usually-inherent difference in emotion between similar intervals literally just doesn't register for them because of it. a basic Major and Minor chord sound almost the same to them, they can only tell there _is_ a difference, but not what it is)
    it's also relatively inconsistent for them on the technical level of telling tones apart, but they seem to consistently be unable to tell scales apart, even got to the point of yelling that a clip of ascending notes, one up Phrygian Dominant and one Minor, were absolutely identical

  • @mawcespelledwithac
    @mawcespelledwithac Рік тому +3059

    I have a guy in my cast who’s tone deaf and he really can’t sing or match tones but he’s absolutely hilarious so it isn’t a total loss😂

    • @MyBiPolarBearMax
      @MyBiPolarBearMax Рік тому +92

      FYI, 90% of tone deaf cases can be “cured” by practicing them listening with their ears rather than their minds.
      I usually have a pitch played or sung constantly right near their ears and then have them practice singing until their hear the pitch start to match and resonate with the tone being played.
      Once they realize the issue (they are matching a tone in their head that isn’t the tone they’ve actually heard) they can practice listening with their ears and matching tones.
      It sounds crazy but it works. Ears are good at hearing pitches, minds have to be trained how to replicate them.

    • @mawcespelledwithac
      @mawcespelledwithac Рік тому

      @lily cartinine Yeah it is true :)

    • @hagelslag9312
      @hagelslag9312 Рік тому +21

      @@MyBiPolarBearMax Fun fact, not all people have an inner monologue and can hear their own voice (aphantasia). This might be a similar issue because it also applies to sound and imagery. If you ask them to imagine something, it stays blank.

    • @nightspicer
      @nightspicer Рік тому +5

      @@hagelslag9312 yup, amusia, their brains just can't process that information in the same way other people's do

    • @p.9227
      @p.9227 Рік тому

      Does this applies to lyric deaf too?

  • @poogie_
    @poogie_ Рік тому +2177

    Man, Tone Deaf guy is super lucky to be able to identify musical instruments. I’ve had times where I’ve heard a song and then later saw it being played and thought “That is not the instrument I thought that was coming from.” (And, yeah, the examples in this video would have been pretty easy to identify…probably. 😛 )

    • @jennywithalion759
      @jennywithalion759 Рік тому +48

      Hey I have a question about tone deafness. Can you identify the voice of different people when they speak?

    • @HermanVonPetri
      @HermanVonPetri Рік тому +68

      Don't feel bad about that. Many instruments can be really similar and hard to identify out-of-context, especially if they were recorded in unusual ways.
      I once had a recording that I could swear had a mandolin or buzuki in it. Only later did I realize that it was of a piano, but that they recorded it with the microphone right up near the strings. The sound of the strings was really twangy and tinny. But in the end they are all string instruments amplified by a wooden box.
      (I played in high-school band btw and am not tone-deaf.)

    • @poogie_
      @poogie_ Рік тому +41

      @@HermanVonPetri - Thank you for that. Mine are pretty embarrassing. The bass guitar is what will often confuse me. I can’t remember if I thought drums were making the noise and it was a bass guitar or vice versa but I had that. And then, of course, the confusion with regular guitar.
      I’m really hoping to get the musical genius gene in my next life. Might try and steal it from Daniel. 😛

    • @NatLaS
      @NatLaS Рік тому +13

      Yeah don’t feel bad! Recognizing instruments takes practice! And time!

    • @alexlaws5086
      @alexlaws5086 Рік тому +5

      Gotta keep you away from Apocalyptica

  • @user-tl2sp9rw9d
    @user-tl2sp9rw9d Рік тому +27

    2:14 THE NECK CRACK. *opens eyes tensely*

  • @disguisedcyclops4593
    @disguisedcyclops4593 Рік тому +22

    As someone who really enjoys and appreciates music, I can’t imagine not being able to experience that joy.

  • @ntm4
    @ntm4 Рік тому +2554

    So I'm not actually tone-deaf, but the "listen to how good my new sound-system is" part is very relatable.
    Like: "Doesn't it sound good?", Well the music comes out with no obvious static or distortion so yes.
    "Can't you hear the difference in quality?", No, no I cannot.

    • @GT-tj1qg
      @GT-tj1qg Рік тому +167

      I too am Bose-deaf

    • @ntm4
      @ntm4 Рік тому +32

      @@GT-tj1qg I'll have to remember that one lol.

