This is a list of notable people with absolute pitch, or "perfect pitch".
Note for pre-19th century composers
Owing to uncertainty in the historical record, it is often impossible to determine whether composers and musicians of the past had absolute pitch. Since absolute pitch is rare in European musical culture,[1] claims that any particular musician possessed it are difficult to evaluate. Among composers of the Baroque and Classical eras, evidence is available only for Mozart, who is documented to have demonstrated the ability at age 7.[1] Experts have only surmised that Beethoven had it, as indicated from some excerpts from his letters. By the 19th century, it became more common for the presence of absolute pitch to be recorded, such as in the case of Camille Saint-Saëns and John Philip Sousa.
^ abcdefghDeutsch, Diana (2019). Musical illusions and phantom words: how music and speech unlock mysteries of the brain. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 82, 101. ISBN978-0-19-020683-3.
^Wilson, Glenn Daniel (1994). Psychology for Performing Artists: Butterflies and Bouquets. London and Bristol, Pennsylvania: Jessica Kingsley Publishers. p. 161. ISBN1-85302-166-0. When soprano Kirsten Flagstad suffered a serious ear ailment that rendered her virtually deaf, for over a year she was able to carry on singing major Wagnerian roles at the Metropolitan Opera using only her own absolute pitch and visual contact with the conductor.
^Frew, Tim (1996). Scott Joplin & the Age of Ragtime. The Life, Times & Music Series. New York: Friedman/Fairfax Publishers. p. 35. ISBN1-56799-304-4. Born with perfect pitch, Scott quickly picked up songs on his family's old, battered reed organ.
^Gunther, Marty (June 28, 2019). "Featured Interview – Lucky Peterson". Blues Blast Magazine. Retrieved December 14, 2023. I had perfect pitch, so I didn't have a problem knowin' where they were.
^Batten, Jack (2012). Oscar Peterson: The Man and His Jazz. Tundra. p. 21. ISBN978-1-77049-362-9.