Meanspeed® Music Review

Entries tagged as ‘PoC’

The Speed of Loneliness – Green Day rocks to a Lonely Tempo with elegant contempt – "Boulevard Of Broken Dreams" – from AMERICAN IDIOT

June 20, 2009 · Leave a Comment

The Boulevard of Broken Dreams is a contemporary piece of music by Green Day. The song, though released years ago, becomes more popular each day, holding at Google’s #7 on the trend list.

Meanspeed-Spencer Summary
song=”The Boulevard Of Broken Dreams”
performer=Green Day
composer=Billie Joe Armstrong, Mike Dirnt, Tre Cool/Mike Dirnt, Billie Joe, Tré Cool
total time elapsed=2,198.23 seconds
total beat measured=3,060 beats
average number of beats per trial=340
average time per trial=244.24777 seconds
meanspeed/average velocity/standard tempo=83.5 beats per minute
emotive speed territory according to meanspeed music theory=loneliness
average beat=0.718 seconds
album=America Idiot
Size=8.1 MB
Bit Rate=258 kbps
Sample Rate=44.100 kHz
Volume (-13.0 dB)
File type=m4a
Profile=Low Complexity
Channels=Stereo
Encoded with iTunes v7.5, Quick Time 7.3.1

Boulevard-of-Broken-Dreams-Speed-of-Loneliness-universal-standard-tempo-map-7-Green-Day-772502_2

Boulevard-of-Broken-Dreams-Speed-of-Loneliness-universal-standard-tempo-map-7-Green-Day-772502_2

Boulevard of Broken Dreams - meanspeed music school psychology of tempo map 1

Boulevard of Broken Dreams - meanspeed music school psychology of tempo map 1

Boulevard-of-Broken-Dreams-Speed-of-Loneliness-universal-standard-tempo-map-22-Green-Day-700487_2

Boulevard-of-Broken-Dreams-Speed-of-Loneliness-universal-standard-tempo-map-22-Green-Day-700487_2

meanspeed music school
/John Andrew Newman/
6/20/09

Boulevard-of-Broken-Dreams-Speed-of-Loneliness-universal-standard-tempo-map-22-Green-Day-700487

Boulevard-of-Broken-Dreams-Speed-of-Loneliness-universal-standard-tempo-map-22-Green-Day-700487

John Andrew Newman
Meanspeed Music School
June 20, 2009

Categories: International Language · Mathematical Psychology · Music Psychology · Neurology · Psychology · Rhythm · Speed · Tempo · Tempo · music
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THE NEW YORK TIMES, ELITES FOR ELITES, in action – “Be an expert at ONE thing: pretend you never heard of the meanspeed® music school. [We'll] all be out of our professorships and journalist social rankings, THEREFORE DO NOT LET THIS OUTSIDER IN. [HE] EXPOSES ALL OF US.” Yeah, I do, and I will continue to so do until you all get jobs.

June 11, 2009 · Leave a Comment

tempo graphics by the meanspeed music school
meanspeed_loneliness_speed_graph_stairway_to_heaven

meanspeed_loneliness_speed_graph_stairway_to_heaven

Meanspeed Music modern tempo map - Stairway To Heaven- Led Zeppelin - graph 2

Meanspeed Music modern tempo map - Stairway To Heaven- Led Zeppelin - graph 2

NEW YORK TIMES’ DISINGENUOUS, POMPOUS, MISLEADING, SELF_SERVING OBSOLETE WORDS SOLD AS…NEWS.  Makes one sick.
THE GREAT SOUNDING PHDS RIP OFF UNIVERSITIES, AEROBICS INSTRUCTORS RIP OFF THEIR SO CALLED CLIENTS.  That which is discussed in today’s “article” was copyrighted over 17 years ago.  Not that I wasn’t warned that so-called journalists and so-called [teachers] would not take what I had, do a Steve Jobs-special (take an old, obsolete idea that you had, after a presentation of a piece of software you “had no interest in” – the, viola, call it yours)
There is my safety net though.  Not only does each of the 85 comments reflect that no one type of workout fits any one person, not only is there no correlative value placed on speed and emotion, not only is the article hereunder internally inconsistent in logic – as Rocky’s 94 bpm, the speed of enthusiasm being 90-97 SPEED being the jey to its success, NOT the stupid bell in the beginning: these professionals, ALL of whom need to find real jobs now that their “work” is being exposed as below obsolete, irrelevant what the Times even calls “rough science” (whatever that meas) and just wrong as they are truly great experts at one thing: pretending not to understand that what I have exposed in print since 1992 and online from August 2004.  For if they did admit to so understanding, those cushy PhD studies would be found wholly unnecessary.  The so-called journalist who wrote the article would actually have to commit to an objective fact somewhere therein.
Oh, but doesn’t everybody know it: nothing is worse than change.  Moving.  Getting a divorce.  Learning how to tell time.
I said: LEARNING HOW TO TELL TIME, AS I HAVE written here for over five years.
Oh – my safety net: let one of these so called experts tell you who, why and how I deduced that the square root of one second was the emotional and mathematical mean speed of music in general.  When they – ANY OF THEM – can do that, I’ll be shown up.  Until them I’ll continue to write about these “experts” who are not only over paid – they ought not be paid AT ALL.  It’s like paying a golf instructor to tel you that if the ball lands in the hole you “proceed to the next hole.  That’ll be tenure, a home, hea;lth insurance for my extended family for life for that please – oh, and money for a study on how to get to the next hole – should one walk or take a cart?  Carry themselves or get a “boy” to do it?  More money please.”
This stuff is what give the Times its deserved name as a RAG that is run by and for elites in order to maintain a false social order.  When you are involved in things like that, by ALL MEANS:  “[We] must pretend not to know what that meanspeed music scale is about!  We’ll have to find NEW things to study!