    • @unacuentadeyoutube13
      @unacuentadeyoutube13 Рік тому +58

      well, it happens to most of people. If you listen to a lot of music and can compare that new speaker to another one, then you may spot it right away (sometimes the difference is too small that only producers hear it tho)

    • @Jessica-sh1js
      @Jessica-sh1js Рік тому +40

      same thing happens to me both with audio and visual. back when 4k was new, my friend got one and I didn't notice any different. thought that I was lying about it. Then they were showing me youtibe videos and kept altering the quality and i could barely tell the different;

    • @FaultAndDakranon
      @FaultAndDakranon Рік тому +4

      @@GT-tj1qg lol.

  • @lieutenantpickle8001
    @lieutenantpickle8001 Рік тому +759

    As someone that read a guy's comment about being tone deaf, I can confirm that this is how tone-deafness works.

    • @zuhararaamiz5572
      @zuhararaamiz5572 Рік тому +3

      lol

    • @monhi64
      @monhi64 Рік тому +1

      As someone who’s read a comment about someone reading a comment I can confirm that preempting all comments with a qualification ESPECIALLY a PhD or Career is basically a requirement in 2023. Whether you actually have that qualification no one will ever know lol
      It’s effing annoying like how do people not get fed up (with themselves) saying “actual molecular Scientologist here”

    • @Raev222
      @Raev222 Рік тому

      I was gonna like this but want to keep it at 666

    • @mrterry1756
      @mrterry1756 Рік тому

      As someone whose main source of information is youtube, I can confirm your comment is accurate.

  • @EmmaSong-vj8zp
    @EmmaSong-vj8zp Рік тому +18

    As a tone deaf person, we know the difference between two notes. It’s just that we don’t know if they are “higher” or “lower” unless they are the same note of different octaves. I had a hard time playing any instrument because I had a hard time figuring out if a note was out of tune because I just thought it was a flat or sharp of some note😢

    • @therealjibrano
      @therealjibrano 3 місяці тому +3

      can non tone deaf people have similar experiences? before i started playing bass i always felt weird because i couldnt always tell if a note was higher or lower than another one. but after playing bass for a while and actually making music my ear has gotten a lot better and i dont really have this problem anymore. i know im not tone deaf because i actually have always had a decent ear, and thats why this problem was kind of confusing for me.

  • @rinka4560
    @rinka4560 Рік тому +15

    omg this is actually so amazing. love videos like this that take something familiar and totally put you in the shoes of another person. super well done. this reminds me of How English sounds to non-English speakers

  • @ninefivetriesmusic
    @ninefivetriesmusic Рік тому +2851

    as someone who has tone deaf friends i can verify this is what it’s like showing them my music
    EDIT: mom i’m famous

    • @_Dwarkin
      @_Dwarkin Рік тому +36

      Jazz. Don't ever try to explain the beauty of the jazz to the tone deaf person 🤣

    • @joshuameierhofer8938
      @joshuameierhofer8938 Рік тому +6

      I didn't know I am Tone death until this video

    • @arponax
      @arponax Рік тому +7

      lol i was once making some random chords and streamed it on our discord server XD and one friend came to listen.....dayum she was unable to tell a difference between major and minor.....seriously i thought thats like normal thing everyone can do. Everyone excels at something different tho, i really suck at math XD
      PS. song "the worst day of my life" reminds me of one of my early works melodically :D interesting pieces you got.

    • @Myuunium
      @Myuunium Рік тому +28

      _Multiple_ tone deaf friends? Are you starting a collection?

    • @tonethebrutal
      @tonethebrutal Рік тому +3

      ​@@MyuuniumLMAO

  • @sharingheart13
    @sharingheart13 Рік тому +69

    I heard a tone deaf guy describe kind of the opposite in a way. Because he was tone deaf, all music sounded beautiful to him, which sadly came with the consequence of him believing he had a beautiful singing voice as well until his family kept complaining for him to shut up. He still sings for fun sometimes though.

  • @LivingGuy484
    @LivingGuy484 Рік тому +59

    As someone who is not creative, the fact that people like Daniel can make me laugh for several years in a row feels like nothing short of a miracle

    • @LivingGuy484
      @LivingGuy484 Рік тому +3

      This is my lame attempt at a compliment

  • @spacetaco048
    @spacetaco048 5 місяців тому +6

    I asked my dad if this is really how he always hears music.
    He said no he doesn't hear music that way. He says "Sometimes I use headphones, and sometimes I don't."

