Striking The RIGHT NOTE - IELTS Reading Answers & Explanations
From IELTS Practice Test Plus 1 Academic Reading Test 4 · Part 3 · Questions 28–40
Reading Passage
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 28–40 which are based on Reading Passage 3 below.
Striking the RIGHT NOTE
Is perfect pitch a rare talent possessed solely by the likes of Beethoven? Kathryn Brown discusses this much sought-after musical ability
The uncanny, if sometimes distracting, ability to name a solitary note out of the blue, without any other notes for reference, is a prized musical talent – and a scientific mystery. Musicians with perfect pitch – or, as many researchers prefer to call it, absolute pitch – can often play pieces by ear, and many can transcribe music brilliantly. That's because they perceive the position of a note in the musical stave – its pitch – as clearly as the fact that they heard it. Hearing and naming the pitch go hand in hand.
By contrast, most musicians follow not the notes, but the relationship between them. They may easily recognise two notes as being a certain number of tones apart, but could name the higher note as an E only if they are told the lower one is a C, for example. This is relative pitch. Useful, but much less mysterious.
For centuries, absolute pitch has been thought of as the preserve of the musical elite. Some estimates suggest that maybe fewer than 1 in 2,000 people possess it. But a growing number of studies, from speech experiments to brain scans, are now suggesting that a knack for absolute pitch may be far more common, and more varied, than previously thought. 'Absolute pitch is not an all or nothing feature,' says Marvin, a music theorist at the University of Rochester in New York state. Some researchers even claim that we could all develop the skill, regardless of our musical talent. And their work may finally settle a decades-old debate about whether absolute pitch depends on melodious genes – or early music lessons.
Music psychologist Diana Deutsch at the University of California in San Diego is the leading voice. Last month at the Acoustical Society of America meeting in Columbus, Ohio, Deutsch reported a study that suggests we all have the potential to acquire absolute pitch – and that speakers of tone languages use it every day. A third of the world's population - chiefly people in Asia and Africa - speak tone languages, in which a word's meaning can vary depending on the pitch a speaker uses.
Deutsch and her colleagues asked seven native Vietnamese speakers and 15 native Mandarin speakers to read out lists of words on different days. The chosen words spanned a range of pitches, to force the speakers to raise and lower their voices considerably. By recording these recited lists and taking the average pitch for each whole word, the researchers compared the pitches used by each person to say each word on different days.
Both groups showed strikingly consistent pitch for any given word – often less than a quarter-tone difference between days. 'The similarity,' Deutsch says, 'is mind-boggling.' It's also, she says, a real example of absolute pitch. As babies, the speakers learnt to associate certain pitches with meaningful words - just as a musician labels one tone A and another B - and they demonstrate this precise use of pitch regardless of whether or not they have had any musical training, she adds.
Deutsch isn't the only researcher turning up everyday evidence of absolute pitch. At least three other experiments have found that people can launch into familiar songs at or very near the correct pitches. Some researchers have nicknamed this ability 'absolute memory', and they say it pops up on other senses, too. Given studies like these, the real mystery is why we don't all have absolute pitch, says cognitive psychologist Daniel Levitin of McGill University in Montreal.
Over the past decade, researchers have confirmed that absolute pitch often runs in families. Nelson Freimer of the University of California in San Francisco, for example, is just completing a study that he says strongly suggests the right genes help create this brand of musical genius. Freimer gave tone tests to people with absolute pitch and to their relatives. He also tested several hundred other people who had taken early music lessons. He found that relatives of people with absolute pitch were far more likely to develop the skill than people who simply had the music lessons. 'There is clearly a familial aggregation of absolute pitch,' Freimer says.
Freimer says some children are probably genetically predisposed toward absolute pitch – and this innate inclination blossoms during childhood music lessons. Indeed, many researchers now point to this harmony of nature and nurture to explain why musicians with absolute pitch show different levels of the talent.
Indeed, researchers are finding more and more evidence suggesting music lessons are critical to the development of absolute pitch. In a survey of 2,700 students in American music conservatories and college programmes, New York University geneticist Peter Gregersen and his colleagues found that a whopping 32 per cent of the Asian students reported having absolute pitch, compared with just 7 per cent of non-Asian students. While that might suggest a genetic tendency towards absolute pitch in the Asian population, Gregersen says that the type and timing of music lessons probably explains much of the difference.
