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--- Tim Nelson <psychle62@yahoo.com> wrote: > Brian Eno's notes on one of his earliest > ambient albums (Music for Airports, I think, but I > don't have it in front of me) describe another > important aspect of ambient music. Eno was in bed > recovering from having been hit by a car, and a friend > brought over an LP of some very quiet 17th century > harp music, put the record on and left. After she had > left, Eno realized that the volume on the stereo was > set much too low, but was not feeling up to getting > out of bed to fix it. As he listened to the record, he > could only hear the loudest notes, and had a sort of > epiphany regarding another way of listening to music > in the context of ambient sounds. It wasn't that he > wasn't listening attentively, but rather, the 'local > soundscape' was an integral part of the listening > experience. Interesting, I'd never read that. But this happens to me periodically, in fact, it's something I actively do to stoke my creativity. My car stereo has this nifty "feature" of resetting the volume to some standard (very low) level when the car is turned off. Some of the music I listen to is recorded at relatively low volumes and at the stereo's "standard volume" I can't hear anything but the loudest notes in the music above the noise floor of the engine and the road. What I find happening sometimes is that my mind starts filling in the pieces to construct a more complete musical piece. But they're not the same pieces from the original music! I hear new rhythms, new melodys, and textures that aren't there. Just something my mind formulates while trying to make sense of the little bit of music it's periodically hearing. It happened by accident the first time, and I was surprised to find a song I knew well playing away when I raised the volume of the stereo...and kind of disappointing, since I was enjoying what my mind was formulating on it's own. Now I actively persue finding that magic volume, where I'm hearing enough information for my mind to hear and start working over, but not so much that it starts latching onto the original song. It doesn't hurt in this discovery that my car is becoming a noisy bucket of bolts, so the noise floor is much higher then it used to be. Greg __________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? Yahoo! Calendar - Free online calendar with sync to Outlook(TM). http://calendar.yahoo.com