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<rayray>
Posted
this isnt so much a dream, but sometimes I get a snippet of a song stuck in my head and I cant get it out. like just one phrase or two, but it keeps replaying and replaying over and over sometimes for hours or all nite long and I cant sleep. Its like a broken record going on for hours. anyone have that ever or know what it is?
 
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<Whitefish>
Posted
That is a common. CNN did a story on that very subject several weeks ago. Seems most of us have that problem.
 
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<elton>
Posted
More info on this:

With all the tunes out there, why is it stuff like 'My Sharona' that takes over our brains? Warning: This article could be hazardous to your sanity. It contains discussions of songs so diabolically annoying that merely reading their titles--"It's a Small World," "The Lion Sleeps Tonight," "My Sharona"--can cause them to get stuck in your head. Proceed at your own risk.

For years, humans have been tortured by Stuck Tune Syndrome, in which a seemingly innocuous piece of music lodges in the brain and won't leave. So far, no reliable cure exists, but a University of Cincinnati professor hopes to change that. James Kellaris has embarked on a study to figure out why songs sometimes commandeer people's thoughts.

Kellaris, a marketing teacher who moonlights as a bouzouki player in a Greek band, theorizes that certain types of music operate like mental mosquito bites. They create a "cognitive itch" that can only be scratched by replaying the tune in the mind. The more the brain scratches, the worse the itch gets.

The syndrome is triggered when "the brain detects an incongruity or something 'exceptional' in the musical stimulus," he explained in a report made earlier this year to the Society for Consumer Psychology. To help determine which factors cause songs to stick, Kellaris surveyed 1,000 students at four universities.

Almost without exception, the respondents had regularly endured stuck songs or jingles, with the typical episode lasting anywhere from a few hours (55%) to a full day (23%). Another 17% said the malevolent melodies persisted several days, and 5% said tunes haunted them longer than a week. One person claimed--perhaps facetiously--that music from an Atari 260 videogame had been playing in his head "since 1986."

The survey also asked people to identify the stickiest songs. From this list, Kellaris hopes to pinpoint the characteristics that make a tune more likely to bore into the brain.

One possibility is excessive repetitiveness. Although all songs contain repetitious elements, some rely on the technique so heavily that they might cause the brain to echo the pattern automatically, Kellaris suggests. Examples: "Follow the Yellow Brick Road," Queen's "We Will Rock You" and the theme from "Mission: Impossible."

A related factor is musical simplicity. "Children's songs seem more prone to get stuck than complicated material, such as a Bach fugue," Kellaris says. "Perhaps the ease with which a tune can be reconstructed" increases its adhesiveness.

Greg Scelsa of Lancaster, who composes and performs children's music for the duo Greg & Steve, acknowledges that simplicity and repetition are key ingredients for making children's songs memorable.

A classic example is "If You're Happy and You Know It," he says. The melody in each verse builds sequentially from the previous verse. He demonstrates by singing, "If you're happy and you know it, clap your hands. If you're happy and you know it, clap your hands. If you're happy and you know it, then your face will surely show it. If you're happy and you know it, clap your hands."

With each "happy and you know it" line, the melody changes slightly, "but in a predictable way," he says. "It's the same pattern, which makes it more memorable."

Does that also make it more likely to implant itself in someone's cranium? Probably, he says. Probably? Three hours after Scelsa hangs up, "If You're Happy and You Know It" has staged a coup d'etat in our brain.

Another possible component of sticky songs is incongruity. If the beat or lyric defies listener expectations, it might incite a cognitive itch, Kellaris says. As an example, he mentions the song "America" from "West Side Story," which has a jarring 12/8 meter.

Then again, maybe melody has nothing to do with Stuck Tune Syndrome, says Diana Deutsch, a UC San Diego psychology professor who also served as founding editor of the journal Music Perception.

Perhaps persistent songs are like recurring dreams, she says: "Something in the back of your mind is trying to tell you something." As proof, Deutsch cites her own experience. Whenever she can't get a song out of her head, she contemplates the meaning of the lyrics--and the song instantly goes away. "Even songs without words can have a larger meaning," she notes, mentioning anthems and religious music as examples.

OK, but what if the tune circulating in your skull is the theme from "The Flintstones"? What's the deeper message behind that? Deutsch isn't sure, but insists that if the human brain has a tendency to play songs over and over, there must be an evolutionary reason.

If so, evolution should be outlawed. That's because it inevitably favors the most irritating songs. Let's say the brain wants to send itself an anti-anxiety message. It could play something like the Beatles' "Let It Be" or the Beach Boys' "Don't Worry Baby." But nooooo. Instead, the inner jukebox naturally selects Bobby McFerrin's "Don't Worry, Be Happy."

Kellaris isn't surprised. Other research has shown that disturbing thoughts are usually more memorable and compelling than pleasant ones, he says.