New York Times

Fitness

They’re Playing My Song. Time to Work Out.

 

Jon C. Hancock/Associated Press (left); Donna Alberico for The New York Times (middle); Stephanie Kuykendal for The New York Times

 

Published: January 10, 2008

FITNESS magazines and Web sites love to ask readers about their favorite workout music while presenting their playlists or suggestions from celebrities. Self.com features the “ ’80s cardio playlist,” which includes the short-shorts video classic “Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go” by Wham! On Fitnessmagazine.com, the singer Rihanna reveals her favorite workout songs — immodestly recommending four of her own for “when you have to pick up the pace on the treadmill.”

Skip to next paragraph 

Related

Tunes for Every Tribe (January 10, 2008)

Readers’ Comments

What music do you like to listen to when you work out?

//

The playlist fixation has a scientific basis: Studies have shown that listening to music during exercise can improve results, both in terms of being a motivator (people exercise longer and more vigorously to music) and as a distraction from negatives like fatigue. But are certain songs more effective than others?

Generally speaking there is a science to choosing an effective exercise soundtrack, said Dr. Costas Karageorghis, an associate professor of sport psychology at Brunel University in England, who has studied the effects of music on physical performance for 20 years. Dr. Karageorghis created the Brunel Music Rating Inventory, a questionnaire that is used to rate the motivational qualities of music in the context of sport and exercise. For nearly a decade, he has been administering the questionnaire to panels representing different demographics, who listen to 90 seconds of a song and rate its motivational qualities for various physical activities.

One of the most important elements, Dr. Karageorghis found, is a song’s tempo, which should be between 120 and 140 beats-per-minute, or B.P.M. That pace coincides with the range of most commercial dance music, and many rock songs are near that range, which leads people to develop “an aesthetic appreciation for that tempo,” he said. It also roughly corresponds to the average person’s heart rate during a routine workout — say, 20 minutes on an elliptical trainer by a person who is more casual exerciser than fitness warrior.

Dr. Karageorghis said “Push It” by Salt-N-Pepa and “Drop It Like It’s Hot” by Snoop Dogg are around that range, as is the dance remix of “Umbrella” by Rihanna (so maybe the pop star was onto something). For a high-intensity workout like a hard run, he suggested Glenn Frey’s “The Heat Is On.”

Music preferences are as idiosyncratic as workout routines, of course. Allison Goldberg, a 39-year-old life coach and amateur runner who lives in Texas and who is training for the Houston Marathon on Sunday, has been running to the Green Day CD “American Idiot” because, she said, “There’s no way you can run slow to Green Day.” (Though she may not be listening on race day; a rule bars runners from using portable music players and headphones.) Haile Gebrselassie, the Olympian from Ethiopia who has won the gold medal at 10,000 meters, often requested that the techno song “Scatman,” which has a B.P.M. of around 135, be played over the sound system during his races.

Ms. Goldberg also includes on her playlist “Don’t Phunk With My Heart” by the Black Eyed Peas (130 B.P.M.), “Mr. Brightside” by the Killers (150 B.P.M.), and “Dancing Queen” by Abba. The musical style that seems to most reliably contain a high B.P.M. is dance music, said Richard Petty, the founder of Power Music, a company that has produced workout compilations for instructors and fitness enthusiasts for two decades. “A rock song doesn’t have that same consistency,” said Mr. Petty, a former D.J. who takes a metronomic approach to making exercise music: He chooses a hit song with a catchy melody — say, “Gold Digger” by Kanye West — and produces a remix whose B.P.M. count is tailored to experience level and type of workout.

For a stroll walker going at a pace of around 3 miles an hour, a remixed track has a count of 115 to 118 B.P.M.; for a power walker going 4.5 m.p.h., the count is 137 to 139 B.P.M., while the B.P.M. for a runner elevates to 147 to 160.