  • @max_the_mantis5173
    @max_the_mantis5173 Рік тому +901

    I'm not tone def but I do have audio processing disorder and it makes it so some sounds and words sound indestinguishable from each other. I often have to ask people to repeat themselves because I don't understand what they are saying sometimes. My former dad used to insist that I was making it up because he could tell it wasn't a physical hearing issue. But it is a nuerological issue, that commonly effects nuerodiverse peoples, that I'm now diagnosed with. I love to sing and make music despite this. I've been in choir before. I love music and can sing along well.

    • @Myuunium
      @Myuunium Рік тому +69

      When I first found out about auditory processing disorder I was glad because it perfectly explains why I have to ask everyone I talk to to repeat themselves at least 8 times in any conversation. Also I'm neurodivergent, so it checks out.

    • @artkincell
      @artkincell Рік тому +8

      You are an awesome person! I'm being serious.

    • @freshestavacado9195
      @freshestavacado9195 Рік тому +73

      It usually comes most commonly in people with adhd. I can hear music and tones perfectly well (actually better than most), but if I'm in a crowd and someone is trying to say something to me, I hear it perfectly fine, but it just doesn't seem to make any sense among the plethora of background noise. It basically goes: No compute, I give up, too much effort, lol

    • @midnight_blue_moon
      @midnight_blue_moon Рік тому +25

      @@freshestavacado9195 You know, seeing as how I have adhd, this is actually a really good explanation for why I have so much trouble understanding people even when I have my hearing aids in.

    • @WelliTriedYT
      @WelliTriedYT Рік тому +44

      I know there is a whole story here, but I just cant help finding the words "Former Dad" a bit odd lol

  • @pissboi9000
    @pissboi9000 Рік тому +305

    My choir teacher must resonate with this

  • @ivyagamet4045
    @ivyagamet4045 Рік тому +3

    I didn’t know much about tone deafness at the time, but through mutual determination of everyone my grandmother taught my grandfather who had gone deafness to sing in a barber shop quartet. My grandmother and myself love singing and have experience in it, and after trying to teach him he because more dedicated. It worked! I don’t know what helped him, but he loves singing and music, it made him so happy. ☺️

  • @stevenanderson718
    @stevenanderson718 Рік тому +3

    This is absolutely brilliant, you inspire me tremendously to create amazing skits like this one. You are the man!!!

  • @metarunner514
    @metarunner514 Рік тому +475

    As someone who plays most songs by ear this was painful. Also the computer voice is too funny.

    • @TeenPerspektiva
      @TeenPerspektiva Рік тому +9

      Well if you can play songs by ear you are definitely not tone deaf. So how why is this painful? I would imagine it would be funny or something

    • @metarunner514
      @metarunner514 Рік тому +35

      @@TeenPerspektiva it’s painful because I can’t stand seeing someone struggle so much.

    • @Lawrencelot89
      @Lawrencelot89 Рік тому

      A

    • @agentjohn4313
      @agentjohn4313 Рік тому

      same

  • @FlatlanderJrFilms
    @FlatlanderJrFilms Рік тому +200

    I didn't know tone deaf people had this much trouble. That's good to learn. But the interaction between these characters is so relatable since it can be applied to other interactions between neurotypical people and me.

    • @DeathnoteBB
      @DeathnoteBB Рік тому +11

      God for realll. I’m not tone deaf but I do have issues and the amount of people who think I just need a good push are too many. No, hun, I physically cannot do this thing.

  • @slkjvlkfsvnlsdfhgdght5447
    @slkjvlkfsvnlsdfhgdght5447 4 місяці тому +4

    how can people like that even have a conversation? human speech has so much intonation in it!

  • @MorbidNeeds
    @MorbidNeeds Рік тому

    Absolutely love this! Wonderfully insightful, how many times haven't your heard it as an insult, thinking it was some made up thing, or something to do with their lack of keeping a ryth or singing abilities. Thank you for this!

  • @silverandexact
    @silverandexact Рік тому +1058

    For those of you who are nerds like me and want to know what tone deafness is actually like after watching this video:
    True tone deafness is called amusia and can be congenital (affecting about 4% of the population) or caused by brain damage.
    People with this condition aren't able to recognize wrong or very out of tune notes or familiar melodies. They have difficulty or an inability to perceive differences in pitch (low note vs high note) though they can tell differences in timbre (piano vs guitar). Amusic people often find music unpleasant or annoying.
    So although this is obviously a humorous exaggeration, Daniel didn't get anything wrong per se.

