Carol et al.: I've greatly enjoyed your thread concerning very special
memories of how songs are supposed to sound as they shift to the next LP
band during play. In that I'm a wee tad older than many/most of you, I have
many more LP band-shift memories than do the rest of you.  Perhaps the
Beatles (because I played the albums so frequently) provide the best
examples of anticipatory conditioning or so I guess that's what it is.  To
this day, one of my favorite quotable lyrics from the Beatles is also a
part of Rocky Racoon, i.e.," Her name was McGill, but she called herself
Lil, but everyone knew her as Nancy."

Doggone, they were good!     D


On Mon, Nov 28, 2011 at 12:36 PM, Carol DeVolder
<[email protected]>wrote:

>
>
>
>
>
> I experience this--and with a Beatles song, too! Rocky Raccoon fell back
> in his room only to fi...ble.
> I doubt that will ever leave my head! I also played albums over and over,
> and now I use shuffle on my iPod, and the order always trips me up--I
> expect to hear certain songs after others.
>
> Carol
>
>
> On Mon, Nov 28, 2011 at 11:19 AM, Michael <[email protected]>wrote:
>
>> When I was young we played vinyl records which after many plays would
>> skip.  Like many people, I was a big fan of the Beatles, so I'll use them
>> as an example.  Now that I've been buying Beatles music, I often find when
>> I play their songs I get to certain places in the music and I EXPECT it to
>> skip, or at least I have a very clear memory that the song used to skip at
>> exactly this point.  Not sure where this fits into psychology other than
>> memory in a broad sense, but I thought I'd throw it out there.
>>
>> Other people experienced this?
>>
>> Michael
>>
>>
>> Michael A. Britt, Ph.D.
>> Host of The Psych Files podcast
>> http://www.thepsychfiles.com
>> [email protected]
>>
>>
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