For one thing, those with absolute pitch started lessons, on average, when they were five years old, while those without absolute pitch started around the age of eight. Moreover, adds Gregersen, the type of music lessons favoured in Asia, and by many of the Asian families in his study, such as the Suzuki method, often focus on playing by ear and learning the names of musical notes, while those more commonly used in the US tend to emphasise learning scales in a relative pitch way. In Japanese pre-school music programmes, he says, children often have to listen to notes played on a piano and hold up a coloured flag to signal the pitch. 'There's a distinct cultural difference,' he says.
Deutsch predicts that further studies will reveal absolute pitch – in its imperfect, latent form – inside all of us. The Western emphasis on relative pitch simply obscures it, she contends. 'It's very likely that scientists will end up concluding that we're all born with the potential to acquire very fine-grained absolute pitch. It's really just a matter of life getting in the way.'
Questions
Questions 28–35 Note Completion
Complete the notes below using words from the box.
A tendency B note C cultures
D ability E song F ancient
G pitch H learning scales I relative
J primitive K absolute L spoken
M music lessons N language O melody
P names Q tone R words
S universities T musical instruments
NOTES
Research is being conducted into the mysterious musical 28 some people possess known as perfect pitch. Musicians with this talent are able to name and sing a 29 without reference to another and it is this that separates them from the majority who have only 30 pitch. The research aims to find out whether this skill is the product of genetic inheritance or early exposure to 31 or, as some researchers believe, a combination of both. One research team sought a link between perfect pitch and 32 languages in order to explain the high number of Asian speakers with perfect pitch. Speakers of Vietnamese and Mandarin were asked to recite 33 on different occasions and the results were then compared in terms of 34 . A separate study found that the approach to teaching music in many Asian 35 emphasised playing by ear whereas the US method was based on the relative pitch approach.
Questions 36–40 Matching Features
Reading Passage 3 contains a number of opinions provided by five different scientists.
Match each opinion with one of the scientists (A–E).
You may use any of the people A–E more than once.
A. Levitin
B. Deutsch
C. Gregersen
D. Marvin
E. Freimer
Answers & Explanations Summary
| # | Answer | Evidence | Explanation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Q28 | D | The uncanny, if sometimes distracting, ability to name a solitary note out of the blue, without any other notes for reference, is a prized musical talent – and a scientific mystery | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage says that the special skill to name a musical sound without hearing other sounds is a wonderful musical 'ability' and a 'talent'. This directly tells us that perfect pitch is a certain skill that people have. Answer Explanation: The answer is 'ability'. It means the skill or power to do something. So, research is looking into a special musical skill that some people have, called perfect pitch. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is 'ability' because the passage describes 'perfect pitch' as a 'musical talent' or 'ability'. The first paragraph states that it is an 'uncanny... ability' and a 'prized musical talent'. 'Ability' from the choices directly reflects this description of perfect pitch as something people possess and can do. |
| Q29 | B | The uncanny, if sometimes distracting, ability to name a solitary note out of the blue, without any other notes for reference, is a prized musical talent – and a scientific mystery | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage says that people with perfect pitch have a special 'ability' to 'name a solitary note' (to say what one sound is) even 'without any other notes for reference' (without needing other sounds to help them). This means they can identify a single musical sound on its own. Answer Explanation: The answer 'note' means a single sound in music. People with perfect pitch can identify this sound on its own. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is 'note' because the passage describes perfect pitch as the unique 'ability to name a solitary note out of the blue, without any other notes for reference'. This directly matches the part of the notes that says musicians with this talent can 'name and sing a [blank] without reference to another'. The keyword 'solitary note' in the passage clearly indicates that they can identify one musical sound on its own. |
| Q30 | I | By contrast, most musicians follow not the notes, but the relationship between them. They may easily recognise two notes as being a certain number of tones apart, but could name the higher note as an E only if they are told the lower one is a C, for example. This is relative pitch | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage states that most musicians do not recognize single notes by themselves. Instead, they understand how notes relate to each other. For example, they can tell how far apart two notes are. This skill is called 'relative pitch' and is the opposite of perfect pitch (absolute pitch). Answer Explanation: The answer is 'relative'. This means the musical talent where people understand notes by comparing them to others, not by recognizing each note by itself. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is 'relative' because the passage explains the difference between 'absolute pitch' (perfect pitch) and the musical ability most people have. People with absolute pitch can name a note without a reference, but most musicians, 'by contrast,' understand notes based on their 'relationship between them.' This common ability is called 'relative pitch.' The notes are asking what kind of pitch the 'majority' of musicians have, which is directly contrasted with perfect pitch in the reading. |
