Saturday, July 10, 2010

Has anyone tried the Perfect Pitch learning courses for sale in the back of magazines?

I'm interested in the opinion of people who have tried this product. What did you think of it. Was it helpful, etc.





ThanksHas anyone tried the Perfect Pitch learning courses for sale in the back of magazines?
I myself never bought it because I've been able to tune my guitar and bass to any tuning I need and pick out any note since several months after I started playing.





However, my friend Chris wasn't so lucky. He bought that. It worked a little, but not 'perfectly' like it says it will. But to be fair he half a**ed it.





I think it's worth a try.Has anyone tried the Perfect Pitch learning courses for sale in the back of magazines?
To be fair, they are a scam.





I mean, people keep saying that you only have perfect pitch if you're born with it, which is RUBBISH. I'm on a degree course, and the first thing we learnt as a group was perfect pitch, and the classes didn't start properly until everybody could identify a random note.





There is a real easy way to learn it - you just play a note, without looking at what it is, and keep guessing till you get it. Certain chords are easier than others - D Major is a dead obvious one, along with A major.





These help you pick out notes and intervals as well.





You don't need to pay ANYTHING to do this - just get a free demo of Guitar Pro or something, and scribble a hundred notes down, until you can name them all without looking.





It's possible.
Perfect Pitch is nothing that can be learned; it is a gift. You an probably learn ';Relative'; pitch, but pefect pitch is one of those things that a very few can do (and even that is believed to be a relative sort of thing happening in the person's head)
What makes you want to have perfect pitch?





Relative pitch is good enough for 95% of professional musicians.

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