The compilations, aimed largely at women doing cardio, with titles like “Shape Walk — 70’s Hits Remixed,” contain no pauses between songs. That unwavering beat allows a person to synchronize their movements to the music, something that Kate Gfeller, a music professor at the University of Iowa, said is crucial.

“Music provides a timing cue,” said Professor Gfeller, who after taking an aerobics class several years ago where the teacher picked music whose tempo didn’t match the moves, was inspired to study the components of music most important to a gainful workout. “It helps you to move more efficiently, which, in turn, can help you with endurance.” (She likes to warm-up for figure skating to the Buena Vista Social Club, in particular the songs “Candela” and “El Cuarto de Tula.”)

In other words, the best workout songs have both a high B.P.M. count and a rhythm to which you can coordinate your movements. This would seem to eliminate any music with abrupt changes in time signature, like free-form jazz or hard-core punk, as well as music that varies widely in intensity, like much of indie rock. It also rules out what the writer and neurologist Oliver Sacks calls “music which doesn’t have adequate rhythmic force.”

“Here, I think of Wagner,” said Dr. Sacks, whose recent book, “Musicophilia,” discusses the link between rhythm and movement. “Nietzsche wrote of what he called Wagner’s ‘degeneration of the sense of rhythm.’ ”

Dr. Sacks is fond of swimming, and said the one-two-three cadence of his strokes often leads him to play a waltz in his mind. “Neurologically, it makes no difference if you’re listening to music or imagining it,” he said. “Vivid imagining activates motor parts.”

Much of the research done on music and exercise is geared toward aerobic workouts like jogging and cardio. But as anyone who has heard Metallica blasting from a weight room stereo knows, music is a motivator in strength training, too. “The vast majority of bodybuilders are fans of heavy metal, if not in their personal life at least in the gym,” said Shawn Perine, a senior writer at Flex magazine. Loud, aggressive music, he said, “keeps you elevated, especially in between sets.”

Mr. Perine prefers to work out to hip-hop. “Let’s say you’ve done a grueling set of squats,” he said. “You’re out of breath, and L. L. Cool J’s ‘Mama Said Knock You Out’ comes on. Your energy won’t flag.”

But is there a perfect workout track, a song that transcends exercise forms and personal preferences? One comes up repeatedly: “Gonna Fly Now,” the theme from “Rocky.” In a forthcoming book on music and sport that he contributed to, Dr. Karageorghis writes that the song “evokes a state of optimism and excitement in the listener,” and Ms. Goldberg said it helped her get through her first marathon. The band from Bishop Loughlin Memorial High School in Brooklyn has set up along the New York City Marathon route and performed the “Rocky” theme for runners each race day for the last 30 years.

Bill Conti, the song’s composer, shed light on why it continues to motivate. “I put a Da-Da! in the beginning,” Mr. Conti said. “any kind of Da-Da! gets your attention. Then it goes into a tune we’ve heard played so weepily throughout the movie, but now I put a beat behind it and put it in a major key.” When Rocky runs up the museum steps, musically, Mr. Conti said, “I am milking it as much as I can.”

meanspeed music tempo map - stairway to heaven - led zeppelin

meanspeed music tempo map - stairway to heaven - led zeppelin

Categories: Academia · Alternative Therapy · America · BPM · Biology · CHRISTIAN · Education · Grace · Homesick · International Language · MIXMEISTER IS FRAUD · Mathematical Psychology · Modern Tempo Map · Music Genome Project · Music Psychology · Music Tempo · National Public Radio · Neurology · Objectivism · Psychology · Rhythm · Rolling Stone 500 · Sir Paul McCartney · Solitude · Sound Conditioning · Speed · Stairway To Heaven · Tempo · Tempo Graphic · Time · Timing · WIKIBPM · WikiTempo · autopsychiatry · beats per minute · behaviorism · meanspeed constant · music · music psychology · pattern · philca · self-comfort · self-help · sluggish cognitive tempo · tempo map
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Neil Young – SUGAR MOUNTAIN -The Speed of the Solitude of Childhood Memory & Pink Beauty in Recall. Video, bpm graphs, spreadsheets, measurements expose shocking biological pattern: the tempo exposes the temperament of the player.

June 3, 2009 · Leave a Comment

 

 

screenshot of iTunes® based playlist - Sugar Mountain - -0121†

screenshot of iTunes® based playlist - Sugar Mountain - -0121†

Neumann Standard Tempo Scale. © Copyright 2008. Meanspeed® Music. Use Freely

Neumann Standard Tempo Scale. © Copyright 2008. Meanspeed® Music. Use Freely

The charts of the song written and performed live by Neil Young called Sugar Mountain, has a meanspeed of 81.9 beats per minute–the middle of Loneliness category of the meanspeed music theroy.

