There is also the "acquired perfect pitch", means the "a" is fix stored in the memory. There is a lot of education involved.
-----Original Message----- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of James Wester Sent: Thursday, May 25, 2006 2:24 PM To: horn@music.memphis.edu Subject: Re: [Hornlist] pitch I've always heard the term "relative pitch" used for those having quite good ears, but not quite perfect pitch. I put myself in that catagory. Some who can sing a pitch cold most of the time, knows proper intervals, plays in tune, yet probably coudln't tell you if a solitary note was sharp or flat or in tune with any regularity. [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: What kind of pitch do you have if you can cold sing a middle c 75% of the time? _______________________________________________ post: horn@music.memphis.edu unsubscribe or set options at http://music2.memphis.edu/mailman/options/horn/ndspmustang%4 0yahoo.com --------------------------------- Love cheap thrills? Enjoy PC-to-Phone calls to 30+ countries for just 2ยข/min with Yahoo! Messenger with Voice. _______________________________________________ post: horn@music.memphis.edu unsubscribe or set options at http://music2.memphis.edu/mailman/options/horn/hans%40pizka. de _______________________________________________ post: horn@music.memphis.edu unsubscribe or set options at http://music2.memphis.edu/mailman/options/horn/archive%40jab.org