Test d'oreille absolue
Découvrez si vous avez l'oreille absolue : nommez des notes de piano isolées et comparez votre précision au hasard.
Ce que ça mesure
This test checks for absolute pitch (often called 'perfect pitch') — the rare ability to identify or name a musical note in isolation, without any reference tone to compare it against. It measures how accurately you can label single notes by ear.
Comment ça marche
You hear a single piano-like note played on its own, then choose its name from the twelve pitch classes (C, C♯, D … B). Octave doesn't count — only the note name. You do this across fifteen randomly chosen notes spanning several octaves. Because there are twelve options, pure guessing scores about 8%. People with genuine absolute pitch name notes quickly and consistently, typically well above 80–90% correct, while most listeners score near chance. The result compares your accuracy against that chance level so you can see whether your note-naming is meaningfully better than guessing.
Conseils pour un résultat fiable
- 1Octave doesn't matter — focus on the note name — A high C and a low C are both 'C'. Concentrate on the note's identity rather than how high or low it sounds.
- 2Retest to check consistency — Absolute pitch is stable and repeatable. If your score swings wildly between attempts, that points to guessing or partial pitch memory rather than true absolute pitch.
- 3A low score is completely normal — Absolute pitch is rare — estimated at well under 1% of the general population. Scoring near chance says nothing about your hearing, musicality, or ability to enjoy and make music.
Questions fréquentes
Poursuivez votre bilan
Test d'oreille relative
Identifiez les intervalles musicaux à l'oreille et mesurez votre oreille relative, la compétence qui s'entraîne.
Passer un testTest d'amusie (fausse oreille)
Êtes-vous vraiment « faux » ? Repérez la note fausse dans de courtes mélodies et dépistez l'amusie congénitale.
Passer un testTest de discrimination des hauteurs
Mesurez la plus petite différence de hauteur que vous percevez et découvrez si vous êtes vraiment « sourd aux notes ».
Passer un test