Comments on: Poll: Do you ever listen to music, without also doing something else?
A music poll: What do you do while listening to music?
A music poll: What do you do while listening to music?
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Hmm... time to make some time to just listen again.
I also find that I am buying and renting (Netflix has an awesome array) live music concerts on DVD.
The sound is phenomenal (I have a pretty decent Audio portion of my A/V set-up), and where else can you get old 'Dead concerts remastered in 5.1 (yeah, I'm aware of SACD/DVD-A, but can you RENT them to find out if it's worth buying that album for the second or third time???"
And of course, I don't have to sit in front of the TV to enjoy it, if I need to be doing something else.
Anybody else find themselves in this trend?
When I'm listening while doing something else, if the music is interesting enough to distract me from what I'm doing, it means one of two things: it's that good or it's that bad. The good stuff, I will dedicate some time to sit back and listen to it.
Life is not fair but 2 weeks ago I was home sick and I turned up the stereo to -10 (on A yamaha 0 is the loudest you can listen) and listened to whole Lorena McKennit DVD (Nights at the Alahambra) in glorious digital surround sound. The music was so loud and the bass was so smooth that I knocked some glasses onto the floor in the kitchen. But to hear every single string on the instruments it was worth it.
BTW Steve thanks for your reviews in Home Theather Mag as I generally have used your opinions to buy my gear and most of the time your recommendations are right on.
The problem with most concerts is that they are recorded in SD which makes for crappy viewing on a 46 inch LCD TV. REM's concert sucked for both picture and sound. Madonna's concert was really good picture wise but she is better when her music is heavily mastered, in concert she just sounds like someone from American Idol singing her songs. The concerts I liked on DVD have been: Duran Duran live in London, I found it on Amazon, but it was an import. Sting soul cages remaster, not the cheap copy which is SD quality, they have a 2006 remaster which while only stereo was upgrade to 480P, video has some artifacts, but I just close my eyes and listen to the sound. But LM was the best concert in a while.
I am waiting for the police to release a DVD of last year's tour.
BTW thanks for the recommendations, I will see if I can find Jewell on DVD.
Atleast I use some decent monitors while I'm surfing. (No cheap computer speakers for me.)
But, I do occasionally sit down and just enjoy an album, start to finish.
But thats probably because I'd feel guilty for spending so much money on loudspeakers and headphones if I didn't.
It's risky because the music may get past your usual avoidances and tap into emotions you didn't even know you had, thought were long buried.
Sometimes I think that's why people "listen" to music in the background. They avoid having to deal with the emotional effects of really listening.
Sometimes really listening to music is an unforgettable peak experience.
But its still a matter of degrees. Some activities are more or less automatic and free up the mind to listen more closely (driving long distances, using a treadmill, etc). Listening to music in these circumstances is nowhere near the same the same as "having sex while watching Lost".
I mostly listen to music while at work and since I do creative work that comes from repetition and body memory (similar to driving) I can focus on what I am listening to. Music is like fuel to creativity.
So, i challenge everyone to select 2-3 of their favorite cuts, grab a glass of your favorite beverage, dim the lights, sit back and enjoy. The quote below says it all....
I think I should have no other mortal wants, if I could always have plenty of music. It seems to infuse strength into my limbs and ideas into my brain. Life seems to go on without effort, when I am filled with music.
George Eliot
novelist (1819 - 1880)
- by chrestme March 19, 2008 8:55 PM PDT
- It's amazing the difference just stopping and listening to music can really make. I used to always multi-task while listening to music (work, cook, exercise, etc.) and never really thought about it. But then I sat down one day with an album and my stereo system and just listened, and the difference was incredible. I noticed nuances in the music that I would have never perceived if I was trying to do something else.
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(21 Comments)I think that's one of the differences between pop and other genres of music. Pop lets you kind of tune-out but still enjoy the music, you don't necessarily need to sit and listen closely, it's just typically not that deep. Other genres often require more from the listener, some commitment. Sure you could listen to it while doing something else and probably enjoy it, but not nearly as much as if you really thought about what you were listening to.
Unfortunately, I don't often get to just sit and listen. I have to make an effort as I think we as a society have been conditioned to constantly multi-task, and the luxury of just listening to music is perceived as a waste of time. Though, for some reason, this isn't true with TV or movies.