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Old 03-02-2008, 08:16 PM   #6
Shnabdabber
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Quote:
Originally Posted by troutman View Post
You might be interested in this book:

This Is Your Brain On Music (Paperback)
by Daniel Levitin (Author)


http://www.amazon.ca/This-Brain-Musi...4511520&sr=8-1

You are an expert in music, whether you know it or not. You can identify hundreds, possibly thousands of songs from just fractions of a second of audio; you can anticipate and identify minute changes tempo and rhythm; you have a built-in framework for identifying standard popular music chord structures, and you know when a song returns to the root (which you find pleasing, even if you don’t know what “root” means); you can recognise a familiar tune-even, say, a Led Zeppelin classic sung as opera, or as an Australian outback ditty. You are attuned to slight changes in pitch, timbre, volume, and location. In fact, when it comes to many of the finer details of music, your mind is far more powerful than any existing computer. It’s all because you have honed your skills with thousands and thousands of hours of training-by listening to music.

Unless you’ve studied music theory, or possibly cognitive neuroscience, you probably had no idea just what an expert you are. This Is Your Brain on Music explains exactly why you are such an expert, appealing to the latest brain imaging research, evolutionary biology, behavioural psychology, and cognitive neuroscience. It’s a primer on music theory, and a fascinating study in the evolving field of brain science.

This is an interesting read....

On name that tune night at the local watering hole, I cant be beat... usually all I need to identify a song is a single note, guitar tone, snare drum tuning, cymbal sounds... and here I was thinking I was just a freak.
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