Gifted Children Find Heavy Metal Comforting 585
An anonymous reader writes "The Daily Telegraph is reporting that intelligent teenagers often listen to heavy metal music to cope with the pressures associated with being talented, according to research.
Researchers found that, far from being a sign of delinquency and poor academic ability, many adolescent "metalheads" are extremely bright and often use the music to help them deal with the stresses and strains of being gifted social outsiders."
Punk (Score:5, Interesting)
However, stepping back from the cynicism, I would note that this was always my experience with the punk scene. Specifically, most people I knew in the scene were incredibly talented, highly intelligent and for the most part more articulate than average. I always wondered how it was that we seemed to find one another, self assemble and take part in a scene that was a retreat of sorts from lives and upbringings that were in most cases not "Leave it to Beaver" or "The Cosby Show" type lives.
Re:Punk (Score:5, Insightful)
Really? Isn't most head bangin' heavy metal disseminated by the recording industry?
Re:Punk (Score:4, Informative)
Perhaps you are revealing just how aware you are....
Seriously though, there is *lots* of very good music out there including metal and punk that does not come through the big RIAA dominated scene. If you will note, that is why I invoked punk.
Re:Punk (Score:4, Informative)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
The Ramones
The Clash
Sex Pistols
The Stooges
All released on major labels (therefore RIAA)....lots and lots more, but I'm lazy. The whole "sell out" label that holier than thou types throw around with abandon really annoys the piss out of me.
Re:Punk (Score:5, Funny)
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Whenever a lot of people talk about punk they forget LA, OC and the Bay Area. All they see is New York, London and Seattle. There's a lot missing in the standard narrative about punk, and it has to do with missing chapters in California.
And remember: it's 30 years since the year Two Sevens Clashed. God that makes me feel old.
Re:Punk (Score:4, Interesting)
No.
It depends on your definition tho, the recording industry puts a lot of music out that they call Heavy Metal. It is quite easy for the avid Heavy Metal listener to filter out that crud.
In other words, what they call Heavy Metal just ain't Heavy Metal :). Just look at Strapping Young Lad [centurymedia.com], those ugly old bastards are a PR/records label nightmare!
Re:Punk (Score:5, Informative)
Nope. Actually, there's a truckload of metal out there that is completely dissociated from the current Top 40 music scene. In many ways, the realm of Top 40 radio hits has been on a dying path for some years. It still persists because it was a convenient way to find good music before the dawn of the digital age, and there will always be those among the masses too lazy to find what suits them best. Top 40 music is consistently available for those people looking for catchy tunes, but I believe you will find a much richer world of music if you look deeper into the lists of independent artists and bands out there. That feeling of discovering a new group with fresh sounds is unsurpassed by the record industry's efforts to pump out "Top Hits" every month.
If you think a record label and great music are exclusively hand-in-hand, then you are short-changing yourself in the world of music that exists today. You can find just about any genre that will blow your ears away from the lyrical depth, passion, and creative quality not found in the work of artists signed by the RIAA. Independent labels are unbound by the chains of corporate earnings and contract clauses that each record label artist must sign upon entering the business. That kind of unbridled freedom to make music is exciting in the mind of this audiophile. That's not to say that the RIAA doesn't have some great bands signed up, but the worldwide music scene has grown larger than the industry itself. You no longer need them to bring you good music when it's already sitting out there.
Re: (Score:3)
If by "most," you mean "nearly none," then yeah. Sheesh, go to a metal show sometime. After the show, when you're buying a shirt and CD so that the band has enough gas money to get to the next town, look at the "label" on the CD. It's almost always just some guy working out of his house, and he sure as hell ain't an RIAA member. Call it a recording "industry" if you want, but you just made that word mean nothing.
RTFA, baby. (Score:5, Informative)
6% - Heavy Metal
14% - Pop
More of them listed the Britney Spears genre than the Angus Young genre.
I'd say there might be some flaws in this "study".