    • @deltablaze77
      @deltablaze77 Рік тому +54

      That would suck, music is incredible.

    • @ricochet4674
      @ricochet4674 Рік тому +39

      As someone who has played an instrument for ten years. What the fuck. I can imagine this. Like not being able to tell the difference between the highest note on the piano and the lowest one is insane for me.

    • @zuhararaamiz5572
      @zuhararaamiz5572 Рік тому +1

      thanks

    • @jay_______________________
      @jay_______________________ Рік тому +17

      As someone who plays piano, this would absolutely suck. I rely a ton on my hearing, especially to check if I pressed the wrong or right key

    • @scribblecloud
      @scribblecloud Рік тому +3

      @@deltablaze77 i know right :(

  • @AM_I_Able
    @AM_I_Able Рік тому +322

    I love Daniel's subtle cry for help when he brought out that horsewhip

    • @NorthernSeaWitch
      @NorthernSeaWitch Рік тому +68

      Oh, that's not a horse whip, Daniel is a freak.

    • @SirArthurTheGreat
      @SirArthurTheGreat Рік тому +18

      Subtle…

    • @manticore1787
      @manticore1787 Рік тому +1

      Why does he have that...😅

    • @manticore1787
      @manticore1787 Рік тому

      Ya..definitely not a horse whip..

    • @he4rt5
      @he4rt5 Рік тому +1

      so glad someone brought it up
      but oh... dear sweet summer child, that is NOT a horse whip (also who even calls it a horse whip? are you thinking of a riding crop?)

  • @cameronjones3592
    @cameronjones3592 Рік тому

    Thank you to Daniel's videos for putting a smile on my face at the ends of my days sometimes, when I can't sleep and am going through a rough time. 🙌✨

  • @zoyadulzura7490
    @zoyadulzura7490 Рік тому +13

    0:52 I watched that like 30 times

  • @WideSmileOfficial
    @WideSmileOfficial Рік тому +540

    Petition for Daniel to do a cover of ‘Welcome to the Internet’

    • @yoshilovesyoshi
      @yoshilovesyoshi Рік тому +18

      But make it melodramatic and sappy

    • @yoshilovesyoshi
      @yoshilovesyoshi Рік тому +2

      @daniel please

    • @jassthelasso
      @jassthelasso Рік тому +2

      YES

    • @jhakardballoch2986
      @jhakardballoch2986 Рік тому +18

      But in a way higher key cause Daniel is a tenor and Bo is a bass baritone and It would just be cool to hear it done differently like that.

    • @lemonraven
      @lemonraven Рік тому +8

      He commented on Bo's video actually! It'd be fun if he was up for it

  • @little_isalina
    @little_isalina Рік тому +659

    This feels incredibly relatable as a neurodivergent person. The "Come on just do the thing you absolutely can't do! You just gotta try!"

    • @PINKBOY1006
      @PINKBOY1006 Рік тому +98

      I was cringing the entire time. It's so painful to hear those words "All you gotta do is try/practice!" NO THATS NOT HOW THIS WORKS "Sure it does"

    • @Ciurk
      @Ciurk Рік тому +29

      "just be better"

    • @maxdanielj
      @maxdanielj Рік тому +41

      "stop faking it" or "you're just doing that to get attention"

    • @Jordan-zk2wd
      @Jordan-zk2wd Рік тому +54

      "No, but come on like try for real."
      I assure you I am at maximum try ;~;

    • @sadi5713
      @sadi5713 Рік тому +17

      just ask these guys if they can benchpress 1000 kg, can fly or read minds. if they say no: you just gotta try harder then.

  • @florencelee321
    @florencelee321 11 місяців тому +6

    What is hilarious is I got an ad before this video on hearing aids 😂

  • @RichardBronosky
    @RichardBronosky Рік тому +10

    1:11 I lost it when he used the electric piano!

