Do you have absolute pitch
81isn't that more frequency related though? as in, the compressed version may have 'harsh' harmonics up near 20k that most people can't physically hear?
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154 wrote:isn't that more frequency related though? as in, the compressed version may have 'harsh' harmonics up near 20k that most people can't physically hear?
davesec wrote: when i was a kid i associated the keys on a piano with colors and the letter of the alphabet, and that's sort of how i instantly recognized stuff. it kind of sounds weird, but A was red, B was yellow, C was blue, D was green, E was dark blue, F was purple and G was burgundy.. i still have color associations for the rest of the alphabet and have no idea how they got in my head, but i've had them for as far back as i can remember. if someone plays a note on a piano i just sort of get a splash of color in my head.
when i was a kid i associated the keys on a piano with colors and the letter of the alphabet, and that's sort of how i instantly recognized stuff.
gmilner wrote:davesec wrote: when i was a kid i associated the keys on a piano with colors and the letter of the alphabet, and that's sort of how i instantly recognized stuff. it kind of sounds weird, but A was red, B was yellow, C was blue, D was green, E was dark blue, F was purple and G was burgundy.. i still have color associations for the rest of the alphabet and have no idea how they got in my head, but i've had them for as far back as i can remember. if someone plays a note on a piano i just sort of get a splash of color in my head.
What a great form of cognition to be born with. If each of the notes is a color, what do you "see" in your head when you hear a chord? I'm guessing hearing an A (red) and a B (yellow) simultaneously doesn't make you "see" green, since that color is represented by D. Do you see the colors side by side?
Edited to correct dumb color mistake.
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