Re:RTFA, baby. (Score:5, Funny)
On a different tack, how does the genera spread compare with the general population within this age group? Are gifted English students more likely to listen to heavy metal than average kids? Or is this study aimed at consoling parents?
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Re:RTFA, baby. (Score:4, Insightful)
Aw cmon, now. That's just like the R&B kids calling heavy metal "crazy devil music". There is some good R&B out there just like there's some good metal. What you said is just as ridiculous as the guy above who said punk was dead.
Re:RTFA, baby. (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:RTFA, baby. (Score:5, Interesting)
Mozart was more rock star than metal.
Re:RTFA, baby. (Score:5, Interesting)
He was also a womaniser, always lusting after rich influential peoples wives and daughetrs. As i recall it was some sexually transmitted disease that finally finished him off.
He used to play free gigs in graveyards to the poor as well, that probably helped his 'metal' image.
You know who's really metal? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Punk (Score:4, Insightful)
As for heavy metal being related to gifted children.. Hmm no. Because music is a personal thing and people will tend to enjoy what they are exposed to at a young age and leaves a lasting impression. So right now rap, girl bands, heavy metal (the pointless screaming type) and punk would be popular with children (0-12ish) in most cases. Where as back in my day (born 86) we had more dance music and retro stuff from the 70s and 80s still hanging around. Which would be very similar to my taste in music now.
Plus children are fickle, if we gave them the entire catalog of music they would have a new favourite band/style every other day.
Re:Punk (Score:5, Insightful)
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Actually I'm ashamed I go back here and read Slashdot, but I'm addicted to posting comments clarifying the BS posing as articles. It's a trap. For reals.
Re:Punk (Score:5, Insightful)
I think this may reflect you reading your own political position into punk/geek culture more than anything else. Geeks and Punks share a kind of anti-authoritarianism that doesn't map well into the (mostly bullshit) left-right political spectrum. Geek libertarianism and Punk DIY-anarchism fit parts of the left and parts of the right. Matching the left, they care about solidarity, anti-corporatism, and socio-cultural liberty. Matching the right, they care about negative freedoms (small, limited government as opposed to the nanny state) and "rugged individualism."
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
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Never. The right and the left are both in favor of big government since they're defined by how they like to use that big government against the people.
The left to enforce their ideas of equality and the right to enforce their ideas of inequality or elitism.
The right hasn't changed since the term came into being when the nobility and the Church sat on the right hand side of the aisle in the
Re:Punk (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Punk (Score:5, Insightful)
Linking music tastes and intelligence is really, really, wrong. What kind of music you like depends on so many factors, mostly environmental but... anyway.
Let's take a look at the article: Translation: Some psychologist asked some kids what kind of music they liked and they answered heavy metal. Oh and they also weren't complete idiots.
Since the sample was so big (almost 20 people!), obviously all "gifted" (definition?) children must listen to heavy metal. But since most of heavy metal is crap, he couldn't help but wonder why did these kids listen to this kind of crap. Ah! That makes sense, because smart people worry about society and stuff. The psychologist thought that his findings were so great he had to share them with the rest of the world, but he needed some statistics, so on his way home he asked some more kids about what kind of music they liked so he can make useless statistics that help make a research look all that much more professional: Okay so he found that from a group of supposedly smart kids (although I'm not sure that academia equals intelligence), SIX percent really likes bands like tool, slipknot and system of a down (which are very popular bands anyway) and about one third said "tool? they're cool, I used to listen to aenima a lot". Did that miniscule percentage surprise him that much that he had to go and tell the world?
Re:Rap on the other hand... (Score:5, Interesting)
Then there were the preps. They dressed like the wiggers (because that Nike and sports stuff was expensive and the preps had to flaunt money) and usually listened to rap/hip-hop/etc but at least they didn't usually come up to you and call you G or tell you they were a blood or crypt.
