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KX2CW, KD7MW. I am, yes, I am looking, there you are, Peter. Yes, bass, ooh, and player. We want to talk about movable dough or immovable dough. I prefer immovable dough myself. I never managed to develop perfect pitch because our piano at home, although we grew up with a piano in the living room, it was never, usually not in tune. And so, perfect pitch fades in and it comes and goes, it's elusive. Sometimes it's there, usually if I remember a song I'll sing it in the correct key, but not always. What's up, Peter? Well, yeah, I don't have perfect pitch, but I do have very good relative pitch. One of my saving graces in those music courses was that they had a game called Hot Seat, where people would play two different notes on the piano, they could be any notes, and you had to tell what they were. And I was undefeated even though I was not a full music major. I had a music minor which was almost a double major. So, anyway, I was undefeated in that because for some reason I could tell what key it was just by hearing the couple of notes and the difference between them, which according to equal temperament is not true, but yet I could. But ask me to sing an A and I will be anywhere plus or minus three quarters of a step.
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