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	<title>Intellectual Scribblings &#187; dnb</title>
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		<title>Musical considerations</title>
		<link>http://old.blog.sean.whitton.me/2009/03/musical-considerations.html</link>
		<comments>http://old.blog.sean.whitton.me/2009/03/musical-considerations.html#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 04 Mar 2009 22:04:04 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Sean</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Diary]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[dnb]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[entertainment]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[friends]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[music]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[psychology]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.seanwhitton.com/?p=329</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I&#8217;m not, and haven&#8217;t been for a long time, very good at listening to music. By this I mean that I have a very specific problem: at any one time I listen to a small selection of tracks over and over again and then feel very dissapointed that they no longer sound as good after [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I&#8217;m not, and haven&#8217;t been for a long time, very good at listening to music. By this I mean that I have a very specific problem: at any one time I listen to a small selection of tracks over and over again and then feel very dissapointed that they no longer sound as good after I&#8217;ve heard them a ridiculous number of times over a few weeks. And then thereafter they are never really as good at they first were. This is not something I myself have really identified; my family have been telling me for years. I seem to do this in many areas of life: I get very very into certain things for short periods of time and then move on. It&#8217;s not something that I consider a positive trait in any way and I would much rather develop interests into deeper understanding but as per usual as soon as something becomes any real challenge I lose most of my interest in it. I&#8217;m not convinced that there is a lot I can do about this because if I am no longer interested in something then I&#8217;m not going to pursue it very successfully as I&#8217;ll be going against what I actually want to do. I don&#8217;t know if this is, though, me just holding my behaviour up to ridiculously high standards which I then inevitably fail to meet &#8211; something else I do very often. Friends tell me they have short attention spans and can&#8217;t believe how long I can spend on particular pieces of work, or certain specific interests which I do maintain. So maybe this is not too much of a concern.</p>
<p>To return to the originally intended subject matter of this post, I thought it might be nice to write a little about my music library. Since I got my iPhone, despite this forcing me to use iTunes which is possibly the worse piece of software ever, I have listened to a lot more music (although in the mornings on the way to school I usually listen to good old fashioned Radio 4 FM for the Today Programme) on my frequent and long bus journeys to and from school. This has meant that my library of music has tended to become a bit repetitive since it&#8217;s not really very big and it doesn&#8217;t get added to very often. Until a few months ago, my music consisted of soundtracks and computer game music with very few exceptions. While I still have all this music, it is a pretty static set. Unless I play a new game that I think has really good music, or see a good film that releases its soundtrack (my favourite music remains the Lord of the Rings film scores by Howard Shore, truly fantastic), it won&#8217;t expand, and I end up stuck with a small selection of tracks that means that they lose their appeal for the above described reasons. So I&#8217;ve since added to the collection a bit from old CDs in my parents&#8217; collections, things that I can remember growing up hearing and liking: the likes of U2, Savage Garden, Gretchen Peters and the Lighthouse Family. I&#8217;ve also got a few other things like a couple of Brent Simon songs, and most of Jonathan Coulton&#8217;s lyrically powerful music. But this leaves me without a source of good music that I can draw from to keep a good flow of new material.</p>
<p>This has changed recently. On one boring Friday afternoon in Physics, my friend Tom and I exchanged lists of music to lookup and play. I suggested various tracks that can be found on YouTube for him to listen to, and he gave me some things to look up from his personal area of interest, Drum and Bass music. A <em>complete</em> departure from my usual content, I was told repeatedly that I wouldn&#8217;t at all like it and I didn&#8217;t really expect to, but was interested in taking a look. At first, the various computer generated tunes failed to appeal as anything more than background sound while working which I could definitely appreciate. But now, after listening to more &#8216;chaones&#8217; (== tunes) and mixes, I think I should probably admit to the world, however much it pains me to do so, that I&#8217;ve become quite the Drum and Bass nerd. I&#8217;m not bothered about the clubbing (obviously, I don&#8217;t see why anyone would want to go to such places) and insufficiently restrained volume controls that tend to come with such music, but simply the actual creativity that goes into tracks. Finally I have something that I can add to and collect and enjoy. My vocabulary and knowledge of the big players and classic tracks is very much lacking at this point, but I seem to be leaning more towards the liquid subgenre which is melodic, tuneful work that is very much reminiscent of the soundtracks in my collection already. My two current favourite tracks that I would be happy to include in a classics playlist are Hurt You by Chase &amp; Status and Beautiful Lies by B-complex, an unreleased track from an unknown artist that has really set off some shockwaves.</p>
<p>I&#8217;m not entirely sure what it is about DnB that appeals to me, but I have been known to laugh at those who attempt to pin down, particularly in classical music, any kind of specific meaning in work. Uncharacteristically, I shall simply state that I like certain bits, certain notes of songs and leave it there. With few lyrics in this genre and with track and artist names that are essentially whatever sounds vaguely memorable, there is very little else to go on. So I&#8217;m trying to add some more variety to what I listen to, and I think I&#8217;m succeeding, aside from finding myself playing certain favourites over and over as before. And I very much enjoy laughing at the culture and vocabulary: &#8216;massive&#8217; and &#8216;shout&#8217; and other such nonsense that I&#8217;m not convinced anyone actually buys into. I would also like to add some more classical music to my library, so I need to find a friend to feed me suggestions. Maybe instead of getting better at listening to the music I already have, I&#8217;ll just get as much as possible and feed the roaring furnace of consumption of it in my mind. Excellent.</p>
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