Discerning Musical Taste :-)
- KVRAF
- 2686 posts since 5 Feb, 2004 from Nevada City, California
- addled muppet weed
- 111304 posts since 26 Jan, 2003 from through the looking glass
ive been able to smell sound for years 
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- KVRAF
- 7217 posts since 21 Aug, 2004 from Trondheim, Norway
I went to see a concert for orchestra and marimba (or xylophone - can't remember) many years ago, and the soloist was a deaf chick whose name I forgot. In an interview in the paper earlier the same day she was asked how she 'heard' the music, and she said she mostly senses the vibrations in her ... uhm ... private parts.
My mind wasn't on the music at all that night, I was dreaming of being a bass note.
My mind wasn't on the music at all that night, I was dreaming of being a bass note.
Rakkervoksen
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- The Teach
- 8273 posts since 23 Jul, 2002 from flatness
synaesthesia is old news surely ???
i dont 'suffer' (or are blessed - depending on your point of view) from it but i do have a view ... i have no sense of smell but i understand that smell is the sense most directly linked to memory (many people describe how a particular scent can trigger extremely vivid memories) ... obviously this cant be true for me but the brain is a clever sod when it comes to rewiring and instead i have an uncanny ability on hearing a particular song to remember very specifically what i was doing the last time i heard it ...
... i guess my point is that in light of this is that synaesthesia isnt THAT surprising or extraordinary ... just an extrapolation of the sensory integration that we all have ...
slainte
rob
i dont 'suffer' (or are blessed - depending on your point of view) from it but i do have a view ... i have no sense of smell but i understand that smell is the sense most directly linked to memory (many people describe how a particular scent can trigger extremely vivid memories) ... obviously this cant be true for me but the brain is a clever sod when it comes to rewiring and instead i have an uncanny ability on hearing a particular song to remember very specifically what i was doing the last time i heard it ...
... i guess my point is that in light of this is that synaesthesia isnt THAT surprising or extraordinary ... just an extrapolation of the sensory integration that we all have ...
slainte
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- The Teach
- 8273 posts since 23 Jul, 2002 from flatness
sounds like evelyn glennie ...Hovmod wrote:I went to see a concert for orchestra and marimba (or xylophone - can't remember) many years ago, and the soloist was a deaf chick whose name I forgot. In an interview in the paper earlier the same day she was asked how she 'heard' the music, and she said she mostly senses the vibrations in her ... uhm ... private parts.
My mind wasn't on the music at all that night, I was dreaming of being a bass note.

(another woman on my slightly-odd-looking-yet-strangely-attractive list)
slainte
Last edited by pHz on Sat Mar 05, 2005 10:11 am, edited 1 time in total.
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- KVRian
- 1244 posts since 21 Nov, 2003 from San Francisco
Ever put your girlfriend on your sub woofer?Hovmod wrote:... and she said she mostly senses the vibrations in her ... uhm ... private parts.
My mind wasn't on the music at all that night, I was dreaming of being a bass note.
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- KVRian
- 588 posts since 14 Feb, 2003 from Rural splendour (Up North, England)
I had a lot of names for it over the years but I must admit I've never called it a "sub woofer"omalley wrote:Ever put your girlfriend on your sub woofer?Hovmod wrote:... and she said she mostly senses the vibrations in her ... uhm ... private parts.
My mind wasn't on the music at all that night, I was dreaming of being a bass note.
Regards,
Derek.
Less than 1000 posts and writer's block has set in 