Why is it that the awful songs stick?
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- David Mason
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Why is it that the awful songs stick?
Have you ever noticed that when you get a song "stuck" in your head, it's usually something really inane and annoying? I happened to check in with "Austin City Limits" in the wee hours and got shellacked by "Every Day is a Winding Road" by Sheryl Crow. I can't force myself to remember Tchaikovsky violin licks or anything else remotely useful on that tape-loop-in-my-head, but now I'm apparently stuck with cloying bimbo mysticism until I can displace it with something equally or more profound - hmmm, "Itsy-Bitsy Spider?"
It has something to do with sing-songy, nursery-rhyme simplicity I suppose. Do smarter people or real musicians at least get to suffer from a higher grade of parasitic brain-farts? I mean, did Tchaikovsky himself at least get to hallucinate Brahms, or Strauss?
It has something to do with sing-songy, nursery-rhyme simplicity I suppose. Do smarter people or real musicians at least get to suffer from a higher grade of parasitic brain-farts? I mean, did Tchaikovsky himself at least get to hallucinate Brahms, or Strauss?
Yup. You gotta overwrite it in your main system with something even worse an pray that it doesn't stick too.
I put on an oldies station and something like "Master Jack", "Indian Lake" or anything by the Archies will wipe it right out, and then QUICK on to some good music.
IF you can find any.
Be careful when you play with your mind though, some results can be permanant.
EJL
I put on an oldies station and something like "Master Jack", "Indian Lake" or anything by the Archies will wipe it right out, and then QUICK on to some good music.
IF you can find any.
Be careful when you play with your mind though, some results can be permanant.
EJL
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They are what's known as an "ear worm".
My personal most annoying ear worm is "The song that never ends" from some children's tv show.
Kinda funny, last week I shut down the truck, with a George Strait tune playing in the CD. Did my day's work with the tune playing in my head all day (including the steel part) , and the moment I started the truck that evening, picked up the tune right exactly where it was in my head.<font size="1" color="#8e236b"><p align="center">[This message was edited by Ray Minich on 02 March 2006 at 06:43 AM.]</p></FONT>
My personal most annoying ear worm is "The song that never ends" from some children's tv show.
Kinda funny, last week I shut down the truck, with a George Strait tune playing in the CD. Did my day's work with the tune playing in my head all day (including the steel part) , and the moment I started the truck that evening, picked up the tune right exactly where it was in my head.<font size="1" color="#8e236b"><p align="center">[This message was edited by Ray Minich on 02 March 2006 at 06:43 AM.]</p></FONT>
Gregg Galbraith (pretty sure that's who it was), in a thread some time ago, provided us with a surefire antidote. Just sing "Amazing Grace" to the tune of "Gilligan's Island". That'll wipe just about any tune out of your head. But the cure may kill you!<font size="1" color="#8e236b"><p align="center">[This message was edited by Bob Blair on 26 February 2006 at 06:30 PM.]</p></FONT>
- Craig A Davidson
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That problem was especially bad when I was younger, but now that I'm so much older I try to avoid pop music on radio and TV. On the other hand, when I hear a catchy awful song I tend to analyse its structure and try to find out what it is that grabs me. It could be the melody, part of the melody, a harmony, a 'hook' or 'riff' on a particular instrument, a chord progression, or an amp tone. The one thing I don't pay much attention to is the lyric content. Lyrics to pop songs (rock, country, or whatever subgenre) are often about things that I don't care about (e.g. you-me boy-girl romantic love, lost love, cars, drinking, partying, etc.).
- David Mason
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I'm afraid that the "Bimbo-Mystic" lyric content is what I used to care about, at least the mystic part, and I'm afraid that maybe that's why it's stuck. Spiritual growth or regeneration used to be considered both a worthy goal and a daunting task - now it's more like the theme song for a soda-pop commercial. Why, even the right shampoo can provoke a burst of nirvana! Rinse your way to Shangri-La.... If you go online, you can even find "tips on spirituality" from Paris Hilton - hmmm, this must be easier than I remember....
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"The sole cause of man's unhappiness is that he does not know how to stay quietly in his own room." - Pascal
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"The sole cause of man's unhappiness is that he does not know how to stay quietly in his own room." - Pascal
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This may be toooo much information...but here goes;
SCIENTISTS have discovered what makes a tune catchy by pinpointing the precise part of the brain where a song’s "hook" gets caught.
It is the auditory cortex - the area that handles information from the ears - that holds on to musical memories.
A team from Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire, played music to volunteers while using a technique called functional magnetic resonance imagery to scan their brains. As the music was played, parts of the tune were cut. Researchers found volunteers mentally filled in the blanks if a familiar song was missing snippets, although the same effect was not seen with unfamiliar tunes.
The brain activity was picked up by the scan and found to be centred in the auditory cortex.
Dr David Kraemer, one of the team whose research is published in the journal Nature, said: "We played music in the scanner, and then we hit a virtual ‘mute’ button. We found people couldn’t help continuing the song in their heads and when they did this, the auditory cortex remained active even though the music had stopped."
SCIENTISTS have discovered what makes a tune catchy by pinpointing the precise part of the brain where a song’s "hook" gets caught.
It is the auditory cortex - the area that handles information from the ears - that holds on to musical memories.
A team from Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire, played music to volunteers while using a technique called functional magnetic resonance imagery to scan their brains. As the music was played, parts of the tune were cut. Researchers found volunteers mentally filled in the blanks if a familiar song was missing snippets, although the same effect was not seen with unfamiliar tunes.
The brain activity was picked up by the scan and found to be centred in the auditory cortex.
Dr David Kraemer, one of the team whose research is published in the journal Nature, said: "We played music in the scanner, and then we hit a virtual ‘mute’ button. We found people couldn’t help continuing the song in their heads and when they did this, the auditory cortex remained active even though the music had stopped."
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