  • @hotgarbage-cc4cu
    @hotgarbage-cc4cu Рік тому +26

    1:52 caught me so off guard 😂😂😂😂

  • @callmeravenlee1972
    @callmeravenlee1972 Рік тому +137

    Impressive that one of the most musically talented people I’ve ever seen is able to convey tone deafness

  • @devinstephans7969
    @devinstephans7969 Рік тому +1

    Thank you !! For bringing this to the attention of a lot of people

  • @TheArchivist14
    @TheArchivist14 Рік тому +2

    I'M SO CONFUSED I JUST GOT AN AD WITH YOU IN IT WHILE I WAS WATCHING THIS VIDEO

  • @brianthesnail3815
    @brianthesnail3815 Рік тому +72

    I am definitely tone deaf. When I was at secondary school we always did major musicals with thousands of people attending but I never had anything but chorus parts yet I always won the school drama prize for acting in small plays so the music teacher decided 'he was going to teach me to sing'. Two hours later he had me stood by a grand piano playing notes at me and making me sing the tune. Well, he eventually admitted defeat after another two hours with the words 'wow you really are tone deaf'.
    Didn't stop him making me organise an entire choral concert to sing the Nelson Mass sometime later just because I accidentally said to him in passing that it would be a great idea to raise money for a local charity at Xmas by holding a choral concert in a local church. Music teachers never give up hope! 😁

    • @Raev222
      @Raev222 Рік тому +1

      Question then, when you're at the piano attempting to sing in tune, do you not hear it then? The tones clashing? Does it just sound like.. nothing?

    • @brianthesnail3815
      @brianthesnail3815 Рік тому +10

      @@Raev222 I can hear the difference between notes that are played slowly say half an octave apart but I cant mimic them with my voice. I can make my voice 'high' or 'low' but how high or low I simply have no clue. I find it almost impossible to distinguish which notes are 'higher' and which notes which are 'lower' if they are close together in tone and played quickly one after another in a normal piece of music. I can hear a scale progression from low to high if it is played slowly but once the notes are randomised I have no clue.
      For someone who is clearly a very gifted musician who has near perfect pitch, Daniel shows in his video a remarkable sense of what is really like for someone less gifted than he is. I really do hear 'high-guitar, drum, high-guitar, low-guitar', 'drum' when I listening to rock music for example. I hear rhythm not tone if that makes sense.

  • @adamsaustria2005
    @adamsaustria2005 Рік тому +28

    The way hoodie guy and his mom just sounded like Morgan freeman after that note made me laugh so damn hard at 2:23

  • @wise_girl6985
    @wise_girl6985 Рік тому

    HE'S DONE IT AGAIN!!! Daniel is SO hilarious and I'm really impressed by the effort he puts into making these videos 😂thanks man

  • @ven0m2
    @ven0m2 Рік тому

    Thanks for your ad that you made with better help, it's always great to see that no matter who you are, everyone could use someone to talk to. Thank you and may you have a great day

  • @leslieroth9908
    @leslieroth9908 Рік тому +31

    Ah, my favorite song is the one that goes like flute, flute piano, piano. It's so beautiful.

  • @RoboticPress
    @RoboticPress Рік тому +87

    I am still training on not being tone deaf and if I am being honest this is surprisingly accurate and the more I train the more I understand the insults people threw at my old covers and pieces-

    • @keepinmahprivacy9754
      @keepinmahprivacy9754 Рік тому +3

      I think if you can train your way past it, it's not "true" tone deafness, just a poor ear. Thankfully you can correct that with practice, because that's a pretty common condition!

    • @RoboticPress
      @RoboticPress Рік тому +3

      @@keepinmahprivacy9754 true actually, I noticed myself getting less and less tone deaf by transcribing and listening to more music, I definitely can't tell what a note is just by hearing it yet but I can definitely tell when it sounds off

  • @evtimbitrakov7634
    @evtimbitrakov7634 Рік тому

    😭😭😭😭 This was amazing! Thank you so much for this amazing video!

