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#1
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"Musical Minds," the season premiere of "Nova" on PBS, is based on the
neurologist Oliver Sacks's most recent book, "Musicophilia." I've promoted this book on newsgroups in order to challenge routine thinking about music and it's permeation of our being. My agenda in doing so is to suggest that music affects us in deep and profound wayes, is to some degree hardwired into our being, and is much more psychologically complex than is often acknowledged. I do so because I continue to believe that the commonly held belief that soundwaves=music and music reproduction can be treated, tested, and measured objectively simply as a matter of physics and/or electronics, somehow misses the boat. As one example, I continue to feel that we humans somehow perceive the low cut-off frequency and subsequent pre-ringing of the CD standard as "unnatural" and as a result, suffer diminished emotional involvement in the music being played. I honestly believe that the resultant lack of attention and beginning of music as "background" dates to the introduction of the CD and predates MTV and the hyperactive, multitasking lifestyles so evident today. I could be wrong of course (and when INTJs are wrong they are often wrong in a grand way) but I will risk that by saying that I think someday this POV will be vindicated by science. INTJs do after all also have the ability to connect often-obscure dots that others miss. In any case, agree or not, read the book and watch the TV show. You will be amazed at what you learn. -- Harry Lavo Holyoke, MA |
#2
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On Wed, 1 Jul 2009 06:24:42 -0700, Harry Lavo wrote
(in article ): "Musical Minds," the season premiere of "Nova" on PBS, is based on the neurologist Oliver Sacks's most recent book, "Musicophilia." I've promoted this book on newsgroups in order to challenge routine thinking about music and it's permeation of our being. My agenda in doing so is to suggest that music affects us in deep and profound wayes, is to some degree hardwired into our being, and is much more psychologically complex than is often acknowledged. I do so because I continue to believe that the commonly held belief that soundwaves=music and music reproduction can be treated, tested, and measured objectively simply as a matter of physics and/or electronics, somehow misses the boat. As one example, I continue to feel that we humans somehow perceive the low cut-off frequency and subsequent pre-ringing of the CD standard as "unnatural" and as a result, suffer diminished emotional involvement in the music being played. I honestly believe that the resultant lack of attention and beginning of music as "background" dates to the introduction of the CD and predates MTV and the hyperactive, multitasking lifestyles so evident today. I could be wrong of course (and when INTJs are wrong they are often wrong in a grand way) but I will risk that by saying that I think someday this POV will be vindicated by science. INTJs do after all also have the ability to connect often-obscure dots that others miss. In any case, agree or not, read the book and watch the TV show. You will be amazed at what you learn. I saw it. Excellent. The Orthopedic surgeon who was struck by lightning was incredible. I wouldn't have believed it had I not actually seen it. Imagine being a normal, middle-aged Joe, brought up on rock-n'-roll, with no particular love for music other than the topical and nostalgic interest many of us carry for the popular music that formed a running obligato to our youths. Suddenly, you get struck by lightning and afterwards feel compelled to listen to classical piano, then to play it, and then to compose it. And to do these things so well as to become a successful performer/composer in one's 50's to sold-out SRO performances! Like I said, practically unbelievable! |
#3
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Posted to rec.audio.high-end
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In article ,
"Harry Lavo" wrote: "Musical Minds," the season premiere of "Nova" on PBS, is based on the neurologist Oliver Sacks's most recent book, "Musicophilia." I've promoted this book on newsgroups in order to challenge routine thinking about music and it's permeation of our being. My agenda in doing so is to suggest that music affects us in deep and profound wayes, is to some degree hardwired into our being, and is much more psychologically complex than is often acknowledged. I do so because I continue to believe that the commonly held belief that soundwaves=music and music reproduction can be treated, tested, and measured objectively simply as a matter of physics and/or electronics, somehow misses the boat. As one example, I continue to feel that we humans somehow perceive the low cut-off frequency and subsequent pre-ringing of the CD standard as "unnatural" and as a result, suffer diminished emotional involvement in the music being played. I honestly believe that the resultant lack of attention and beginning of music as "background" dates to the introduction of the CD and predates MTV and the hyperactive, multitasking lifestyles so evident today. Interesting thoughts on CD, Harry. Yes, Sacks' books are wonderful and highly thought provoking. As you probably know, in the film "Awakenings", Robin Williams is playing Sacks. And yes, the Nova show is fantastic. I'm especially intrigued by the fellow who is autistic and can barely function, is blind from birth, etc. but his mind organizes musical sounds and techniques in profound ways. In spite of all of our "advances", we barely know how the brain works, particularly concerning how it processes art. And yet, once again during bad budget times, we as a country are in the business of cutting music programs. How many children will we "leave behind" this time? |
#4
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On Wed, 1 Jul 2009 06:24:42 -0700, Harry Lavo wrote