I remember at a small gathering one time a so called blood was bragging about his brotherhood and status. A friend shaped a 'B' out of a wire hanger and branded him with it. Convinced him that it would show his loyalty. The following day he spread it around town that so and so was his bitch and he had branded him to prove it. The kid showed his 'B' all over town and it was a good month before he found out why everyone thought it was so funny.
Gifted find *eating* heavy metal comforting (Score:5, Funny)
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It's so true. (Score:5, Funny)
Let's see... I'm 41, have loved metal since I was 14 (Motorhead is the greatest band EVAR) and am the smartest guy on slashdot...
The evidence is overwhelming.
Re: (Score:2)
Very funny. Seriously though, you should know that there is *always* someone smarter than you out there. The trick I've found is to find as many of them as you can and surround yourself with them so they continue to challenge you, introduce you to new thinking etc...etc...etc...
Re: (Score:2)
I had a Drill Sgt. tell me once that he always had a plan to kill whoever he met, particularly if they were smarter than he was. He followed that up by saying that since I made him laugh and could think him out of a bad situation, he'd kill me last.
Jokes aside, I've loved metal, punk, thrash, etc. since I first heard it. Oddly enough I love classical music too (even Joyce Hatto. Ha!) but can't stand country music, rap, hip hop....
Not unusual. Lots of m
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Motorhead *is* classical music.
Seriously... metal of all types is a natural offshoot of western classical music as punk is of folk music.
Compare Jake Thackray and the Sex Pistols. They even sing about the same things. Almost.
Re:It's so true. (Score:4, Interesting)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Some don't even try to hide it, for example "Classical Metal" like some of the works of Yngwie Malmsteen...
Re:It's so true. (Score:4, Funny)
Here, let me repeat something that someone else has said. "Go fsck yourself....."
In all honesty though, I've been around Slashdot for a while now (since '97 or '98) and am not remotely concerned about making cheap karma grabs.
Re: (Score:2)
Excellent idea, old bean!
Re:It's so true. (Score:4, Interesting)
Heavy Metal (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Heavy Metal (Score:4, Funny)
Yep. (Score:5, Insightful)
Hard rock, progressive rock, and heavy metal all usually talk about social and political issues in a manner that is both musical and lyrical, and it's a lot easier to dig into and associate with than the lamenting dorks that populate alternative and indie rock nowadays.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Yep. (Score:4, Informative)
Yep. And how about S.D.I. by Bonfire, Fight for Your Rights by Motley Crue, Symphony of Destruction by Megadeth, When Freedom Dies by Nuclear Assault, The Needle Lies by Queensryche, Lack of Communication by Ratt, Institutionalized by Suicidal Tendencies, etc., etc. Lots of metal bands have written songs that were raised awareness and created discussion about important social issues. The myth that metal is all nihilistic "suicide music" is so much bullshit...
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So if you want to find some smart kids... (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:So if you want to find some smart kids... (Score:5, Funny)
Also.. (Score:2, Insightful)
Marilyn Manson (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Marilyn Manson (Score:5, Interesting)
"As a side note, I've seen a couple interviews with Marilyn Manson and he comes across as surprisingly intelligent and well-spoken, even while still wearing the freaky makeup."
Florence Henderson (the mother in The Brady Bunch) said almost the exact same thing after meeting Marilyn Manson on Bill Maher's former show, Politically Incorrect. She was doing an interview and was asked how she felt about the incongruity of the two of them participating in a round table discussion, and she replied that she thoroughly enjoyed talking with him. She said that she was struck by how intelligent and articulate he was, and that she found him to be extremely charming.
Re:Also.. (Score:5, Informative)
The beauty of metal, especially after it's "death" in the early 90s is that it's been reborn and many new sub genres are born. Everything from Symphonic Metal to Melodic Death to Progressive to Doom to Gothic to whatever!
Some lesser known but very talented bands:
Therion [wikipedia.org] - Sopranos, tenors, baritones, lot of classical instruments. Pure genius. Theli, Vovin, Secret of the Runes are great albums. Their live shows are also very interesting, they usually travel with about 5-6 opera singers.
