We will not do your homework for you, so it is time to get to work and do it.
Active listening.
You can get a spiritual feeling while playing or listening to music. Some people may feel weird when listening to certain music.
When you are listening to music, the brain analyses the various patterns that the music creates. Music is about pattern recognition, on the neurological level.
I would say that in your case the music is distracting your attention from what you are trying to study... try listening to music that has no lyrics. Instrumental stuff actually helps me memorize better. Good luck with it!
You're listening to rap if the singer is known to rap or he/she is singing or talking quickly.
J. Peter Burkholder has written: 'Study and listening guide for A history of western music, seventh edition, by J. Peter Burkholder, Donald Jay Grout and Claude V. Palisca and Norton anthology of western music, fifth edition, [edited] by J. Peter Burkholder and Claude V. Palisca' -- subject(s): Music appreciation, History and criticism, Music 'Charles Ives, the ideas behind the music' -- subject(s): Composers, Music, Biography, Philosophy and aesthetics 'Study and listening guide for Concise history of western music, by Barbara Russano Hanning, and Norton anthology of western music, third edition, by Claude V. Palisca' -- subject(s): Musical analysis, History and criticism, Music 'Study and listening guide for a history of western music , seventh edition, by J. Peter Burkholder, Donald Jay Grout and Claude V. Palisca and Norton Anthology of western music , fifth edition, by J. Peter Burkholder and Claude V. Palisca' -- subject(s): Music appreciation, Instruction and study, History and criticism, Music 'Study and Listening Guide for a History of Western Music (6th): And Norton Anthology of Western Music (4th)' 'Charles Ives'
Answers are not written out online for the Music For Ear Training 3rd Edition or the teacher's edition. Students will have to read the book and view the study materials from the course to answer the questions.
Active listening.
No! U cannot die with listening to much music!
I think it is if you enjoy listening to music
Easy Listening Music is what used to be elevator music like Percy Faith, Perry Como
You can get a spiritual feeling while playing or listening to music. Some people may feel weird when listening to certain music.
It depends on how musically interested you are into listening to music
When you are listening to music, the brain analyses the various patterns that the music creates. Music is about pattern recognition, on the neurological level.
Music for the Fifth World was created in 1992-02.
Passive listening is the kind of listening we do at the grocery store, in the elevator, or at the dentist. This is background listening, where the music washes over you while you are involved in another activity.
Tests carried out showed that the majority of students listening to Mozart while doing a test got a better result as to the students who were listening to music "x" and another test was carried out where people listening to Mozart done better than people listening to no music at all. Yet another test was carried out where music "x" was played to half the class and they done worse than the other class who had been listening to nothing but the sound of the room and the occasional cough of their classmates/teacher. Wether the events were coincidences or not, I am not sure, but I am guessing some music can influence learning and memory. I hope this answers your question to some extent.