Leeds_Demon wrote:
What if you can hear a note & sing it, but aren't musical - that is to say, you can't read/write music, or play a musical instrument?
When I was auditioning for my school choir, many years' ago, I was told I had a good singing voice. But if you were to ask me to name the notes on a piano, I'd look at you as if you asked me to translate some Serb-Croat - a blank stare.
If you're hearing a note and singing it, that indicates you have some level of music talent (I definitely know of people who can't do this), but it has nothing to do with perfect/absolute pitch, or relative pitch either for that matter.
Perfect/absolute pitch is your ability to identify or sing a specific note without having anything to compare it with (eg. without warning, I suddenly ask you to sing a middle C).
Most people think perfect pitch cannot be taught and is something you either are born with it or without it, although there are some people who think it can be taught at a very young age (3-5 years old). There is general agreement that it cannot be taught at an older age, although I have also seen some articles suggesting that those on the spectrum might be able to be taught it at a somewhat older age, and that might be why more people on the spectrum have perfect pitch.
Relative pitch is your ability to identify or sing a note based on a reference note (eg. I play a note, tell you the note I played was middle C, then ask you to sing an E). There is general agreement that relative pitch is something that can be taught and learned, but some people will certainly find it easier than others!
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Level 1 Autism Spectrum Disorder / Asperger's Syndrome.