星期三, 九月 06, 2006

Ask the Readers: Best music for studying

[webnote]

Ask the Readers: Best music for studying?

Your upstairs neighbors sound like they're rearranging the furniture and your roommate's clipping her toenails across the room. How do you drown out sound to study? There's always white noise, or just some good tunes with noise-cancelling headphones. For deep-focusing background music, I'm partial to ambient albums like Eno's Music for Airports. What about you? What do you listen to when you're trying to study or write? Let us know in the comments or to tips at lifehacker.com.

 

 

 
Ambient 1: Music for Airports
 
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Ambient 1: Music for Airports
Brian Eno
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Amazon.com essential recording
Eno's theory of the "discreet music" he called ambient was far from the modern chill-out room: the idea was that it should function at very low volumes, unobtrusively coloring the atmosphere of a room. Evolving by tiny gradations, the long pieces of Music For Airports (the first in a series of albums that followed the statement of purpose Discreet Music) defy close attention, but then they're not meant to be listened to consciously; they're meant to serve as a counterpoint to the frantic arcs of travel, or rather to be imagined in that setting. --Douglas Wolk

Amazon.com
This complex sound sculpture was created by Brian Eno in 1978 and was even installed for a while at the Marine Terminal of New York at LaGuardia Airport. The ambient-minimalist soundscape has been alternately described as background Muzak, a profoundly artificial musical milieu, and a groundbreaking studio creation. Eno designed Music for Airports from a few simple notes and the serial organization of variable tape loops that didn't quite match up. It's a groundbreaking elaboration on the aural/spatial dimension that utilizes silence, piano, synthesizer, female voices, and, most importantly, the technology of the studio. A true metaclassic, the "music" is divided into four distinct movements. This record is the first of Eno's ambient series and is undoubtedly the best. --Mitch Myers

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