(in article ): "Musical Minds," the season premiere of "Nova" on PBS, is based on the neurologist Oliver Sacks's most recent book, "Musicophilia." I've promoted this book on newsgroups in order to challenge routine thinking about music and it's permeation of our being. My agenda in doing so is to suggest that music affects us in deep and profound wayes, is to some degree hardwired into our being, and is much more psychologically complex than is often acknowledged. I do so because I continue to believe that the commonly held belief that soundwaves=music and music reproduction can be treated, tested, and measured objectively simply as a matter of physics and/or electronics, somehow misses the boat. As one example, I continue to feel that we humans somehow perceive the low cut-off frequency and subsequent pre-ringing of the CD standard as "unnatural" and as a result, suffer diminished emotional involvement in the music being played. I honestly believe that the resultant lack of attention and beginning of music as "background" dates to the introduction of the CD and predates MTV and the hyperactive, multitasking lifestyles so evident today. I could be wrong of course (and when INTJs are wrong they are often wrong in a grand way) but I will risk that by saying that I think someday this POV will be vindicated by science. INTJs do after all also have the ability to connect often-obscure dots that others miss. In any case, agree or not, read the book and watch the TV show. You will be amazed at what you learn. Yeah. Pretty interesting as with most of Sacks' stuff. He makes a good story without stretching too far from the facts at our present state of knowledge. Kal |
#5
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"Harry Lavo" wrote in message
"Musical Minds," the season premiere of "Nova" on PBS, is based on the neurologist Oliver Sacks's most recent book, "Musicophilia." It's an interesting watch, but not nearly as informative about human perception as "This Is Your Brain on Music" I've promoted this book on newsgroups in order to challenge routine thinking about music and it's permeation of our being. There are actually few if any challenges to well-informed thinking about music in "Musicophilia." Read it, for fun. However it is mostly just anecdotes, not science. My agenda in doing so is to suggest that music affects us in deep and profound wayes, is to some degree hardwired into our being, and is much more psychologically complex than is often acknowledged. My agenda is being well-informed by science, but I'm not against freak shows like the ones that fill "Musicophilia." I do appreciate the fact that the book shows how music can improve the lives of people who have severe abnormalities to shoulder. I do so because I continue to believe that the commonly held belief that soundwaves=music This sort of thinking does permeate the high end audio community where few seem to distinguish between hearing and perceiving. If hearing were as simple as they seem to think it is, then there would be no need for bias-controlled tests. and music reproduction can be treated, tested, and measured objectively simply as a matter of physics and/or electronics, somehow misses the boat. Actually, that is a different boat, but one that can be correlated with perception if you are up on your science. As one example, I continue to feel that we humans somehow perceive the low cut-off frequency and subsequent pre-ringing of the CD standard as "unnatural" and as a result, This is a false claim. A brick wall filter low pass can be implemented in such a way that it has pre-ringing, post-ringing, or a mixture of the two. Harry's claim that low pass filters necessarily cause pre-ringing is simply false. In fact, pre-ringing is a consequence of linear phase filtering, which many DAC builders have gone to because of baseless fears about high frequency phase shift. The irony is that the frequency at which the ringing happens is so high and the ringing is of a low enough amplitude that any reasonable choice turns out to be sonically benign. suffer diminished emotional involvement in the music being played. There can be diminished emotional involvement due to playing CDs since they have a low cost to obtain and play, If you want real emotional involvement with a ritual of playing music, you want vinyl with all of its costs and inconveniences. OTOH, if you want to listen to music as opposed to being a slave of useless technology, then the CD and other digital forms are exactly what you want. I honestly believe that the resultant lack of attention and beginning of music as "background" dates to the introduction of the CD and predates MTV and the hyperactive, multitasking lifestyles so evident today. That's a minority opinion. Most people understand that we haven't been in a sound-only entertainment economy since the popularization of the video tape, which predates the CD, but only by a little. It used to be technically impossible to have high quality mobile audio in the days of tubes and 15" woofers. I could be wrong of course (and when INTJs are wrong they are often wrong in a grand way) but I will risk that by saying that I think someday this POV will be vindicated by science. INTJs do after all also have the ability to connect often-obscure dots that others miss. The problem here is the effect of completely wrong beliefs, such as the one I just pointed out about low pass filters causing pre-ringing. In fact a low pass filter can have pre-ringing, ringing split in any proportion around the impulse or post ringing. You can even have no ringing at all. It's all a matter of what you want, and what you want to sacrifice. The whole issue of ringing due to brick-wall filters is generally moot for overkill sampling frequencies such as those used with the common CD. However, certain kinds of audio (usually speech) are downsampled to low frequencies within the audio band, such as 10 KHz. When your artifacts are at clearly audible frequencies like 5 KHz, then the secondary properties of the filter including ringing, can have audible consequences. In any case, agree or not, read the book and watch the TV show. You will be amazed at what you learn. I suggest reading "This Is Your Brain on Music" if you want to understand the mechanisms of music enjoyment, instead of focusing on only those cases where things get messy and there's an interesting, but not necessarily insight-providing story to tell. |
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