Absolute pitch is the ability to correctly identify any musical note. It is close to another ability, relative pitch, which is the ability to identify any interval correctly, although relative pitch is usually described as the ability to correctly identify any note, once the subject has been given a "reference tone". An important fact here is that relative pitch is not as rare as absolute pitch, which may hint that absolute pitch is harder to acquire/train.
What kind of learning procedure would you design to learn absolute pitch?
In particular, I have two strategies in mind, and I don't think either would work. The first one is simple: a computer produces a note, the user identifies the note, the computer corrects the user. This is flawed because the first note in pair with the correct answer given by the computer provides a reference tone, therefore, after the first note, the user only trains his/her relative pitch. The second strategy would be to not correct the user immediately, but instead wait for example 10 notes before correcting. This seems flawed too, because of how crucial a quick feedback is to learning. Note that, with either strategies, it is not possible to make long learning sessions anyway, because it soon becomes a relative pitch training strategy.
Any clever idea?
Relative pitch and absolute pitch are 2 different skills. While most people can learn relative pitch, some people say that absolute is genetic and can’t be learnt. I don’t believe this is true (at least in my case). My technique is to learn songs that start on a specific pitch (C for example) and internalise the pitch, imagine the sound and try to sing it before comparing with the original. Try this exercise every morning, take notes and see if you improve over time.
I am one of those people. Fact is, I've spent ten years in a conservatory, surrounded by dozens of people heavily selected for music-related skills, and basically all of them agreed on absolute pitch being genetic. In a conservatory, relative pitch is considered a very important skill, taught to students of all courses through specific exercises, and some mandatory exams are almost impossible to ... (read more)