Music has charms to soothe a savage breast. Or to inflame it. I saw Slayer 
in concert for the first time last year. Incredible energy. I was in the 
Pit amist the slam dancing. A bunch of sweaty rambunctious teens and 20 
somethings pushing, shoving and screaming. 

It was awesome. Wish you could have been there Neil. ;^)

Reams have been written on the effects of music. A powerful, heavy bass 
line affects us physically as well as emotionally. Nothing expresses rage 
better then rapid double bass drumming. Light fingers softly and swiftly 
strumming harp strings takes me back to a fond memory...or perhaps poorly 
written sitcoms from my childhood form this relationship, I dunno.  

I was surprised in my youth how many people think the words in songs are 
important. I've always loved Rush and was talking them up one afternoon to 
a friend that was puzzled by my enthusiasm. He quized me on the lyrics and 
was flabbergasted I had no idea what Geddy was singing about most of the 
time. For me it's all about the drums and guitar and bass. Words are what 
fills the time between solos. Although I have to admit Geddy has powerful 
vocals. Again, for me it's about the screeching, shouting, screaming much 
more then whatever the person is actually communicating with language. It's 
viceral for me. Always has been. 

Maybe this song will illustrate what I mean.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WRhJt3PLdUE

This dude is EXCELLENT on mouth harp. 

I get Bob Dylan lovers though. The man can't sing his way out of a paper 
bag and is a barely competant guitar and harmonica player but words matter 
with his music. I much, much prefer the covers though. Jimi Hendrix with 
All Along The Watchtower is notable. 

Today's music ain't got the same soul. I say it's 'cause of computers. 
Computers have taken the place of musicians in pop music and the soul 
suffers. If you doubt me I'll leave you with this thought.

Justin Beiber.

'Nuff said.

dj



On Monday, January 27, 2014 1:31:18 AM UTC-6, andrew vecsey wrote:
>
> Why does music captivate our soul as powerfully as it does? Why is it that 
> the same music which captivates the soul of a some listeners is found to be 
> nothing more than annoying noise to other listeners? 
>

-- 

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
""Minds Eye"" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/groups/opt_out.

Reply via email to