u/zephyreblk

Is pitch recall similar to perfect pitch?

I did randomly stumble on this sub just now and I did asked this question in a singing sub that was on a topic of perfect pitch and I had mixed answers. I'm fully unable to recognize a note, I can't translate a note from a piano to a guitar to a voice, like at all. However I can reproduce from memory songs if I have the same "Sounds" at disposability. Basically if I hear a piece of piano and memorize it by listening (without sheet of course and without listening to it while I'm recalling it, so it's only memory work) , I usually can replay it "by ear", it takes a lot of attempts to find the right note, basically me going through the octave until finding the note that matches (I'm in the right octave though) but all my notes match after checking with the sheet. My mother has and my grandfather had (died) perfect pitch (I know it's kind of genetic) but is it linked to it or it's something else (and if something else, I definitely would like to know the word for it so I can learn about it).

Thanks in advance for your answers.

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u/zephyreblk — 8 days ago
▲ 2 r/AskVet

A friend of mine has a small terrier that has for the third time their claw "broken" (I don't know the term, like if it doesn't heal from itself, they will need surgery to remove it), she was seen at the vet and it's just kind of rest, they didn't provide anything except pain meds. She's 12 month so there is way too much energy, she tried to put things on it but it doesn't hold and some things won't help. Do you have maybe some advice on how to protect it better that won't slip?

Thanks in advance:)

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u/zephyreblk — 23 days ago