This video is interesting, but you (and I) don't have to agree with it - neither did the presenter completely.
Musical IQ test? Dodgy?
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostIt’s a bit like those (stupid) IQ-claiming tests found on Facebook.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostSounds as though nobody other than I is owning up to having watched it!"The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Petrushka View PostA couple of possible reasons: The word 'dodgy' in connection with anything on the internet is a massive deterrent to any further investigation. In addition, you make it clear it's not worth watching anyway! Life's too short...
Comment
-
-
Interesting to "my" generation inasmuch as there was a discussion to be had about received standards regarding musical correctness, which (I think, though I was only an autodidact after reaching Grade 5 at age 17) looked at alternative traditions' ways of regarding tuning and beat preciseness from a point of view of accommodation to Euroclassical values, rather than relatively, or neutrally. The first test, regarding intervallic incongruence in respect of unchanging harmony in different keys, had more to do with memory than the other tests.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostThe first test, regarding intervallic incongruence in respect of unchanging harmony in different keys, had more to do with memory than the other tests.
I'm not sure about the first test. Did the developers get singers to actually sing those pieces, and change their tuning - which some singers might have found hard. Some find it hard to sing out of tune, while others find it hard to sing in tune If the developers simply took the same tracks and then used computer technology to retune some of the notes, then it might be that some people could actually detect that - which is not the same thing as knowing when a singer isn't hitting the right notes.
Comment
-
Comment