| Q31 | M | And their work may finally settle a decades-old debate about whether absolute pitch depends on melodious genes – or early music lessons | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage talks about a big argument, or 'debate', about perfect pitch. It asks if this skill comes from special genes, which are like natural talents from your family ('melodious genes'), or if it comes from 'early music lessons', meaning learning music when you are young. Answer Explanation: The answer is 'music lessons'. This means that researchers want to know if perfect pitch comes from genes or from starting music lessons when someone is young. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is 'music lessons' because the passage specifically states that a long-running debate is about whether absolute pitch comes from 'melodious genes' or 'early music lessons'. The blank in the notes asks about 'early exposure to' something, and 'music lessons' fits this description as an alternative to genetic inheritance. |
| Q32 | Q | Deutsch reported a study that suggests we all have the potential to acquire absolute pitch – and that speakers of tone languages use it every day. A third of the world's population - chiefly people in Asia and Africa - speak tone languages, in which a word's meaning can vary depending on the pitch a speaker uses | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage says that some languages are called 'tone languages.' In these languages, the meaning of a word can change based on the 'pitch' (how high or low) the speaker uses their voice. The research found a link between knowing these 'tone languages' and having 'absolute pitch,' a special musical ability. Answer Explanation: The answer, "tone," refers to a type of language where the way you say a word, specifically the highness or lowness of your voice, changes its meaning. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is "tone" because the passage explicitly states that one research team looked for a connection between perfect pitch and "tone languages." It explains that a large part of the world's population speaks these languages, and in them, the 'pitch' (how high or low a sound is) of 'words' affects their meaning. The study focused on speakers of Vietnamese and Mandarin, which are examples of 'tone languages.' |
| Q33 | R | Deutsch and her colleagues asked seven native Vietnamese speakers and 15 native Mandarin speakers to read out lists of words on different days | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage says that researchers asked people who speak Vietnamese and Mandarin to read out groups of 'words' on different days. This means they spoke the words out loud as part of the study. Answer Explanation: The answer is 'words', which means a group of letters that make a sound and have a meaning, like 'cat' or 'hello'. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is "words" because the passage describes a study where researchers asked people who speak Vietnamese and Mandarin to say lists of 'words' many times. They did this to check if these speakers used a consistent 'pitch' (how high or low a sound is) for the same 'words' on different days. |
| Q34 | G | By recording these recited lists and taking the average pitch for each whole word, the researchers compared the pitches used by each person to say each word on different days | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage says that scientists wrote down the sounds of people speaking words. Then, they looked at how high or low the voice was for each word. They then checked if the 'pitches,' or how high or low the sound was, were the same when people said the same words on different days. Answer Explanation: The answer 'pitch' means how high or low a sound is. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is 'pitch' because the passage explains that researchers studied Vietnamese and Mandarin speakers. They asked these speakers to say words and then checked how high or low their voices were when they said the same words on different days. Specifically, the text states the researchers 'compared the pitches used by each person to say each word on different days.', which directly addresses what the results were compared in terms of. |
| Q35 | C | Moreover, adds Gregersen, the type of music lessons favoured in Asia, and by many of the Asian families in his study, such as the Suzuki method, often focus on playing by ear and learning the names of musical notes, while those more commonly used in the US tend to emphasise learning scales in a relative pitch way. In Japanese pre-school music programmes, he says, children often have to listen to notes played on a piano and hold up a coloured flag to signal the pitch. 'There's a distinct cultural difference,' he says | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage explains that music lessons in Asia, like the Suzuki method, teach people to play music by listening and learning the names of notes. In contrast, in the US, lessons often focus on understanding how notes relate to each other (relative pitch). The passage concludes that these are 'distinct cultural difference[s]', meaning they are differences in the traditional ways or customs of teaching music in different parts of the world. Answer Explanation: The answer is 'cultures', which means the ways of life, customs, and beliefs of groups of people, like those in Asia or the US. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is 'cultures' because the passage compares different ways music is taught in 'Asian' regions versus the 'US'. The sentence in the notes talks about the 'approach to teaching music in many Asian ______' and contrasts it with the 'US method'. The passage explains that there are 'distinct cultural difference[s]' in how music lessons are approached, with Asian methods often focusing on 'playing by ear' and the US methods on 'relative pitch'. This direct comparison of teaching approaches between different parts of the world points to their respective cultures as the differentiating factor. |
