@autistics
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@d1 @autistics
I like a lead bass guitar. Which is a rhythm instrument but its not drums. I also play the Kalimba which counts as a percussion instrument… but its not like the drums at all.They call Kalimba a “thumb piano”. Which is accurate. But I cant play piano because my fingers are short. But my thumbs are long. I have always struggled to play instruments even though I wanted to. I think the struggle with Kalimba for me is not chewing my nails.
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@alexisbushnell I feel the same way. I love to use the graphic equalizer to "cheat" and lift up the bass so I get more of it. I tune down the higher tones I enjoy less. The neurotypical people around me think I'm a bit off for preferring my music this way.
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I once got dragged to a birthday party which initially had big band music playing and I found that PAINFUL, then they switched to more contemporary pop and even though it was played louder I was fine as long as I kept my headphones on... Except I specifically turned noise cancelling off to let more bass stim through! -
@d1 @alexisbushnell @autistics I’m more into guitar riffs. If a song has a particular riff that sounds good then I’m in. That’s why I’m usually listening to rock or a similar sub genre at work.
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@d1 @autistics I love interactions between instruments, and the shapes they make together, not just the beat/rhythm
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@d1 @autistics I like music with cool *patterns*. Whether that's with drums or some other instrument doesn't make much difference. (That said, I'm an occasional folk/early music drummer myself which enables me to *define* the pattern)
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@d1 @alexisbushnell @autistics I’m a big drum and bass head and especially love the stuff with complex beats, so I guess it’s an affirmative here but I’ve only recently started to think I might be autistic.
@ainmosni @d1 @autistics welcome! you can get peer reviewed here! lol!
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Relatable Bat Content
I once got dragged to a birthday party which initially had big band music playing and I found that PAINFUL, then they switched to more contemporary pop and even though it was played louder I was fine as long as I kept my headphones on... Except I specifically turned noise cancelling off to let more bass stim through! -
@ainmosni @alexisbushnell @autistics I too love drum and bass, but it has to be the more "soulful" kind. An example:
https://youtu.be/hNzuD3ONDCE?si=sHWcIVjaLhDrpEAZ&t=1007
Trigger warning: an ugly computer graphic zombie woman is occasionally shown in that video for some distasteful reason, please ignore! It's just the music I wish to share.What sort of Drum and Bass do you like?
#Music #DrumandBass@d1 @alexisbushnell @autistics Depends on my mood but I think Neurofunk is my main subgenre. The SF samples and interesting drum patterns are my thing.
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@d1 @autistics I'm all about cool rhythms, but my taste is usually toward music with more intricate, hard-to-predict beats (think IDM, glitch-hop, that sort of thing)
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@d1 @autistics no. i mean, i like a good rhythm, but not exclusively. i listen to a lot of ambient…
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One that drives my extrovert ex-salesman friend completely nuts is Genesis doing _The Firth Of Fifth_.
To me, the bonkers time signature swaps at the start are fascinating and make me think about what they're doing, whereas he's like "can't they just get the bloody riff down?!"
So basically, after some modest 'empirical research', I can report that not all autistic people are troubled by weird time signatures, and some of us get a tweak from them, in a good way!
I'm honestly a bit of both
But most often I just find 6/8 and 12/8 very stimmy for whatever reason... -
@d1 @autistics i get positively twitchy if i'm listening to music in which i can't pick out some kind of rhythmic aspect
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@d1 @autistics I do like a good drum beat, but I'm not attracted to music specifically for the beats due to the logic of their rhythm. I do love polyrhythms due to their logic and feel drawn to them like riddles. But that is only one facet of the many reasons I like music and the many styles I enjoy, and in the balance, I would not name this as the primary reason or style.
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I definitely dig a solid rhythm section, if it's funky, even better (everything from RATM to The Meters, Galactic, and Soulive, to Lettuce and Pigeons Playing Ping Pong).
But I also love the frenetic, syncopated flurry that jazz can be (or a local favorite, Critters Buggin).
But mostly, yeah, it's about the drummer for me. I'm a massive fan of Larnell Lewis, Alan Evans, and Stanton Moore especially.
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One that drives my extrovert ex-salesman friend completely nuts is Genesis doing _The Firth Of Fifth_.
To me, the bonkers time signature swaps at the start are fascinating and make me think about what they're doing, whereas he's like "can't they just get the bloody riff down?!"
So basically, after some modest 'empirical research', I can report that not all autistic people are troubled by weird time signatures, and some of us get a tweak from them, in a good way!
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@d1
> It's said that people with #Autism tend to like music for the drum beats especiallyI'm ADHD as well as autistic, so that might mean I don't have the same relationship to music as other autistic people. But what originally got me into listening to music was the words, not the beats. I pretty much ignored both beats and melody at first, and couldn't stand listening to instrumental music. I think it was when I started smoking cannabis that I learned to hear and appreciate those.
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for me, it's more about the sound aesthetics and melodies that makes me like particular music
i also like odd rhythms or syncopathy much more than straight 4 to the floor, probably because i also have adhd
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