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- From: jj@alice.att.com (jj, curmudgeon and all-around grouch)
- Newsgroups: misc.kids
- Subject: Re: What do you do when your kid things Metallica is cool?
- Message-ID: <24245@alice.att.com>
- Date: 19 Nov 92 16:57:29 GMT
- Article-I.D.: alice.24245
- References: <199211171521.AA10495@tuna.wang.com> <18NOV199211155488@eldyn.gsfc.nasa.gov>
- Reply-To: jj@alice.UUCP (jj, curmudgeon and all-around grouch)
- Organization: NJ State Home for Bewildered Terminals
- Lines: 56
-
- In article <18NOV199211155488@eldyn.gsfc.nasa.gov> goldberg@eldyn.gsfc.nasa.gov (Patti Twigg) writes:
- >OK, now I want to get on my soapbox. First of all, I am not against
- (insert the sound of JJ climbing up next to you, and bringing
- the megaphone, which I will need in order to get across to people
- who listen to LOUD music, I don't care of what kind)
- >any kind of music. That said, the problem I have is with very loud music.
- >Very loud music does lead to hearing loss. This is a personal concern
- >of mine, since I am deaf in one ear (not from loud music, though). You
- >cannot imagine what a precious gift your hearing is until you lose it.
- Hear, Hear! I do work in psychoacoustics and hearing, as well
- as in signal processing and psychoacoustic audio compression algorithms.
-
- LOUD MUSIC does physical damage to the basilar membrane in your
- cochlea. Examination of people who've died from traumatic
- causes (car crashes and the like) have shown that some
- young people (high school and college age) have as much
- cochlear damage as very old folks who have had moderate
- noise exposure themselves. In addition, it is also clear that
- the degredation of hearing due to noise is proceeding much
- faster in the last two generations, even in those who don't
- attend rock concerts and other loud music events (like discos
- and such), and astonishing fast in those who do.
-
- As much as I like to go home some days after a standards
- meeting and put on "Iron Man" as loud as my equipment will
- handle (which is PDL), I tend to wear ear-protectors at
- concerts. I've mixed entire concerts and shows with
- ear protectors in place, much to my disgust, in order
- to be able to tell if something is wrong (I've stopped
- doing that sort of work, at this point I get sorta radical
- about really loud sounds) with the equipment and in order
- to preserve my own ears, which are a professional
- asset that I can't afford to damange.
-
- >If I am in a noisy restaurant, I frequently cannot hear what my
- >tablemates are saying, even though my remaining ear is normal. My
- That's a typical problem. Have you tried using protectors of the
- 'yellow earplug' kind? Depending on the kind of impairment
- you have, you may find that this INCREASES your ability to make
- out the conversatons around you. Yes, really.
-
- >Good music is good at soft volumes
- >too. OK, I will get off my soapbox now.
- > Patti Twigg
- Unfortunately, there are physical reactions to loud sounds that
- can be interpreted as pleasant and/or arousing, due to the interaction
- of skin and body cavity sensation and some of the afferent/efferent
- systems in the body, so loud music is definitely different.
- If you HAVE to listen to it, WEAR EARPLUGS. They will NOT
- ruin the music, in fact you'll be better able to hear it.
-
- --
- Extremism *Copyright alice!jj 1992, all rights reserved, except transmission
- in the *by USENET and like facilities granted. Said permission is
- defense of *granted only for complete copies that include this notice.
- liberty is no vice. *Use on pay-for-read services specifically disallowed.
-