NEWS FLASH!! Listening to Music is NOT a "Distraction."


I wish I had a free music download for every time I’ve heard the statement: “Music is a distraction”.  It’s been tossed around for eons like a worn-out Frisbee.  After a while we just ignore the bite marks and warbles and just let it fly.  From a distance, casual onlookers think everything is just hunky dory.  And, for a moment in time, so do we.

 

A “distraction” implies an activity that is trivial, lacking both substance and value.  Music is neither trivial, nor without substance or value.  It is part of life -- and living. 

 

An example of a “distraction”:  My “normal” work week was 70+ hours a week.  After 10+ hours of whack-a-mole problem solving, some days I’d head to the movie rental store to pick something out.  My movie prerequisites were pretty simple:  1) nobody gets killed or maimed.  2) People are generally nice to each other.  And 3) a plot that doesn’t make me think very hard.  I’d grab an easy to prepare entre’ (or take out), something soothing to drink and spend the next 2 hours being “comfortably numb”.  In other words, a distraction – from work.

 

Listening to music may be the most alive we feel that day.  Or, that week.  When we’re fully engaged, our bodies and minds fully resonate with the thing we are experiencing.  Our senses are at their peak.  We’re celebrating genius, humbled by the “invitation” to be part of something truly extraordinary.  We smile.  We get all weepie for the 1,400thtime during the same point in the soundtrack.  We’re able to “resurrect” the energy and presence of a long-deceased musician; inviting someone long gone to hold a microphone 5’ off the floor and belt out a vocal in the center of our “stage”. 

 

If there is anything “therapeutic” about listening to music at home, it is the liberation created when grasping onto something totally predictable.  During Martha My Dear, Paul McCarty’s piano intro will fade, and the melody replaced by a violin.  It happens every time.  Regardless of how much “stuff” was thrown at me on any given day, I can always depend on it happening.

 

To this point, this discussion has been all about us as individuals.  Flying solo when enjoying music is amazing in itself.  The value of having an opportunity to identify, acknowledge and celebrate the common interests and passions we share with others is immeasurable.  It also has an added benefit:  Hitting the “mute button” on all things you don’t have in common with others.  All is good in the world.  And your best friends ARE your best friends.  As it should be. At a live venue, your “closest friends” could reach 50,000. 

 

Anesthetic is when we shut our senses off and deaden ourselves to what is happening.  Music has a way of waking us to what we have inside of us.

 

Music is a lot of things to a lot of people.  But it is NOT a distraction.

 

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Showing 2 responses by tylermunns

@waytoomuchstuff I appreciate your sentiments.

As someone for whom music is central to existence, I was offended when my good friend Matt said, while we were doing hard work on a commercial fishing boat, “I just want to listen to something with energy and a beat, not any art-y s**t.”

Keep in my mind he is my good friend but his definition of art-y is much broader than mine.  I have no problem curating playlists for certain situations and people (I actually enjoy it) and I understand why he would prefer certain kinds of music (good  loud/aggressive/fast music is good for those long, grueling work days) but it still seemed derogatory and disdainful the way he said, “art-y,” and, based off of knowing him for years and his own words throughout our friendship, I really believe music for him is merely a distraction.  Kinda hurts my soul.

Ultimately, whatever, people can like whatever they like however they like it.

But…

When I see (more specifically and importantly, excruciatingly ‘hear’) people using a CELL PHONE SPEAKER (sans headphones) as a stereo IN PUBLIC, when I see people thoughtlessly letting algorithms determine their music, when I see people complacently listening to the same narrow sliver of music’s historical continuum every day of their lives (like, say, the same corporate FM classic rock trash we’ve heard 80 bazillion times or, as another example, a ceaseless onslaught of pseudo-bluegrass, milquetoast Americana) or only using music as another “app,” another utilitarian appliance in their modern lives, that really does hurt my soul.

@waytoomuchstuff That sounds great.  If the neighbors are cool (if that’s even an issue) sounds like an awesome way to enjoy music outside!

Martin Scorsese said something in an op-ed I really appreciated. Paraphrasing, he lamented a certain devaluation of art in our modern lives.  He took umbrage with everything being described as, “content.” A cinematic masterpiece, a ballet, a symphony, visual art, music, etc. is described as “content,” just as a cat video on Tik-Tok, a 3-minute podcast clip of bloviating pundits, a highlight reel of curling is considered, “content.”  

In short, something I agree with; art being devalued and reduced to yet another of a hundred modern, utilitarian applications and appliances, in stead of what it is: art.