The Gathering [wikipedia.org] - One of the first gothic metal bands (now more gothic/atmospheric rock). Mandylion, if_then_else, How to measure a planet, are all very good. Due to some experimental guitar work, their style has been labeled sometimes "shoe gazing".
Tiamat [wikipedia.org] - Pink Floyd meets Gothic Metal. Wildhoney is among the best gothic metal albums. Awesome albums are also Prey and A deeper kind of slumber. Another band that evolved from extreme metal to some weird psychedelic gothic style.
Agalloch [wikipedia.org] - Atmospheric, lot of doom/dark ambiance. Every record from this band is worth it's weight in gold. I do have a soft spot for Ashes against the grain.
Nightwish [wikipedia.org] - One of the bands who defines the Symphonic Metal sub genre. Lot of uplifting melodies, great shows. Once, Century Child and Oceanborn are really good.
Katatonia [wikipedia.org] - Everything from doom metal to gothic rock. They started as some extreme metal band and evolved into some weird dark/doom rock/metal mix. Viva Emptiness and The Great Cold Distance are great.
Symphony X [wikipedia.org] - Progressive Metal at it's best. Jazz and classical influences. Albums like The Diving Wings of Tragedy and V are their best.
Iced Earth [wikipedia.org] - How Metallica should have evolved. The Gettysburg 1863 trilogy is a pure masterpiece of symphonic metal. The rest of their work is more classical thrash with Iron Maidenesque melodies and gallops. Something Wicked and Dark Saga are very strong albums.
Opeth [wikipedia.org] - Progressive Death Metal, extreme on some albums and some dark haunting lullabies on some others. Orchid, Damnation and Deliverance are my favorites.
Ayreon [wikipedia.org] - One composer, Arjen Lucassen, almost every album is a concept album. Invites various singers to sing for him. Style is mostly progressive rock/metal.
Tristania [wikipedia.org] - Probably the most beautiful female voice in the metal world (hopefully the future Nightwish singer). Ashes and World of Glass are amazing gothic metal albums.
Really? (Score:2, Funny)
I thought'd it be math rock. [wikipedia.org]
Sorry, sorry, sorry. I'll leave through the side door.
Uh, wrong. Headline is misleading.. (Score:5, Informative)
The researchers surveyed 1,057 members of the National Academy for Gifted and Talented Youth - a body whose 120,000 student members are within the top five per cent academically in the 11-19 age range.
Asked for their favourite type of music, 39 per cent said rock, 18 per cent R&B and 14 per cent pop. Six per cent said heavy metal and a third rated it in their top five genres.
So no, not 'many adolescent metalheads', but a few happen to be gifted, compared to the rest who listen to other types of music.
Also from the article:
The heavy metal fans in the study had lower self-esteem and more difficulties in family relationships and friendships.
So, if anything, one could hypothesize that gifted teenages that listen to heavy metal are more likely to have shitty self-esteem and quite possibly being perceived as asshats by family and friends, and listened to heavy metal as a way to 'cope' with the anger.
Just you wait until they start playing those tracks backwards....
Raw tunage... (Score:2)
It's hard to find music that holds a lot of interesting 'content' per second of sound. Perhaps in a signal-to-noise ratio, where crooning voices or cheap noise effects, metal just held the greatest s
Rock, R&B, and Pop are all better than Heavy M (Score:2, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
I'm sure you have no difficulty figuring out how this statement is wrong.
Damn kids (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Damn kids (Score:4, Funny)
In my day, there was just a village idiot guy banging two rocks together.
Damn kids!
Re:Damn kids (Score:5, Funny)
In my day we had Yoko Ono, five cats, a chainsaw, and tube of K-Y Jelly.
possible explanation (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:possible explanation (Score:4, Interesting)
When you are dealing with profoundly gifted kids, it is a safe bet that any antisocial behavior is mostly intentional and the kid is fully aware of how other people interpret those actions. I've known at least one kid who could fool most any psychologist into thinking he had Asperger's, at first glance.
