|
|
|
|
|
by yesenadam
1680 days ago
|
|
(Perfect pitch here, jazz pianist.) Yes, what you say sounds right. Although I don't remember a time before I knew lots of things about minor 3rds, so I don't know what that's like, or which came first. I don't know if there are many people with perfect pitch and without childhood music training/practice—I don't think so. I also have no idea why it would help with brain recovery. |
|
I’ve studied Pat’s playing a lot and transcribed several of his solos. The “muscle memory” seems to be a huge part of his playing as he has so much great dorian material under his fingers and he knows how to connect all those ideas really well, and how to repurpose them over various other chord types. WRT perfect pitch I think that must have helped him to build all that vocabulary in the first place. I’m just wondering whether he retained the ability after the op and how he related to it in his playing.
Coda - “absolute pitch” is a biological phenomenon. People recognise a C as easily as we recognise the colour red. “True pitch” is a variation where people play an instrument for so long that they can remember the sound of a pitch on that instrument. It’s a slower, less reliable process. Many people get the two confused