 

bpm graph - Neil Young Sugar Mountain -meanspeed music school - speed of pink recall

bpm graph - Neil Young Sugar Mountain -meanspeed music school - speed of pink recall

bpm graph - Neil Young Sugar Mountain -meanspeed music school - speed of pitman the fraud

bpm graph - Neil Young Sugar Mountain -meanspeed music school - speed of pitman the fraud

 


The song is lonely on at least two levels: For one, Neil is singing about the joys and wonders of all of childhood and adolescence and young adulthood–but, as he note in the song: “you can’t be twenty On Sugar Mountain–Though you thinking that you’re leaving there too soon….”--in other words, 19 is carefree, 20 is time to start about Reality–and reality is mean, indeed.

SPREADSHEET ELEVEN - meanspeed music school - measurements for bpm graphs spreadsheet number eleven

SPREADSHEET ELEVEN - meanspeed music school - measurements for bpm graphs spreadsheet

 

Ok–so the song is lonely because it’s a man–Neil Young– looking back at childhood with wistful melancholy about the awkwardness of awkward social moments, as when you are 16 and feel lonely in a crowd.
A twist on the 82=Lonely theme perfected by Neil is a thing Neil does that is true of his Comes a Time, but not Southern Man, Philadelphia or Ohio, all in this same speed category, is make the 4 beat pattern a two-beat pattern. This way, the song more as a line dance and simplified Let’s get Over it hop. As the gret two-step at a lonely speed that pulls it out—Blackwater, by one of the best United States pop groups ever, the Doobie Brothers.

bpm graph - Neil Young Sugar Mountain -meanspeed music school - speed of the pink memory spreadsheet 1

Meanspeed-Spencer Speed Summary

mean speed/average tempo/median velocity= 81.9 beats per minute.

emotional expression according to meanspeed music theory=loneliness
average beat= 733 milliseconds.
beat frequency= 1.37 cycles per second.
corresponding pitch= 349.44 Hertz, where each of the frequencies correspond to the tones, in equal temperament, to between F4=349.228 Hertz, over which the song’s frequency is faster by less than one cent where the next note in proximity is F#4/Gb4=369.994 Hertz , over 99 cents away.  

bpm graph - Neil Young Sugar Mountain -meanspeed music school - speed of the pink memory spreadsheet 1

bpm graph - Neil Young Sugar Mountain -meanspeed music school - speed of the pink memory spreadsheet 1

bpm graph - Neil Young Sugar Mountain -meanspeed music school - speed of the pink memory spreadsheet red256 

bpm graph - Neil Young Sugar Mountain -meanspeed music school - speed of the pink memory spreadsheet krss lnz hmsxlt
bpm graph – Neil Young Sugar Mountain -meanspeed music school – speed of the pink memory spreadsheet krss lnz hmsxlt

 

bpm graph - Neil Young Sugar Mountain -meanspeed music school - speed of the pink memory spreadsheet father

bpm graph - Neil Young Sugar Mountain -meanspeed music school - speed of the pink memory spreadsheet father

 

bpm graph - Neil Young Sugar Mountain -meanspeed music school - speed of the pink memory spreadsheet lzbn MCL

bpm graph - Neil Young Sugar Mountain -meanspeed music school - speed of the pink memory spreadsheet lzbn MCL

The graphs are based on a spreadsheet generated with this method: 

As adults we express our lament at this frequency, simply and truly: 710-760 milliseconds per beat, or 79-84 beat per minute.
a) I calibrated the (quarter-notes) ten times with Seiko 300-lap stopwatches;
b) Ten trials were entered, averaged and coordinated.
using Microsoft’s Excel, created in on Windows XP, on Gateway hardware modified by Microsoft’s Excel for MacIntosh 2004 on an Apple iBook G4 as hardwardware.

All the Best.

 from the home of  the

Somerset Patriots,

2008 Atlantic League Champions,

Ian Andrew Schneider/
meanspeed music school
June 3, 2009

BPM GRAPH - Neil Young "Sugar Mountain" - Speed of Aloneness linear time velocity chart
BPM GRAPH – Neil Young “Sugar Mountain” – Speed of Aloneness linear time velocity chart

Categories: Alternative Therapy · Biology · Education · Groove · Homesick · International Language · MIXMEISTER IS FRAUD · Mathematical Psychology · Modern Tempo Map · Music Genome Project · Music Psychology · Neil Young · Neurology · Objectivism · PoC · Psychology · Rhythm · STOP INTELLECTUAL THIEVES · Science of Music · Self-Help · Solitude · Speed · Stairway To Heaven · Tempo · Tempo Graphic · Time · WIKIBPM · autopsychiatry · beats per miinute · beats per minute · behaviorism · bpm addiction · conceptual tempo · conjecture · constant · creativity · iTunes · meanspeed constant · music · music psychology · pattern · self-comfort · self-help · sluggish cognitive tempo · tempo map
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