Forums - Theory / composition / technique
Subject: music as language
Original Message Date: 23-Apr-00 @ 04:03 PM - music as language
Peaceout
Message 41/44 12-Jun-00 @ 09:16 AM - RE: music as language
Message 42/44 13-Jun-00 @ 08:43 AM - RE: music as language
Ape
Message 43/44 13-Jun-00 @ 02:19 PM - RE: music as language
Message 44/44 13-Jun-00 @ 06:12 PM - RE: music as language
There's several groups of folk that have done brainwave/sound studies. Most center around the idea of 'entrainment' which has been covered to some extent in the earlier posts. Basically, it assumes the brain is like a tuning fork. When you strike a tuning fork and bring it near a similar static one, the static one will begin to vibrate sympathetically with the original. Entrainment assumes that same thing happens with the brain.
Also, not the same thing but along the same lines, check out the work of MaryAnne Armacher. She's got some CDs and a book about creating sound inside the ear. One of the examples can be found on her 'Sound Characters' disc. She creates these sounds that create other sounds inside your own ear canal! Pretty interesting stuffs...
As for music being a language, certainly. I'm a bit of an emotional 'retard' and I have a great deal of trouble expressing emotions in words, but with sound... altogether different matter. There have been many times when I've felt I couldn't describe something in words, but I could play 'its sound.' I also tend to think that sound might be a lot bigger than we think. There's those 'golden moments' when it seems like I'm sitting there 'watching' myself play as if I were not the one pulling the strings. that tends to be some of the best stuff I get down, yet it feels very hard to take credit for something I just 'let happen.' When the muse whispers, listen...
As for blowing up the Earth with sound, sure, in theory it can be done. You'd have to have a hell of a sound system though. A couple of tidbits from me days in the military: a powerful enough high frequency sound can burn the skin right off your bones. A powerful enough low frequency sound can literally turn you into jello - just before it blasts you into oblivion. Of course, you'd need a woofer driven by a piston the size of the London Tower, but it could work. however, very economically prohibitive....
Anyhoos, great thread folks, this is what I love about this site!
Peace All
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