Newsgroups: comp.music
Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!rpi!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!van-bc!cynic!quayster
From: quayster@cynic.wimsey.bc.ca (Tony Chung)
Subject: Exact colours (Was: RE: <NONE> --aka PP)R
Organization: Mad Artists' Technological Hangout
Date: Wed, 10 Apr 1991 08:31:17 GMT
Message-ID: <1991Apr10.083117.25449@cynic.wimsey.bc.ca>
Keywords: Perfect Pitch
References: <4123.27fb5354@iccgcc.decnet.ab.com> <4124.27fb558b@iccgcc.decnet.ab.com> <1991Apr6.004426.24266@dgbt.doc.ca>

In article <1991Apr6.004426.24266@dgbt.doc.ca>
  ted@dgbt.doc.ca (Ted Grusec) writes:

 >Some people seem to think that way that we normally deal with 
 >visual color is analogous to perfect pitch. I don't think this is
 >so.
 
I've heard that when people say they hear "colours", they are referring
to a pitch colour, not a visual nor timbral colour.  I've also heard that
pitches are addressed naturally, without any conscious thought.  That
would definitely be a skill worth having. 
 
 >If I show you a "red", and then a slightly different shade of 
 >"red" at some time later, then you are not likely to be able to
 >detect the difference between these two different "reds" without
 >having both to compare.

That all depends on how much colour training you've had.  Being an
artist, I have to be able to tell that Ferrari red is a shade oranger
than Porsche's "candy-apple" red, and both are brighter than Fire
Engine red.  (FE red is usually duller because the truck is covered
with dirt, see.)

-Tony

-- 
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        "If you drive, don't drink."                    -- Tony Chung
        quayster@cynic.wimsey.bc.ca      quayster@arkham.wimsey.bc.ca

