"No disrespect, but something seeming to correlate closely doesn't mean it's actually related." -Explorer
I think this is accepted in scientific and engineering circles, so no "disrespect" is possible - in fact, possibly the only "disrespectful" thing you could do to a scientist is to declare that what they hypothesize is absolute truth! ;-)
All I said was:
"the Schumann fundamental does seem to correlate quite closely to the frequency of Alpha waves in the brain"
and then effectively proposed an experiment:
"I would be really interested is seeing whether perfect pitch related to the stability of Alpha waves - whether these people are perhaps phase locked to the Schumann fundamental... or something like that ;-)" -
The above steps are (IMO) the essential prerequisites for EXPLORING INTELEGENTLY - Make an observation, then create an experiment or find a source of other data, and test any hypothesis or idea against new data.. But NEVER be absolutely sure about anything…
LOL - It gets real boring being accused of saying or inferring something you haven't, and having to repeatedly explain the basics of scientific method.
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"There is also something called "tonal memory", which is the ability to accurately recall a particular note. If you have a favorite piece of music and are able to hear it in your musical imagination sung or played in the key in which it was originally performed when you first heard the piece, then you have "tonal memory" (sometimes called "aural recall").
That does not mean that if a truck honks its horn in the street you will instantly know that it honked 35 cents flat of 'G'. To do that you need perfect pitch." - Coalport
I am having some difficulty accepting the above -
First, I would think that, if one has "perfect" "tonal memory" AND you are able to bring this "out of your head" into the physical world - as in, you can remember a song starting at A440, and, at any time, without hearing any other tonal references, you are able to hum A440, Then you have perfect pitch FOR A440..
If, from this "perfect" pitch you are able to produce other perfect intervals, then, to me, one (surely?) must have perfect pitch ??? -
But here I start having a problem - in fact, several problems.. I do not see any basis for the idea that:
" if a truck honks its horn in the street you will instantly know that it honked 35 cents flat of 'G'. "
- To me, I see no way that this can be anything other than just plain nonsense..
What is a cent? - It’s a division of some arbitrary ratio by 100..
So are people with "perfect pitch" tuned to the (unnatural) 12 interval Equally tempered scale? - why not to a 19, 24,31,43 or 48 interval ETS ? .. And why not to some other older and more musical scale where intervals are not equally tempered ?
We have only had this ETS for an extremely short time in human history, and it is badly out of tune (if one is talking about cents) with the "natural" just scales at the Major 3rd and Major 6th intervals, and out on others (by less).
Look, I may well be wrong on some of the above - I come at this from the background of designing and building instruments, not as a musician..
But this "perfect pitch" stuff seems to have a lot of ambiguity and I am really starting to wonder if its really worth bothering about at all - There are an infinite number of intervals between every interval, there are a few basic musical ratios, but these are flouted by the ETS in order to standardize on the 12 ETS "required" for "industrializing" music..
Perfect Pitch ?? Perfect with reference to what??
Fred.
Ps.. The theremin is, by its nature, able to play in any scale or tuning.. Unlike most other instruments, where the designer / builder must decide the tuning intervals, and the musician is stuck with these..
Is it possible (?) that there is a natural tendency to play in just temperament (unequal interval spacing) - and that without being 'locked' to the ETS some players "drift" towards "natural" just tuning .. The 5-limit Just scale has 12 intervals per octave, just like the 12-ETS.. but is quite a number of "ETS cents" out against the ETS.