I was only wondering about this, how many of the famous composers had perfect pitch? Or rather, which ones didn't?Mozart of course, had a disgustingly perfect pitch. I have also read that Liszt had it. Saint-Saëns definitely did. I think Rachmaninov as well, but not sure about that. What about Beethoven, Bach, Chopin, Debussy, Ravel? And so on...
I don't think Liszt saint-saens and rachmaninoff had it ... I'm even pretty sure that of those you named, only mozart had it.
I had the impression that many of the most successful pianists and violinists, as well as composers, have perfect pitch... is it an inaccurate presumption?
Yes. And why the hell would bach need an instrument to compose that? Musicians at the time were much better than most of our time.
There is no evidence that Bach nor Beethoven had perfect pitch. I don't think Beethoven had it. Did you see all what he wrote without even hearing ANYTHING? He clearly had relative pitch. Relative pitch is even better in most cases, when it is well developed.
There is no evidence that Bach nor Beethoven had perfect pitch.
What's all this hype about "perfect pitch" good for?As a composer you need to be able to create and hear chords, melodies, rhythms with your inner ear. You don't need perfect pitch.
Most musicians have perfect pitch. They just don't know how to use it. I spend a lot of my time working with singers and they usually pick the right note IF THEY DON'T HAVE TO THINK ABOUT IT. Most orchestral players know to an astonishing degree of accuracy where to tune their instrument to. A lot of pianists can play a chord on a piano and know whether it's a few cents sharp or flat or spot on. But for some reason mostly people can't access this in a direct way. Odd.