I missed this. Another piece of silky Harbal smoothness Bit of a bum note somewhere around 1:30 but I expect you'll tell me it was some complex modal thing hehehe
Very nice track, Greta, shame about the slight miss-hit on the high hat around the two minute mark.
touché! I note that you were too polite to mention my other microtiming errors, just as I was too polite to point out your other questionable notes hehehe
I once spoke to a person who explained the difference between "perfect pitch' and "relative pitch". Relative pitch is when you can start on a note that may be slightly off and still keep the whole song in the correct pitch to the starting note. Perfect pitch is when the not has to be correct to the absolute correct pitch or the person knows it is incorrect. I know some people in a musical group and one of them has perfect pitch, the others can start a song on whatever note they settle on but this one person knows that it's wrong but sings along anyhow.
I once spoke to a person who explained the difference between "perfect pitch' and "relative pitch". Relative pitch is when you can start on a note that may be slightly off and still keep the whole song in the correct pitch to the starting note. Perfect pitch is when the not has to be correct to the absolute correct pitch or the person knows it is incorrect. I know some people in a musical group and one of them has perfect pitch, the others can start a song on whatever note they settle on but this one person knows that it's wrong but sings along anyhow.
Only a person with perfect pitch could be deaf and sing like that. It's because they can 'hear' the correct notes in their head. That's why Beethoven could compose some of his greatest music after he became deaf. Mozart could compose straight from his head to the manuscript.
I once spoke to a person who explained the difference between "perfect pitch' and "relative pitch". Relative pitch is when you can start on a note that may be slightly off and still keep the whole song in the correct pitch to the starting note. Perfect pitch is when the not has to be correct to the absolute correct pitch or the person knows it is incorrect. I know some people in a musical group and one of them has perfect pitch, the others can start a song on whatever note they settle on but this one person knows that it's wrong but sings along anyhow.
Only a person with perfect pitch could be deaf and sing like that. It's because they can 'hear' the correct notes in their head. That's why Beethoven could compose some of his greatest music after he became deaf. Mozart could compose straight from his head to the manuscript.
You're correct, I didn't intend to say otherwise, a person with "perfect pitch" "hears" the note in their head and tries to match it with what they hear in their ears. The problem comes when the notes don't match but the person with relative pitch doesn't notice the difference.