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Mozart

Perfect Pitch – How It’s Achieved And What’s Involved

by Tania Gleaves on December 22, 2011

What Is Pitch?

To make a long physics lesson short, pitch is the rate at which a sound vibrates. Mathematically, Hz (hertz, or cycles per second) units denote pitch and the faster the vibration — the higher the tone. The A note for example vibrates faster than a C or D note whereas a G note vibrates much slower than a B note.

Click Here And Learn How To Achieve Perfect Pitch!

Perfect pitch is the sound of exact tones or notes. Its counterpart, relative pitch, is the sound of chords. Since a large part of learning to play the piano entails training the ear, it’s important that you spend some time training yourself to listen for perfect pitches. Practice certainly makes the process easier, however others contend that training yourself to listen for relative pitches at the same time increases your abilities to hear both. Some pianists even claim that training to identify relative pitches enhances the ability to pinpoint perfect pitches.

What’s particularly interesting about perfect pitch is that it isn’t easy to identify and it has thus become the subject of scientific study. It prompts us to ask why some people can easily identify any note while others can’t.

Four Components: The Ear, The Body, and Practice

As musicians, we can tell you that part of the answer lays in practice. Years and years and years of practice not only train your ear, they train your body as well. The ear isn’t the only thing that responds to sound — the entire body responds to sound too. So when you play a note, you’re ears will hear how it sounds and your body will feel how it vibrates even if you’re not conscious of the note’s sound waves.

In a sense, our bodies are tuners in their own right.

So you really have two distinct tools to help you identify perfect pitch and this is why many musicians will say, “that feels about right” when they attempt to match a tone. Believe us when we say that years of practice have a tremendous impact on these “feelings.” The ability to “feel” one’s way through a song isn’t unusual at all and it’s one of the techniques used by blind pianists such as Stevie Wonder and Ray Charles.

Natural Talent

Practice of course doesn’t mean to suggest that people can’t achieve perfect pitch through natural ability. Pianists who seem to pick up their lessons rather quickly probably have the natural ability to achieve perfect pitch because their bodies are more sensitive to the vibration of sound.

For those of us who aren’t Mozarts or Chopins however, or just not as sensitive to sound waves as others are, we need to practice – and we need practice a lot!

Click Here And Learn How To Achieve Perfect Pitch!

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Mozart Piano and The Genius Behind It

by Tania Gleaves on November 16, 2011

A Brief History Of Mozart, The Genius

There would probably be no Mozart piano as we know it without the contributions of Wolfgang Amadeus (1756-91). Over time, the name Mozart has become synonymous with classical piano and for very good reason. Within a relatively short life span of only 35 years, Mozart wrote 16 operas, 27 concerti, 25 string quartets, 41 symphonies, and more. Knowing a little of the man’s history could explain the method behind his madness, as we’ve come to discover that Mozart’s father, Leopold Mozart, was also a musician — a violinist in fact and composer to the archbishop of Austria.

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Leopold didn’t sway his children toward a different career path as so many other artistically inclined fathers did at this time. Instead, Leopold traveled throughout Europe and performed with his children: the Mozart whom we know today and his sister, Maria Anna. Both children played the harpsichord and piano, sometimes together and at other times, separately. Mozart however, also played violin and organ. He published his first work in Paris in 1764 only to become the archbishop’s honorary concertmaster four years later.

With the arrival of a new archbishop, Mozart felt that his creative freedom was being stifled and he asked to step down from his achieved position. A brewing hostility between Mozart and the archbishop (coupled with physical removal from the residence) granted his wish. He later went to Germany and Paris to be with his mother and somehow managed to write seven violin sonatas, seven piano sonatas, a ballet, and the ‘Paris Symphony’ between. Additional compositions during this time include ‘Coronation Mass’, ‘Idomeneo’, ‘Missa Solemnis’, and ‘Post Horn Serenade.’

Married to Constanze Weber in 1782, Mozart wrote ‘Mass in C Minor’ and ‘The Abduction from the Seraglio.’ In 1787, Emperor Joseph II hired Mozart as chamber composer but the financial compensation was not enough to relieve the genius from the debts he acquired over his short career. Mozart simply couldn’t draw in the large crowds he once attracted as a young prodigy.

Mozart Piano Works

His last ten years of life showed no signs of slowing down however. For during that time, he composed most of his piano concertos, the ‘Cosi Fan Tutte’, ‘Don Giovanni’, ‘Haffner’, ‘Jupiter’ symphonies, ‘La Clemenza di Tito’, ‘Linz’, ‘Prague’, ‘The Marriage of Figaro’ and ‘The Magic Flute’.

Mozart did not finish writing his ‘Requiem’ due to illness and he died in 1791 with the grave digger being the funeral’s only attendant. Despite numerous rumors, there is no evidence to suggest foul play in his death.

Other Famous Mozart Piano Works :

  • Concerto for Piano and Orchestra, No. 28
  • Eine kleine Nachtmusik
  • Fantasy in D Minor
  • Overture from -The Marriage of Figaro
  • Rondo a la Turk
  • Sonata for Flute and Piano in F Major, Mvt. 1
  • Sonata for Piano in C Major, K.545, Allegro
  • Sonata for Piano in C Major, K.545, Andante
  • Sonata for Piano in C Major, K.545, Rondo: Allegro
  • Symphony No. 41 in C Major, -Jupiter, 1st Mvt.
  • The -Queen of the Night aria, from -The Magic Flute
  • Variations on Ah! Vous Dirai-je, Mamanecho (Twinkle, Twinkle Little Star)

Click Here And Learn Classic Mozart Piano Pieces!

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