mouthporn.net
#music – @minecanary on Tumblr
Avatar

just another canary in the coal mine

@minecanary / minecanary.tumblr.com

Avatar
reblogged

The Neuroscience Of Music

Why does music make us feel? On the one hand, music is a purely abstract art form, devoid of language or explicit ideas. The stories it tells are all subtlety and subtext. And yet, even though music says little, it still manages to touch us deep, to tickle some universal nerves. When listening to our favorite songs, our body betrays all the symptoms of emotional arousal. The pupils in our eyes dilate, our pulse and blood pressure rise, the electrical conductance of our skin is lowered, and the cerebellum, a brain region associated with bodily movement, becomes strangely active. Blood is even re-directed to the muscles in our legs. (Some speculate that this is why we begin tapping our feet.) In other words, sound stirs us at our biological roots. As Schopenhauer wrote, “It is we ourselves who are tortured by the strings.”

We can now begin to understand where these feelings come from, why a mass of vibrating air hurtling through space can trigger such intense states of excitement. A paper in Nature Neuroscience by a team of Montreal researchers marks an important step in revealing the precise underpinnings of “the potent pleasurable stimulus” that is music. Although the study involves plenty of fancy technology, including fMRI and ligand-based positron emission tomography (PET) scanning, the experiment itself was rather straightforward. After screening 217 individuals who responded to advertisements requesting people that experience “chills to instrumental music,” the scientists narrowed down the subject pool to ten. (These were the lucky few who most reliably got chills.) The scientists then asked the subjects to bring in their playlist of favorite songs – virtually every genre was represented, from techno to tango – and played them the music while their brain activity was monitored.

Source: Wired
Avatar
reblogged
Avatar
nickford

Earlier this year, Australian Treasurer Wayne Swan claimed inspiration from US crooner Bruce Springsteen. Now, his South Korean counterpart is getting in on the musical act. Bahk Jae-Wan has hailed K-Pop star Park Jae-Sang (better known by his stage name, Psy) as an inspiration for his nation. Psy’s ‘Gangnam Style’ has been a surprise hit of the year, with its video clip generating millions of YouTube views around the world. In the process, Psy has brought attention to South Korea’s music scene like no one else.

As William Pesek writes, Bahk wants South Korea to translate Psy’s success to other parts of the South Korean economy. The finance minister is urging his countrymen to be provocative and creative. In particular, Bahk identifies that a key weakness in South Korea’s economy is its services sector. South Korean manufacturing is solid enough: its cars, televisions, mobile phones and other high-tech devices are sold around the world. But its ability to add value through ‘intangibles’ is limited. This requires South Koreans to pursue a new wave of innovation.

One of South Korea’s problems in this regard is the country’s cosy corporate climate: dominated by a handful of family-owned conglomerates (the chaebol), and resistant to entrepreneurial spirit. And while South Korean society has been a force for transformation in the past, nowadays it is undermined by complacency. Its education system is, like in other Asian countries, strong on drilling facts and figures into its students. But children are discouraged from exploring their creative sides. The consequence is an all too homogeneous workforce that is unlikely to rock the boat.

Psy may fade from the public spotlight: a one-hit wonder. But if South Korea can be remodelled in ways hinted at by Bahk, it would deliver long-lasting benefits.  Producing a viral video is easy by comparison.

Avatar

Chinese Bluegrass ("Redgrass"): Red Chamber 紅庭, Jaybirds

Avatar
reblogged

Unlike what the name suggests Afrofuturism has nothing to do with Africa, and a lot more to do with power imbalances and cyberculture in the West.  Bring on Sun Ra; 90’s Hip-Hop; the Techno mashups of Scanner and DJ Spooky with African-American identity in outer space.  The term was coined by American author, lecturer and cultural critic Mark Dery in Pyrotechnic Insanitorium, the article “Black to the Future: Afro-Futurism 1.0” (1999, now found only on through the Internet’s wayback machine)…

Avatar
Hatebeak is a death metal band, formed by Blake Harrison, Mark Sloan and Waldo, a 19 year old Congo African Grey Parrot. The band members do not use their last names on their releases "for the mystery." Hatebeak is unique in that they are the only band to feature a parrot on vocals. They are currently signed to Reptilian Records.
Their sound has been described as "a jackhammer being ground in a compactor."
You are using an unsupported browser and things might not work as intended. Please make sure you're using the latest version of Chrome, Firefox, Safari, or Edge.
mouthporn.net