Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!cs.utexas.edu!sdd.hp.com!mips!dimacs.rutgers.edu!rutgers!mjm!mjf From: mjf@mjm.mjm.com (Mark Fresolone) Newsgroups: comp.music Subject: Re: Re: Kinesthetic Memory &Pitch Message-ID: <2970002@mjm.mjm.com> Date: 10 Apr 91 17:03:15 GMT References: <6285@acorn.co.uk> Organization: Melillo Consulting, Somerset, NJ Lines: 16 / mjm:comp.music / awall@acorn.co.uk (Adrian Wall) / 7:35 am Apr 9, 1991 / In article <1991Mar28.141949.21382@uservx.afwl.af.mil> galetti@uservx.afwl.af.mil writes: >In article <1991Mar26.163620.8399@odin.corp.sgi.com>, gints@prophet.esd.sgi.com (Gints Klimanis) writes: >> HI !! >> >> I question the accuracy of remembering pitches by throat muscle tension. >> Has anyone (at least any male, since I am a male human) noticed that >> low notes are easy to sing in the morning ? Later. The bass section at Stevens Institute always needed a beer or two before singing "Streams in the Desert" in order to pump out a decent low E-flat. Mark Fresolone mjf@mjm.com, rutgers!mjm!mjf Melillo Consulting/MJM Software 908-873-0075/Fax 908-873-2250