  • @user-qg4ri6ls8l
    @user-qg4ri6ls8l 9 місяців тому +2

    He has truly gone insane! I love his videos

  • @Philip942
    @Philip942 Рік тому +35

    Why did I crack up? 1:02

  • @lootmaster1337
    @lootmaster1337 Рік тому +129

    So glad a big youtuber like daniel managed to get such a unknown person like morgan freeman to voice in his skit. Proud of you for giving smaller actors a job

  • @_WillowBranch_
    @_WillowBranch_ Рік тому +1

    I laughed much harder then I should have on this, and nearly choked on my drink, keep up the amazing work man :'D

  • @being7310
    @being7310 Рік тому +8

    I never knew that tone deafness could be, let alone has been like this. seems like i have something interesting to search up now instead of aimlessly browsing youtube
    also-no fault of urs Dan-but I hate hoodie guy after 0:34 bc he just ignores what his friend had just blatantly said about how his hearing works, and won't accept how differently his brain works
    "you're going to have to try harder than that" especially got me screaming internally

  • @YazzMusicOfficial
    @YazzMusicOfficial Рік тому +56

    WHEN IT WAS PIANO AND HARMONICA, I new it was piano man 😂😂😂

    • @LinKueiDragon
      @LinKueiDragon Рік тому +1

      ​@@DontReadMyProfilePhoto_2 Oops. Too late.

    • @GT-tj1qg
      @GT-tj1qg Рік тому +6

      ​@@DontReadMyProfilePhoto_2 I read your name. Then I read your profile photo. It had a message telling me not to look under my kitchen sink. I looked and there was a note telling me not to open the can of alphabet soup I bought. I opened the can and took out all those spaghetti letters. I arranged them a hundred different times looking for a meaning and then I found it "previous commenter is gae".

  • @umeinui
    @umeinui Рік тому +20

    0:28 I was not ready lmao

  • @loubna1016
    @loubna1016 Рік тому

    Love your eyes 💕 I literally watch your videos just to see them

  • @wps626
    @wps626 Рік тому

    Bro all your videos....HILARIOUS!! ENTERTAINING!! CREATIVE!! GENIOUS!!! DId I say HILARIOUS already? Keep them coming bro!!

  • @caracheyenne8839
    @caracheyenne8839 Рік тому +124

    As a tone deaf percussionist, I literally cannot tell if a scale is going up or down 😭😭

    • @m0L3ify
      @m0L3ify Рік тому +6

      Don't worry, as long as you can count to 1, you're fine. 😉 (sorry, just a little percussionist on percussionist violence there lol. couldn't help myself!)

    • @caracheyenne8839
      @caracheyenne8839 Рік тому +14

      @@m0L3ify no fr I took AP Music Theory and my teacher curved my grade from a D to a B because he felt so bad

    • @m0L3ify
      @m0L3ify Рік тому +2

      @@caracheyenne8839 Music Theory is tough for sure. I'm glad your teacher was compassionate about it! I mean...what can you do?

    • @ictogon
      @ictogon Рік тому +1

      Do you still listen to music? Like percussion albums or something?

    • @caracheyenne8839
      @caracheyenne8839 Рік тому +2

      @@ictogon I listen to any and all music I just don’t hear the full range of notes and I can’t decipher between notes 🤷🏼‍♀️ it’s really hard to explain but if you heard me try to sing you would understand 🫣

  • @scienceofmusicschool
    @scienceofmusicschool 11 місяців тому

    Wonderful video Daniel! Thanks for making me laugh.
    In response to some of the comments: I’ve had pleasant successes training people who were previously tone deaf to sing in tune as well as learn to deeply appreciate music.

  • @skatardrummer1
    @skatardrummer1 9 місяців тому +2

    I didn't realize there were so many people that are actually tone deaf. I thought true tone deafness was a lot more rare.

  • @gideonbrown4215
    @gideonbrown4215 Рік тому +87

    It’s good to see Daniel doing another piano sketch.

  • @haven_hinode
    @haven_hinode Рік тому +26

    No one gonna talk about the flogger at 1:45 ??? *WHY DOES DANIEL HAVE A FLOGGER*

  • @benjaminsagan5861
    @benjaminsagan5861 Рік тому +2

    I played piano for a show once, and I was warned beforehand that a guy in the cast was always going to ask me to play "his note" beforehand. The note in question was a genuinely tricky harmony, but there was zero chance he'd retain it for 30 minutes so it was completely pointless. But I was assured that it was easier to just play along because "he's tone deaf anyway". The routine was, he'd come ask for his note; I'd play it; he'd sing the wrong note; I'd gently coax him up to the right pitch; he'd walk away looking very dissatisfied.
    But on the third or fourth time, I realized something pretty extraordinary. He wasn't singing a random wrong note. It was always the *same* wrong note. A fifth below. So when that dawned on me, I tried playing the note up a fifth, and he sang the pitch I wanted instantly.
    Therefore, he hears his relationship with the music at a harmonic.
    Knowing that, all I had to do was orient his singing to how he hears, and it was never a problem again.

