![]() My wife has Tinnitus so we sleep with a sound machine (waves and rain) and an old, noisy oscillating fan on top of a dresser (amplifies the hum) Total luck, I just happened to have read that recently.Ĭheck out the Wiki link I added to the original post, it has lots of helpful nfo including tips gathered from studies on how to deal with this stuff. I pulled up an online article about it, then he adjusted his monitors slightly to widen the field and then freaked out that such a small change made such a big difference while he was working. Which meant while he worked he was leaning left and right, out of the narrow stereo field. Later, he asked me what I thought bout some stuff and I mentioned I'd noticed that his monitors were focused directly at the front edge of his board. He was leaning forward over his boards, swaying left and right as he worked, doing a lot of tweaking. On a side note, I was laying down guitar tracks in a studio once and while in the booth I was watching the engineer work on the mix. Normal stereo separation for speakers is what I always use. If it is low enough you can add the fan for white noise to smear out the music more, so it would probably need to be between both speakers for equal noise distribution into both ears if used at all. I like it just loud enough that occasionally I think I am hearing one of the songs but if I strain I can't. For me it helps if that volume level isn't too loud. :) I don't know if it matters? I think the main point is to have both songs at the same volume level so one isn't louder than the other. Later, once I began learning to play viola and violin some new theory would be introduced and I would think "oh yeah, I noticed that before." Sometimes while composing I will avoid listening to certain music so it doesn't get stuck in my head and influence what I play or even take a couple of days off from working to let my brain fixate on something less obtrusive.Įdit: Wow, I posted this last night, crashed out and woke up to TONS of replies! Apparently this is a pretty common condition :D It is commonly known as an "Earworm" so here is a link for context. When I was younger I realized I was doing this to songs and analyzing them, breaking down rhythms, patterns, etc. I think it is pretty much a constant thing though. Often I am doing it without realizing it. But it can be the weirdest stuff, like something reminds me of a church hymn from 40 years ago and bam, now I have that looping. Although it seems like I often only have a small portion of a song on repeat. I do, like on repeat on the background of my mind. Undergraduate Student Read about flair in /r/musictheory and get your own! Other (formal music education, but not a professional musician) The above-listed resources are a thousand times more reliable! Related subreddits Please know that Wikipedia is especially bad for music theory topics. Audiciones y ejemplos, wiki with schemata examples and theory (Español)Įar training apps and websites here! Check our FAQ! Drop by our affiliated Music Theory Discord Server!. ![]() "Music Theory for Musicians and Normal People" by Toby Rush, convenient, one-page summaries written by /u/keepingthecommontone of just about every music theory topic you might come across in freshman or sophomore theory!.Dave Conservatoire, a Khan Academy style website.Recommended theory apps for Apple devices.Open Music Theory, an open-access online textbook.Helpful symbols, for copy-pasting into comments ![]() They are not conducive to the informative atmosphere we'd like to maintain here. No low-content material, including memes, image macros, and Facebook screenshots. It's important that we get such posts taken down ASAP, so in addition to reporting, please message the mods if you see someone breaking Rule #3.Ĥ. Please ask your IRL teacher/tutor for homework help instead. ![]() Our subscribers generally dislike this kind of behavior. It is against the Academic Honesty Policy of most schools and courses. No homework help on specific assignments. However, comments that productively guide OP to their own answer or offer substantive critique are encouraged.ģ. Avoid "do your own research" responses, such as bluntly telling OP to Google the answer or to figure it out for themselves. Dismissive or blatantly unhelpful top-level comments will be removed. Any critiques should be focused on ideas, never on individual users.Ģ. Disagreements and discussion are great, but hostility, insults, and so on aren't. Please use the "report" button for posts violating the rules!ġ. ![]()
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