> Also, a lot of classical composers enjoyed elaborate key changes: e.g., you'll have your main theme in A major, and then it appears again in D major, and later it comes back as A major. If you have absolute pitch (those composers likely did), then they all sound different, as if you first see a picture in black and white and later it comes back in blue. If you don't, then that part of composition completely passes over your brain.
Even if one doesn't have perfect pitch they'll still notice the key change itself unless it's performed very subtly or after a long pause. If the key change is drastic enough the timbre of the instruments will change as well resulting in a different sound.
Garden | Open Source Developer | Full time | Remote or Berlin Office
Garden's mission is to keep developers productive and happy in the cloud-native era
Our open-source core product is a pluggable, graph-based, cloud development tool.
That's a mouthful, but in essence, it's an engine that's optimized for building, testing, and deploying workloads that run on the cloud.
As one of three Open Core Developers, you will be responsible for maintaining and improving the core engine and main plugins.
Previous experience with Typescipt and some cloud tools like Kubernetes and Helm will come in handy.
> There is nothing else to do in Norway unless you're a active sportsman during the 9 winter months.
what? How about other hobbies than sport? Music, arts, language learning, crafts, cooking, photography, etc. All of these have active communities around them you can join and socialize in.
Even if one doesn't have perfect pitch they'll still notice the key change itself unless it's performed very subtly or after a long pause. If the key change is drastic enough the timbre of the instruments will change as well resulting in a different sound.