    • @joker6solitaire
      @joker6solitaire Місяць тому

      I had no idea that was possible. CONSISTENTLY a fifth below?! The human brain is astonishing. Thanks for sharing.

  • @TheMilwaukeeProtocol
    @TheMilwaukeeProtocol 3 місяці тому +2

    I didn't believe that tone deaf people could learn to sing through practice until I met my husband. It is remarkable. I do not have that level of skill and dedication for almost anything. I either just do something automatically or I don't.

  • @cornelius5926
    @cornelius5926 Рік тому +14

    At 2:48 I only hear "Synthesizer, Synthesizer, Synthesizer, Synthesizer..."

  • @ceilinh6004
    @ceilinh6004 Рік тому +19

    Daniel has a talent for taking basic premises to completely unhinged levels of farce, and I love it.

  • @ozzyfernandez8228
    @ozzyfernandez8228 Рік тому +1

    My Dad is tone-deaf and cannot sing to save his life, but he loves music. He has no concept of sound quality and is more than happy listening to his favorite songs on UA-cam set to 360p. He doesn't know the difference and is happy with that. Ignorance is truly bliss.

  • @TheKojiLinx
    @TheKojiLinx Рік тому

    I was stationed in Fort Stewart for sometime and volunteered for many a SCAD student films. Great people! The parties were always awesome and hanging out at the Crypt was fun even though I don't dance, I danced anyway!

  • @laurelloaf
    @laurelloaf Рік тому +45

    For years, I would make fun of my family’s haunted choir when they’d sing happy birthday. I thought, how can I be the only one in my family who can hold a tune? I finally figured it out that it’s one of my sisters who drags everyone down but everyone else sounds fine when she’s not around. Thank you for bringing to light her terrible condition and what she hears when she listens to the radio!

  • @guestuser4506
    @guestuser4506 Рік тому +18

    I'm Morgan Freeman and I approve this message.

  • @christinemerritt974
    @christinemerritt974 Рік тому +1

    Excuse me, but this video was so clever and intelligent, that I never laughed, but my jaw was hanging open in awe instead.😮❤
    You’re a genius.

  • @buenoloco4455
    @buenoloco4455 Рік тому

    I can feel that. I don't have musical ear like my father, all he's ''teachings'' with guitar included ''What's wrong, Son!? Just play it by the ear!'' I picked guitar 17 years later, and before that I played piano so notes were familiar and tabs are awesome!! Knowing both of them+ how these 2 scales (or something XD) is so much fun. Lesson is: My dad sucked as a teacher, I will never do or could even do it!! Yes, playing by the ear has been developing into my system, but I'm not a natural monster with super hearing and orchestrating thoughts, even if I'm hearing tunes inside my head!

  • @Chexmix6
    @Chexmix6 Рік тому +6

    As someone who is tone deaf, it's so true! It has its ups and downs; on one hand, you can't play or judge the quality of any music, but on the other hand, all speakers sound the same. Even the cheap ones.

  • @alf5617
    @alf5617 Рік тому +14

    02:00 little bit Gilbert Gottfried 😂

  • @kellyalvey7627
    @kellyalvey7627 Рік тому +3

    Edwin Gordon did a study that displayed that musical aptitude (a person's potential to learn music) is pretty much determined by musical training and exposure before the age of 8! Students in the study were asked to do things like echo rhythms and tell which pitch was higher/lower. Before the age of 8, scores improved dramatically from year to year. After the age of 8 (all the way up to 18), there was not much change in scores from year to year!

    • @tonylee1667
      @tonylee1667 11 місяців тому

      That's unrelated to this video though

  • @angelsreminiscent2079
    @angelsreminiscent2079 Рік тому

    You went to SCAD!!!!! I've wanted to go there forever. Hopefully I can go there in the future.

  • @thewizard-edits
    @thewizard-edits Рік тому +20

    I’m just impressed that Dennis managed to become a world-famous musician back in “When You Compliment a Musician but Don’t Mean It” while being tone deaf this whole time

  • @jonnnnniej
    @jonnnnniej Рік тому +18

    I had a roommate who actually had a beautiful singing voice, but for the love of all that sounds great... she just couldn't hold a tone or note. I think now I finally understand why

    • @rich1051414
      @rich1051414 Рік тому +9

      Not being able to hold a note usually just implies poor vocal control and an inaccurate internal voice. Tone deafness means they literally can't distinguish different notes and can't comprehend chords and progressions, it just sounds like random notes with no correlation.

