shadowkat: (Default)
[personal profile] shadowkat
Well, considering I can't remember songs to save my life - it's basically everything. I was discussing this with mother over the phone today.

Me: So, a friend post that his mother could hum the entire orchestration of Lara's theme of Doctor Zhviago.
Mother: Beautiful, but can't remember it all.
Me: I can't remember the title of songs, the singer, let along the lyrics or tune. It's why I can't sing. I was hunting this song that had something like I can see clearly now, the rain is gone, it's going to be a sunshiny year..
but it took me forever to remember that phrase. And every song I've posted to this meme I'm doing online? I've had to look up. Because I can't remember theme..I've no memory for music for some reason.
Mother: Neither do I. I have difficulty remember our choral music, I don't remember the tunes or lyrics.
ME: Hmmm, I'm thinking this is not a skill or a talent, it's genetic. DNA.
If you can remember songs, your parents probably could, and theirs probably could. Which means you can probably sing.

[Edited to Clarify - I found the song I Can See Clearly Now - last night via a title on my journal posted in January 2008. I found it by a visual memory, and a sense of what it was - I couldn't remember the lyrics, tune, words, etc...only a feeling from it. ]

At first, I didn't think I knew what to go with. But my heart and soul screamed one above all the rest. It's the only song - I find that I stop to listen to..and am always moved by. It's a song that says so much with so little.

It's one of my father's favorite spiritual song - you see...and right now, my Dad is in my heart for oh so many reasons that I do not want to go into here. Sometimes music talks greater than words, and that is this song.

There's so many versions of it, it's hard to pick one, so I'm picking four - to give you an idea of it's range and versatility.

1. Aretha Franklin Sings Amazing Grace in 1971



2. Joan Baez & Aaron Neville Sing Amazing Grace



3. Celtic Women Sing Amazing Grace



It's a song that moves me to tears, comforts me, and gives me hope all at the same time.

Date: 2020-08-16 05:50 am (UTC)
atpo_onm: (Default)
From: [personal profile] atpo_onm
I have a visual memory not an audio one. I can't remember tuns or music at all. But I can describe visuals, and if the song is used in specific way in a story or movie I'll remember it. When I hear music - I see a story or movie, or a feeling.

I can't venture an intelligent guess as to how common your way of processing music is, but it may well be more common than you think.

The one thing I can state with certainty, based on my several decades of work in the retail specialist audio trade is that a weakness in many salespeople is a failure to understand that people do indeed hear/process sound and music differently, often very much so. If you're trying to recommend a component or system for a customer, you have to first try to find what works for them.

One simple example would compare myself with another salesman I worked with in my early days in the trade. He was especially sensitive to a characteristic known as "imaging". This is the ability to place yourself between the two speakers, and with your eyes closed, be able to tell exactly where each instrument or singer is located within that space. I'm nearly deaf to that ability, but on the other hand, I can usually detect even minute amounts of distortion in the audio. I'm moderately pitch sensitive, others-- fairly rare-- have perfect pitch, can for example say "that's A above middle C" and be dead on.

As to hearing music visually, there was a segment on 60 Minutes a few weeks back where this fellow who was totally blind nearly from birth started playing a toy piano his father bought him when he was just two years old. He could not only hear a piece of music, and then play it on the piano, he used both hands to do so!

His parents , realizing how astounding this was, got him started with lessons. Today, he is one of the world's greatest jazz pianists.

But the mind-blowing thing was, recently, a doctor who wondered just how this young man's brain actually processed information when he played music, arranged to have MRI scans done while he played a keyboard.

The results? The man's entire visual cortex responded when he played, or simply heard music! His brain had effectively reprogrammed the normal visual area to work with sound, obviously from when he was a small child.

Damn. Gives new meaning to that old saw about a mind being a terrible thing to waste.

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