Or the simpler explanation... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Resist the Crowd Mentality (Score:5, Insightful)
Actually... (Score:2)
Pantera! (Score:3, Informative)
Or maybe watch Lemmy sing Ace of Spades on the Young Ones. Loser!
Bruce Dickenson's School for the Gifted (Score:5, Funny)
Gifted children aren't a monoculture. (Score:5, Interesting)
Gifted children: is there a single type of gifted children? Gifted in what? You can be very gifted in certain areas and suck in other areas.
Also, it's funny that the fellow Slashdot commenters which listen to heavy metal read this as "you listen to heavy metal, so this confirms you're gifted". I don't blame anyone for putting on his rose glasses though. It's only natural.
For the record, gifted children are not a monoculture. There are some gifted children who listen to heavy metal to deal with stress of being a teenager. Nice. There are also gifted children who don't listen to heavy metal, and heavy metal listeners that aren't gifted.
You're walking away from this article slightly less mentally gifted. Slashdot, you suck.
Re: (Score:3)
Agreed. Without access to the full study, this writeup doesn't really mean anything.
TFA: Asked for their favourite type of music, 39 per cent said rock, 18 per cent R&B and 14 per cent pop. Six per cent said heavy metal and a third rated it in their top five genres.
From the sounds of this, articles could easily have been written stating that "Gifted Children Find R&B Comforting" or "G
That's because it's not cool anymore. (Score:4, Insightful)
I think that this article is more like "nerdy kids listen to music that isn't cool."
Academic ability? (Score:5, Insightful)
*favourite genre* (Score:4, Interesting)
Singer-songrwriter Folk
Bluegrass esp. New Acoustic/Newgrass
Celtic (stronger toward Scottish or Newfoundland)
Blues, Polka, Jazz, Klezmer, old Country, slightly harder New Age (Jean Luc Ponty or Ralph Towner), Scandinavian (NorthSide records artists), Jam Bands, etc etc.
You know, the stuff that is categorized as "Other" and not even counted in such surveys. Mostly I'm sad that the "gifted" kids have such limited horizons that 80% answered "eh... rock, I guess".
Comparison to general statistics (Score:3, Interesting)
About the author of the paper [nagty.ac.uk]: Webpage is updated at least this year. So the author of the survey called "psychologist at the University of Warwick" in the Telegraph article does not have a master degree yet. Hmm...
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Evidently Metallica have been playing for so long that it's some time since they actually listened to their own music (as can be evidenced by a quick play of, say, S&M)
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Re:So if heavy metal listeners are so smart.... (Score:4, Insightful)
Labels are bad news (Score:5, Insightful)
Most kids are gifted one way or another, some academically, some otherwise. Just most kids don't experience the environments that bring the best out of the kids.
My experience was just the opposite... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:My experience was just the opposite... (Score:5, Insightful)
In my experience kids who use labels to manipulate their parents only do so because they are allowed to, the parents tend to be push-overs.
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However, the proportion of slashdotters who qualify as "highly gifted" or better in the precise medical sense (ie having an IQ of at least 145) is still very small.
Gifted label used to control (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.alternet.org/story/42644/?comments=vie
The "Gifted and Talented" Fraud
http://borntoexplore.org/unschool/gifted.htm [borntoexplore.org]
"The truth is that "gifted and talented" programs are fast-track indoctrination courses, not real academics."
http://www.johntaylorgatto.com/chapters/15c.htm [johntaylorgatto.com]
"I could regale you with mountains of statistics to illustrate the damage schools cause. I could bring before your attention a line of case studies to illustrate the mutilation of specific individuals--even those who have been apparently privileged as its "gifted and talented." What would that prove? You've heard those stories, read these figures before until you went numb from the assault on common sense. School can't be that bad, you say. You survived, didn't you? Or did you? Review what you learned there. Has it made a crucial difference for good in your life? Don't answer. I know it hasn't. You surrendered twelve years of your life because you had no choice. You paid your dues, I paid mine. But who collected those dues?"
http://www.johntaylorgatto.com/underground/prolog
"In 30 years of teaching kids rich and poor I almost never met a learning disabled child; hardly ever met a gifted and talented one either. Like all school categories, these are sacred myths, created by human imagination. They derive from questionable values we never examine because they preserve the temple of schooling."
