Thank you and Rick Beato, is one of the people I hate.
That asshole has perfect pitch. I am green of envy.
All kidding aside, I am sub-scripted to his channel, and been wondering if I should order his course about ear training.
According to him, perfect pitch is some thing you have or do not have, you can't train it, but you can train to have a good relative pitch.
I do remember uploading my first track, and people asking if I was tone deaf.
I was shocked, what do you mean my track is out of tune? I did hear something not totally fine, but also not having a clue on what was wrong.
Scales ? What are scales ?
About 5 month later while refusing to give up, something went pop in my head.
That had to do with a vid of musikbear, showing how to find the key of a song in LMMS.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WhkwmABRtp4&t=339s
For the first few months, I did not hear why he is saying no no no at first, and then hello when he does find the key.
To me this proofs Rick Beato is right, that there is hope for people not having perfect pitch.
I also wonder if I need that course though, because Bearsounds probably has helped me already.
When I cover something these days I can hear if I am in tune or not.
I owe Bearsounds a lot. He thought me to use the mark current scale option in LMMS.
Its possible he made this vid for me, but it will help others too, starting with music. He is one of the LMMS devs.
He added strumming and some more, but the other devs did not agree on how he did this.
Strumming and humanization, is something I have requested for LMMS, but I was probably not the only one.
This goes back to me seeing a demonstration, of Cubase on an Atari ST and a drumcomputer. (and a Yamaha DX7)
The guy made a rhythm, and we the audience said it sounded very mechanical.
Then he did something with the mouse, he right clicked and boom, it suddenly sounded like a live drummer.
I learned a lot since then, I now know how to do swing in LMMS, and how to mess the the volume of individual notes.
In the famous 1,2,3,4 make the first beat a tad louder. Real drummers do this even without knowing they do this.
Its when you say 1,2,3,4, there is usual an emphasis on the one.
I downloaded reaper and will get back to this topic.