science
Music is not just an art, but a science; the latest research about your brain on music, scientific innovation in the instrument industry and more.
Mixing Drums
it's time to start working on your mix and the first time you want to start with are your drums, when mixing your drums it is very important that your instruments are kicking at the right level, so when the time comes to mix your track and add the rest of the elements, each sound will find its place in the mix making your job a lot easier and joyful.
By Espacio Creativo5 years ago in Beat
Simulated Methods and Results
Introduction (Chapter three) The topic of research is one I have chosen to work closely with over the past 12 years of my life and pertains to sound and the human body. The research goes as Music and sound have influenced throughout the history of human life on this planet. Today music and sound are used as a medicine to improve the overall quality of life, to discover what music does to the human stress response, and how it affects the human brain. Patients of music find it to be a reliever of stress, pain, anxiety issues and can help get through cancer treatments. Research finds that students of music have increased grades, high GPAs, creativity, and higher intellectual reasoning about school and life.
By Justin Ames Gamache6 years ago in Beat
What Sound is Capable of, and How the Schemers Have Profiteered on It - Part 2
As a rule, given the fierce arguments on its capabilities, white noise generators still are getting all the rage on the market. They've, thus, paved the right way for pink, brown or blue sounds and many a "trendy" generator. After all, our advice still is taking it slow.
By cheryl bobbie6 years ago in Beat
What Sound is Capable of, and How the Schemers Have Profiteered on It
Instead, the cutting-edge sound technology has also leveraged soundwaves to either detect bombs, manufacture water-resistant windshields, convert heat into sound, from which generates electricity, operate brain surgery or lift heavy objects.
By cheryl bobbie6 years ago in Beat
Get A Clue: Is It Endorphins or a Brain Orgasm?
Pinky and the Brain. Pinky and the Brain. One is a genius. The other one's insane. Which one are you today? I think I've always been a healthy mixture of both. Lately, however, I've questioned my own happiness. The quarantine has had different effects on all of us and certainly has had varying effects on our brains.
By Paulina Pachel6 years ago in Beat
Innovation in Place of Standardization
"Music expresses that which cannot be said and on which it is impossible to be silent," said Victor Hugo. This speaks for Clive Wearing, a English musician and musicologist in his mid-forties, who suffered a devastating brain infection—herpes encephalitis—which reduced his memory span to only a few seconds. He was featured in a BBC documentary in 1986 by Jonathan Miller titled, Prisoner of Consciousness. Renowned author, Oliver Sack, wrote Clive's wife, Deborah, post illness until he finally went to meet him face to face in the summer of 2005. He was astounded to find that the anticipated man writhing in agony was in fact, a bubbly conversationalist brimming with warmth. How you ask? Music. He was taken off the hard drugs that dulled his senses and was immersed in classical piano, "The structure of the piece, he was held, as if the staves were tramlines and there was only one way to go. He knew exactly where he was because in every phrase there is context implied, by rhythm, key, melody...When the music stopped Clive fell through to the lost place" (209 Musicophilia). This is a man who couldn't remember a passed moment, yet he knew a score through and through. This is the power of music. Music offers a plethora of psychological, emotional, and physical benefits to people of all ages. Despite this, music programs are being cut across the country because of a lack of understanding that music pays for itself. The lack of funding due to a myopic to budget constraints, misappropriation of importance, and disregard for music education needs to be rectified.
By Shay Hanae6 years ago in Beat
How Learning How to Play an Instrument Can Strengthen Your Brain
How many of you know how to play an instrument? If you do, good for you! You may be “smarter” than an average person. And do not worry if you do not play one; just pick up guitar or piano and you too will develop skills that can help everyday life become easier as well. When I was younger, my mother pushed me to be in as many different extracurricular activities as I could, one being piano lessons. Although I loved playing piano, I begged and begged my mother to let me watch TV, play on the computer, or go outside. Little did I know, learning the piano helped me develop many useful skills and habits that would later help me to become successful in my day-to-day life as a young adult. Knowing that now, I not only play the piano, but I also picked up the guitar, the ukulele, and the clarinet to better myself and my brain.
By Danyea Hays8 years ago in Beat
Health Benefits of Playing Guitar (Backed by Science)
Playing a six string is one of the easiest ways to make friends in college, at least if you listen to shows like Family Guy. It's a trope that has some truth in it, though. Guitar playing is something popular kids do, and if you look at most of the times people do play guitar, it does benefit them.
By Ossiana Tepfenhart8 years ago in Beat









