• @CarbonatedPastaSauce@lemmy.world
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    75 days ago

    I’ve experienced this a few times after smoking weed. I will be sitting there and suddenly “where is that faint music coming from? That is a sick beat!” and then a few seconds later “oh that’s the air conditioner”.

    • @lauha
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      55 days ago

      I have this happen without drugs too. World is full of unheard sick beats.

      • @remotelove@lemmy.ca
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        25 days ago

        I have been recording samples for my own music recently and have found your statement to be quite true. (Almost any sound can be used as an instrument, actually.) Rhythm is everywhere and you just need to listen for it.

        • @Haggunenons@lemmy.worldOPM
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          5 days ago

          Maybe you would enjoy this radiolab podcast if you haven’t heard it before.

          We’ll kick off the chase with Diana Deutsch, a professor specializing in the psychology of music, who could extract song out even the most monotonous of drones. (Think Ben Stein in Ferris Bueller. Bueller … Bueller …)

          For those of us who have trouble staying in tune when we sing, Deutsch has some exciting news—the problem might not be your ears, but your language. She tells us about tone languages such as Mandarin and Vietnamese which rely on pitch to convey the meaning of a word. Turns out, speakers of tone languages are exponentially more inclined to have absolute—aka ‘perfect’—pitch. And, nope, English isn’t one of them.