| Q36 | D | 'Absolute pitch is not an all or nothing feature,' says Marvin, a music theorist at the University of Rochester in New York state | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage shows that Marvin believes having perfect pitch is not a simple 'yes' or 'no' matter. It's not something you either have completely or don't have at all, but something that can be present in different ways or levels. Answer Explanation: The answer refers to Marvin, who is a music theorist. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is D because the question asks who believes that absolute pitch is not a clear-cut issue. The passage directly quotes Marvin, who states that "Absolute pitch is not an all or nothing feature." This means it's not a simple case of having it completely or not having it at all, which aligns with the idea of it not being a 'clear-cut issue'. The passage also supports this by noting that recent studies suggest absolute pitch is "far more common, and more varied, than previously thought." |
| Q37 | B | Deutsch reported a study that suggests we all have the potential to acquire absolute pitch – and that speakers of tone languages use it every day | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage states that Diana Deutsch did a study. This study showed that all of us can learn perfect pitch. It also says that people who speak special 'tone languages' use this skill every day. Answer Explanation: The answer says that Diana Deutsch believes everyone can learn to have perfect pitch. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is B, Diana Deutsch, because the passage states that she conducted a study showing that all people have the ability to learn absolute pitch. Absolute pitch is another name for perfect pitch. She explicitly suggests that 'we all have the potential to acquire absolute pitch', meaning anyone can develop this skill. |
| Q38 | A | Given studies like these, the real mystery is why we don't all have absolute pitch, says cognitive psychologist Daniel Levitin of McGill University in Montreal | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage states that Daniel Levitin, a scientist, thinks it's a 'real mystery' (which means very surprising) that all people do not have absolute pitch, especially after seeing many studies about it. This means he is puzzled why only some people have it. Answer Explanation: The answer is A, which means Daniel Levitin believes it is surprising that not everyone has absolute pitch. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is Levitin because the passage states his opinion directly. After discussing various studies showing how common absolute pitch might be, the passage quotes cognitive psychologist Daniel Levitin, who says it is a 'real mystery' why this skill isn't found in everyone. Saying it's a 'real mystery' means he finds it surprising, matching the statement that it's 'surprising that not everyone has absolute pitch'. |
| Q39 | E | Nelson Freimer of the University of California in San Francisco, for example, is just completing a study that he says strongly suggests the right genes help create this brand of musical genius | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage says that a scientist named Nelson Freimer is doing a study. He thinks his study shows that special genes (parts of your body that make you unique) help people have this great musical talent called 'perfect pitch'. Answer Explanation: The answer is E, which means Nelson Freimer believes you can have perfect pitch because of your genes. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is E, Freimer, because the passage states that Nelson Freimer conducted a study and concluded that genes play a role in having absolute pitch (perfect pitch). He specifically mentions that his study 'strongly suggests the right genes help create this brand of musical genius' and that 'some children are probably genetically predisposed toward absolute pitch.' These statements directly link the ability to genetics. |
| Q40 | C | For one thing, those with absolute pitch started lessons, on average, when they were five years old, while those without absolute pitch started around the age of eight | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage explains that people with this special musical skill ('absolute pitch') usually began learning music when they were about five years old. But people without this skill usually started later, around eight years old. This part of the passage shows that the starting age for music lessons is a big difference between people who have absolute pitch and those who don't. Answer Explanation: The answer is Peter Gregersen, who is known as scientist C. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is C, Peter Gregersen, because he talks about how important the age is when someone starts music lessons. He found that people who have 'absolute pitch' (a special musical skill) usually started their music lessons when they were younger, around five years old. People who did not have this skill usually started lessons later, around eight years old. This shows that the 'age at which music lessons are started' truly matters for gaining this musical ability. |