"Old-fashioned dumbness used to be simple ignorance; now it is transformed from ignorance into permanent mathematical categories of relative stupidity like "gifted and talented," "mainstream," "special ed." Categories in which learning is rationed for the good of a system of order. Dumb people are no longer merely ignorant. Now they are indoctrinated, their minds conditioned with substantial doses of commercially prepared disinformation dispensed for tranquilizing purposes. Jacques Ellul, whose book Propaganda is a reflection on the phenomenon, warned us that prosperous children are more susceptible than others to the effects of schooling because they are promised more lifelong comfort and security for yielding wholly: Critical judgment disappears altogether, for in no way can there ever be collective critical judgment....The individual can no longer judge for himself because he inescapably relates his thoughts to the entire complex of values and prejudices established by propaganda. With regard to political situations, he is given ready-made value judgments invested with the power of the truth by...the word of experts."
Re:Gifted label used to control (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Gifted label used to control (Score:5, Interesting)
I was one of those kids who was labeled as "gifted" fairly early on in my education. My school didn't have a tag program until 6th grade due to budgetary constraints. I can't speak for every school in the country, but your descriptions don't match my experience and they largely seem the product of philosophical / political beliefs.
- My tag program was comprised entirely of real academics. In the 6th grade we did high school chemistry, some astronomy and physics, learned about stock trading, wrote research papers on 20th century history, read some difficult books, started a debate team, and so forth.
- My experience in high school people was like pretty much any experience with other people. One or two teachers were brilliant, most were just getting by, a few were misleading, and one was downright malicious. Sure, my school didn't seem to be able to provide for me very well, but it was due to a lack of resources, not any kind of malice or conspiracy.
- No matter what you want to believe, some people's brains just work faster than others. One of my best friends in high school was also in the tag program. I did my homework during class, never studied a night in my life, blew away standardized tests without preparing, and spent my nights hacking on linux. She was doing the same work, getting pretty much the same grades, but studying 6+ hours a night to keep it up. Some people couldn't have kept up if they studied 8 hours a night, 7 days a week.
That last link goes into a lot of conspiracy theory bullshit about how the idea of varying intelligence amongst people is an artificial concept, which it coyly blames on some great conspiracy between the Rockefellers, Dewey, Rousseau, blah blah blah. Frankly, a lot of the links you've posted seem politically or philosophically motivated.
Bottom line:
- Some people are smarter than others. These categories are not the product of propaganda, conspiracy, or a bunch of fat rich white men smoking cigars and drafting up a "system of order."
- Teachers get paid shit so many of them are there because the hours are good, or because the competition is not exactly fierce, or because they are genuinely benevolent, caring individuals. At the end of the day, though, I believe far more of them give a shit than most people believe; I suppose it's more comforting to think that you're dealing with a conspiracy or institutionalized malice than to confront the fact that most of what we encounter in life is the product of people doing the best they can under the circumstances.
...shit. (Score:5, Funny)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
As the son of two teachers, I call B.S. on the hours bit. The hours for teaching are not that great. Did you think that machines grade papers for them? Did you think that they just wing it each day instead of having to submit detailed lesson plans to the administration? Just because all the kids go home doesn't mean t
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theory_of_multiple_in telligences [wikipedia.org]
So this suggest you are correct to start making distinctions, like between IQ and EQ. One can go a lot further than that, according to Howard Gardner.
Even if some people are just smarter about everything (including ethics?), so what? How does that justify compulsory schooling of everyone? Perhaps "Gifted programs" skim off those who might be t
Re:Labels are bad news (Score:5, Insightful)
Oh please! Can't we get an article about gifted children or aspergers or something like that without someone making a stupid lowest common denominator post like this? Yes. I'm sure the things you have stated in your post happen. It is stupid, it shouldn't happen, but it does. The problem is, it has nothing to do with the article. Do you really find it so hard to believe that there are smart kids who find life stressful because they don't fit in, so they listen to heavy metal music?