  • @tommy7467
    @tommy7467 Рік тому

    Hard work and practice can payoff and be super fun playing by ear! At the start, I could hear 2 notes that were like 2/3 whole steps apart and still incorrectly guess higher/lower. Now I’m playing along to my favorite songs on the piano in real time. Super fun and it’s okay to start by just shooting helplessly in the dark. You will learn.

  • @NavLondon
    @NavLondon Рік тому

    Thank you for this

  • @blockman3508
    @blockman3508 Рік тому +12

    Love how this is the first sketch Daniel’s made with a piano in ages and we don’t even get to hear it

  • @mikef5951
    @mikef5951 Рік тому +17

    Why does Daniel just have the flogger on hand at 1:40

  • @KitsuyuutsuR
    @KitsuyuutsuR Рік тому +2

    I can kind of relate… I have perfect pitch and married someone who can’t carry a tune if it had a handle on it 😂 I’m a huge music lover, I also play piano and guitar. Sometimes we’ll be listening to a song and I’ll hear this AMAZING key change. It’s subtle, but it sticks out to me like a sore thumb. I’ll play it for my husband and ask him excitedly if he thought the key change was amazing also and he didn’t notice it. Even when I point at the exact moment it changes keys, nope… still doesn’t hear it. Even if it’s a really obvious key change, he often can’t tell. There’s a part in Tubular Bells (the theme from The Exorcist) where the notes are switched. He can’t tell that, either, even though I think it’s very obvious. Our (adult) kids can’t really tell, either. One day I played it for my mother and she found it as obvious as me, but to be fair, she also plays piano and we both sang in school chorus. Actually, her side of the family was very deistic and musically inclined going way back, so maybe that’s why? I don’t know, but it’s frustrating that my husband can’t hear these marvelous things and my kids often can’t hear them either. At least my kids seem to love music as much as I do, especially my youngest. He has a taste range as broad as my own 😊

  • @ellanimation816
    @ellanimation816 7 місяців тому

    I can’t imagine not being able to hear music, it would change my life completely

  • @pyrosnineActual
    @pyrosnineActual Рік тому +3

    The best thing about this is how just like in real life, if you've got a non-visible disability, expect that one friend/family member to go 'bullshit!, that's just a myth' or 'you're just not trying hard enough!' and take any example of a time you were almost right or made a proper educated guess as 'proof' that you weren't really disabled. Even a colorblind person can guess which shirt is "red" from the context, and even a deaf person can feel the vibrations of the gat damn room when you yell at the top of your lungs at them. I'm deaf in one ear and have trouble hearing in terms of direction or in crowded areas, but when I hear something from my deaf ear's directions because of acoustics (as sound, by nature, bounces), there's always that one person who goes "I thought you were supposed to be deaf?"

    • @joker6solitaire
      @joker6solitaire Місяць тому

      I'm deaf in one ear, too! I also have perfect pitch (I can sing the correct note out of the blue, with no instrument playing it for me first).
      I sang in choirs from grade school through college, and people were ASSHOLES about my hearing impairment! I always sing on-key, so they didn't believe that it's super hard for me to sing with someone standing on my deaf side. (I focus on trying to hear the person on my deaf side, so I can't also concentrate on my own voice to sing well.) My choral directors kept trying to position me in the center of the choirs because I kept everyone else on pitch; they completely ignored my insistence that I needed to stand on one side in order to hear everyone else sing.
      The last time I sang in a choir was over 10 years ago, and I still feel furious recalling the way those choral directors dismissed me. They made me feel like a lesser musician and actually DISABLED for the first time in my life, all because they refused to accept my need for a small accommodation.

  • @Platinum_XYZ
    @Platinum_XYZ Рік тому +3

    I can't believe danial thrasher was morgan freeman the whole time

  • @aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa790
    @aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa790 Рік тому

    This was hilarious and informative, thank you.

  • @Nintendhope64
    @Nintendhope64 Рік тому +1

    As a singer, I cant even fathom what tone deafness is like o.o also love how you just casually pull a whip out XD

  • @HoneyBeeGtag
    @HoneyBeeGtag Рік тому +7

    Piano, piano, piano, piano.. truly a work of art 🙏