Pros yes but not us amateurs, that is amazing Mat can you apply this to all music that you hear?
Pretty much, Colin. Or at least to those pieces that
have a key :lol:
A tale I heard, maybe apocryphal maybe not, Cleo Laine was heard to say when somebody dropped a metal tray "that's a little sharp on Eb"
I sometimes wonder if PP is always a blessing, or if the ability to spot something off tune can be almost painful at times (some school orchestras and amateur groups on youtube come to mind, even I cringe at some youtube offerings)
I had no idea who that person was, but what she (supposedly) said doesn't surprise me at all. It happens to me all the time. So many things in everyday life that make a "pitched" sound will catch my attention. The transformer, or whatever it is, in the cheap speakers I have hooked to my PC will make a slightly too sharp G sound. My microwave makes two sounds at the same time – a perfect fifth (G-D). My vacuum cleaner...ect., ect. Shall I go on?
Let me put it this way. As long as the musicians are in tune
with each other, then it's okay. Your ear will eventually adjust to hearing everything half-step (or any other number of steps, for that matter) lower, like
here. But
this is different. And you dont't need to have PP to notice how far off the oboist is.