There really are people out there who think that kids who are called "gifted" are just spoiled brats, and that people with asperger syndrome are just shy and need to get out more. Simply because some spoiled brats get called gifted or because some nerds falsely claim to have aspergers. Posts like yours just add to that, without bringing anything useful. Just the same obvious "damn I'm such a rebel for pointing this out" obvious boilerplate post.
P.S. The title for your post is "Labels are bad news". Believe it or not, all words are labels. Do you think words are bad? Just because using a single word like "gifted" doesn't perfectly describe something as complex as a person? This whole anti-label thing is idiotic. Just speak in complete sentences and you fill find that words/labels work to convey a point of view, even if they don't carry enough meaning one at a time. Imagine that!
Re:Heavy metal as a detox? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Heavy metal as a detox? (Score:5, Funny)
Not quite heavy metal... (Score:5, Informative)
But the parent is right about heavy metal soothing anger. I can't manage to stay angry after a few minutes of listening to death metal. Ironically, it's often the most calming music I have.
Re:Not quite heavy metal... (Score:4, Interesting)
It would be interesting if the study included classical pieces as well, as in studying how many gifted teenagers like both modern "complex" metal and "complex" classical. A close friend and I like both kinds, it would be nice to know we weren't the only ones who mix Ride The Lightning with Toccata and Fugue in D Minor.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Another factor that may cause "gifted" individuals to listen to metal is the complexity and technicality. If you break down metal music, you'll find that it's much more "musical" then any modern bands. Bands such as Slayer, Amon Amarth, Nile, Testament, and Kreator play with such precision and technical perfection. Anyone who has taken music theory can easily see that this genre is superior to most modern pop. While the growling lyrics may be intimidating to many, there are metal bands out there that combin
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
I prefer NiMH, myself. Not as heavy, but a lot more reactive. :-)
Re:Heavy metal as a detox? (Score:4, Funny)
I prefer NiMH, myself. Not as heavy, but a lot more reactive. :-)
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
They asked me how I could listen to it and not get stressed out or even how I could enjoy listening to it, and I always told them that it actually calms me and thats why I listen to it.
I never looked like a metalhead (well, except a jeansjacket I had in my early teens with metallica/sepultura/megadeth marks stiched all over it), but I pretty much only listened to metal.
Always thought I was weird
Re:Heavy metal as a detox? (Score:5, Interesting)
I've also noticed that the Mozart Effect [wikipedia.org] can apply to certain non-mozart music, as well. It seems to be based on the idea of a 60 Hz beat (now I'm doubting that, since Wikipedia didn't mention it. Someone else back me up?), which most of Mozart's stuff provides. Rob Zombie's "Never Gonna Stop Me" features a baseline that follows this pretty exactly.
Re:Heavy metal as a detox? (Score:4, Funny)
Whadda you mean stupid lyrics?
That's literary GOLD, man....Re:Heavy metal as a detox? (Score:4, Interesting)
Like most great creations, Rammstein's best work is about drugs, death, joy, confusion, power, discovery, and/or fucking.
And it's not always silly, but often quite serious, even after being translated. Oftentimes, their music is downright ugly. Sometimes, it helps to know that things could always have been worse.
Courtesy of herzeleid.com [herzeleid.com]:
what does a man do
who can't tell the difference
between human and animal
what
He will go to his daughter
she is beautiful and young in years
and then, like a dog, he will
mate with his own flesh and blood
What do you do
What do you feel
What are you
but an
animal
What does the woman do
what does the woman do
who can't tell the difference
between animal and man
She dips the quill in his blood
and write herself a letter
lifeless lines to her childhood
when her father slept by her
What do you do
What do you feel
What are you
but an animal