Perfect
Pitch
Broadcast beginning week of January 23, 2008
Why
can some people name a note as soon as they hear it when others can't
tell one from another? In this hour, we'll explore the mysterious
ability known as perfect pitch. A cellist with perfect pitch will
give a guided tour through the notes and keys. We'll also hear from
a psychologist and geneticist who have different ideas about how many
people have perfect pitch and why. And a report on Williams Syndrome,
a rare genetic disorder which can cause physical and mental problems
- and a sensitivity to music and pitch. Guests include: Gordon
Grubb, a cellist with the Grossmont Symphony; Dr.
Dan Levitin, a record producer and psychology professor at
McGill University; Dr. Peter Gregersen, Chief of the Division
of Biology and Human Genetics North Shore University Hospital; Dr.
Ursula Bellugi, professor and director of the laboratory for cognitive
neuroscience at the Salk Institute; Dr. Glen Schellenberg,
professor of psychology at the University of Toronto; and Dr. Howard
Lenhoff, professor emeritus at the University of California at
Irvine. Commentary by John Hockenberry.
We begin
the hour with commentary by host Dr. Fred Goodwin, who notes
that some people will hear sounds simply as sounds, while other people
immediately identify their pitch. He wonders whether people with perfect
pitch can hear something distinct about notes that helps them tell
them apart. He asks whether everyone begins life with the ability
to recognize pitches and also alludes to the controversy over whether
perfect pitch can be learned.
Next, Gordon
Grubbs, a cellist with the Grossmont Symphony in San Diego, discusses
his experience of perfect pitch. He plays and describes several notes,
then talks about the differences he hears between keys. He says he
hears D-minor as sad, then plays a piece in G-major that he thinks
sounds serene. Gordon Grubbs performs with the Grossmont Symphony
and the Grossmont Symphony String Quartet. The quartet will be performing
on December 3 at the Grossmont College Recital Hall in San Diego.
For more information about this performance, call 619-644-7298.
Host Fred
Goodwin is then joined by Dr. Daniel Levitin and Dr. Peter
Gregersen. Dr. Levitin is a record producer, musician, music journalist
and FCAR Strategic Professor of Psychology at McGill University. Dr.
Gregersen is Professor of Medicine and Pathology at New York University
School of Medicine and Chief of the Division of Biology and Human
Genetics North Shore University Hospital. They agree that perfect
pitch, which is sometimes called absolute pitch, is the ability to
name and produce notes. But Gregersen believes that perfect pitch
is a "distinct ability," that people either have the ability or don't.
Levitin, on the other hand, thinks people fall all along a spectrum
that spans from always being able to recognize notes to never being
able to do so. Dr. Levitin also breaks perfect pitch into several
talents, including the ability to sing a popular, song from memory
on the note it usually begins in recordings. Dr. Gregersen then discusses
his research, which includes the finding that perfect pitch is far
more common among Asian music students than in the general population.
The interview ends with Dr. Gregersen and Dr. Levitin agreeing that
perfect pitch can be a detriment to professional musicians. For more
information about his research, log on to Dan
Levitin's website or email
Dan Levitin. To reach Peter Gregersen, you can write to him at
the Division of Biology and Human Genetics, North Shore University
Hospital Research Building, 350 Community Drive Manhasset, NY 11030.
Or email Dr. Gregersen.
Next, The
Infinite Mind's Sharon Lerner reports on Williams Syndrome,
a rare genetic disorder that causes mental and physical problems.
People with Williams have a distinctive look as well as problems judging
distances and generally lower IQ (the average is around 60). But they
also seem to have a number of unusual talents. Gloria Lenhoff,
who has Williams Syndrome, begins this segment saying how much she
enjoys music. Then she sings, which she can do in 29 languages, and
demonstrates that she has perfect pitch. We then meet Jessica Mavro,
a woman with Williams Syndrome who performs an aria from The Marriage
of Figaro.
Dr.
Ursula Bellugi, director of the Laboratory for Cognitive Neuroscience
at the Salk Institute in La Jolla, says she thinks about Williams
Syndrome in terms of strengths and weaknesses. According to Bellugi,
people with Williams often have a flair for expressive language and
an ease with social situations as well as an affinity for music.
We also
meet Howard Lenhoff, Gloria's father, who is convinced people
Williams Syndrome are more likely to have perfect pitch; Nancy
Goldberg, who runs a music camp for people with Williams, and
Glenn Schellenberg, who is skeptical of the Williams/music
connection. Howard then describes a study he conducted recently in
which he tested five people with Williams Syndrome and found that
they could identify pitches correctly 97.5 percent of the time. The
report ends with Gloria Lenhoff singing a song she will soon perform
with Aerosmith while accompanying herself on accordion.
To find
out more about Williams Syndrome, call the Williams Syndrome Association
at 248-541-3630. You can also log onto the
Williams Syndrome Association website or click here
to send email to the Association. To email the Williams Syndrome Foundation,
click here. Or you can write
to them at Williams Syndrome Foundation, University of California
Irvine, CA 92679-2310. Or call the Williams Syndreom Foundation at
949- 824-7259. To find out more about the music camp for people with
Williams Syndrome, you can email
Nancy Goldberg or log on to the camp
website. If you'd like to contact Glenn Schellenberg, you can
write to him Department of Psychology, University of Toronto at Mississauga,
Mississauga, ON, Canada L5L 1C6. You can also email
Glenn Schellenberg.