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Music through ages
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Music through ages
Posted in 
Off-topic
Music through ages
If one takes on consideration that rythm on music is innate, meaning the heartbeat of a pregnant woman is 1st heard by her baby in her womb. Tis the 1st phase in human age. Age of Findings.

Baby is now born, he can hear all sounds he himself produce and/or he hears around, from the laughings of his family to the tiny buzz of bees in the garden, to the twitting of birds to the barking of dogs and miaowing of cats. This is the 2nd phase in his age. Age of Exploring.

The baby is now a child, he has a rich sound library. As he's growing up, he hears new sounds. He sees also. He smells. His 3rd phase is enriching his sound backround. He now knows the difference btw each sound.

He's now a teenage. Each sound he hears is diffrently assimilated in his head. He feels that each sound is heard differently. The 4th phase is strenghtned by his next phase where he becomes an adult.

He's now in his mid 20's. His sound background is full of discoveries, new foundings and explorations.

..to be continued
❤️
1
Sequel to music through ages

What this has anything to do with music?

Music being a mixture of sounds; a combo of musical notes (sounds) with a rhythm, isn't it? A melody that is heard and perceived differently for each individual.

What makes one kind of music more attractive than others to some individuals is the character (personality) growing up within each individual. 

As you had seen that sounds are related to the core of a human being, it's not rare to see that at one time, one individual influence changes to other kind of music he wasn't attracted to in his previous "life", because now his character evolved to something new. An evolution which implies evolution of feelings, thoughts and attractiveness.

The multitude of music types existing is not by chance but mainly due to the multiple characters everyone may passes through during his existence.

Without saying that a myriad of foreign cultures, backgrounds, and languages contribute to the proliferation of music kinds too. 

Hard Rock for eg: is a classical rock born in the western world in early 70s comparing to death metal, black metal, grunge, nu metal, trash metal born in the 90s and 2000.. Dozens of new kinds of the old hard rock. Hard rock evolved due to the evolution of characters in metal bands. 

From vocals to guitarist, to bassist, or a drummer. Each of that quatuor has his own personnality. A personality he shows the world, as the general aspect of his being. His persona as specialists in behaviour describe such: What does he wear and how does he talk in public?

Such characters and personalities evolves due to multiple factors, they feel themselves trapped within their public character. Therefore, depression is on its way to come. And metal bands or whatever band or artists, or duo collapse and sink.

... to be continued
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1
Final part to sequel to music through ages (Part 1 of 2) 

...Why singers do not heal their depression with their own songs? the same songs that heal their fans? If they did, there would be no suicide case among artists (singers or else...).

With that being said, music is the antidepressant everyone looking for. 

Through ages, music always been to people a way to express themselves and what they feel, whether be it to higher power through their sacrifices' celebration or the gathering for battles by use of horns and drums.

In Turkiyë, on mountains, highlanders since always tweeted their message, to their far neighbours at the other part of the mountains. Like birds, a tweet is a mean of communication. These people tweeted their message at sound speed. The music produced in any tweet has different meaning, could it be a marriage, a funeral, a celebration, an alert or just a rally btw villagers. 

to be continued
I was about to dive deep in music and its interaction and influence on people through ages, but i believe i can't do more than what's already done.

That's all folks!
What a beautifully layered reflection on the human connection to sound. The way you’ve described each life stage as an evolving rhythm of experience is poetic, and surprisingly relatable.

Looking forward to the next movement in this symphony of thought.

— An0nCiPher
P.S. Before starting a new thread, it’s always worth checking the forum or FAQ — sometimes the answer’s already playing quietly in the background. 🎵
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