The first case of Stuck Tune Syndrome is lost to history. If ancient Romans had "Parvus Orbis Est" (Latin for "It's a Small World") chirping incessantly in their heads, they were kind enough not to mention it.

"Maybe this is a modern phenomenon," says H.A. Kelly, director of UCLA's Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies. "I can't think of any literary references to a haunting or persistent melody."

In recent times, the most bizarre cases of Stuck Tune Syndrome involve elderly men and women. In rare instances, they begin to hallucinate music, according to reports in medical journals. The songs are "so vivid that people will look for a nearby radio," says neurologist Oliver Sacks, author of "The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat."

Curiously, many of the auditory hallucinations are hymns or patriotic tunes, sung by a chorus. Some fade after time; others are permanent. "It goes 'round and 'round in their heads and they can't get it to go away," says UCSD's Deutsch, who has interviewed three sufferers and hopes to conduct a formal study of the disorder. "One woman went to her doctor and complained about hearing a hymn because she's not religious."

Sacks says the songs tend to be "music that was popular or important in the first 15 years of the person's life." In other words, future generations can expect to hallucinate Eminem, Britney Spears and the theme from Barney the dinosaur.

Scientists don't know what causes the hallucinations. Some people begin hearing music after surgery, others after taking too much aspirin. But most of the patients are partially deaf, so the hallucinations might be akin to phantom-limb syndrome, Sacks says.

In any case, no cure is known.

Music exerts a powerful grip on the mind, Sacks says. "It's the catchiest of all stimuli, at least for humans. I don't know whether it's catchy for monkeys or apes."

As for run-of-the-mill stuck tunes, the remedies vary. In Kellaris' survey, people outlined several strategies for derailing a nagging melody. The most obvious is to drive out the offending song by playing or thinking of another melody. Unfortunately, the substitute tune also might get stuck. "Some people turn to folkloric remedies," Kellaris says. "One chews on a cinnamon stick--and swears it works."

Others try to distract their minds by reading out loud or doing another task.

Finally, there's the "cooties" method, in which a stuck song is "transferred" to someone else by humming a few bars. Says Kellaris: "It's like, 'Tag, you're it.'"

Of course, the technique isn't practical for all songs. For instance, composer John Cage's "As Slow as Possible," which is currently being performed in Germany, begins with a silence that lasts 16 months, followed by a single chord to be played on Jan. 5, 2003, then another silence, then another chord on July 5, 2004, and the final chord in 639 years.

Luckily, humming isn't the only way to transfer a song. Simply telling someone the title might also be enough to insert it into their thoughts.

With that in mind, we feel compelled to mention some of the most common stuck tunes from Kellaris' survey, all of which infected our brain while writing this article: "The Macarena," "I'm a Little Teacup," "Gilligan's Island," the Chili's baby-back ribs jingle, Tchaikovsky's "1812 Overture," Kenny Rogers' "The Gambler," "YMCA," two Dr. Pepper jingles, Mozart's "Eine Kleine Nachtmusik" and the themes from "The Andy Griffith Show" and "The Odd Couple."

Tag, you're it.
 
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<Whitefish>
Posted
Thank-you for the great post Elton! Enough said on that subject! You covered it! Next topic please?!
 
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<repoman>
Posted
I have a huge problem with that. nora jones and dave matthews circulate in my head like my underwear in the dryer. it can go on for hours or days and at night in bed its like a radio in my ear. always wondered what the heck that was. anyone got a pill to cure it? i have to put on the radio and get a new song in there to push out the old one, but usually it creeps back in. Confused
 
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<pristina>
Posted
I have this problem too and it usually happens when I am exhausted and overworked. I think it must be a way for the mind to work out an issue or otherwise its a real bad joke.
 
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<SNUGGLES>
Posted
THE SONG THAT GETS STUCK IN MY HEAD DAY AFTER DAY IS THE ONE BE CHERYL CROWE AND KID ROCK, "PICTURE". IT REMINDS ME OF MY EX BOYFRIEND AND USE TO MAKE ME CRY NOW I CAN GET THREW IT WITHOUT THE CRYING AND SING IT AND IT IS A GREAT SONG FOREVER THAT WILL STICK IN MY HEAD.
 
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Exceptional Pluba
Picture of Dj's Doxies
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WELL TO BE HONEST WITH YOU, follow the yellow brick road I DONT HAVE THAT PROBLEM follow the yellow brick road TOO MUCH. SOMETIMES follow the yellow brick road WHEN A SONG GETS IN MY HEAD follow the yellow brick road I JUST LET IT FLOW follow the yellow brick road AND I'LL EVEN TURN ON THE follow the yellow brick road RADIO AND LISTEN TO IT! LOL Just trying to make you all smile. The last time a song really stuck in my head was the jingle from the old listerine commerical "oh oh ohohohohohoh oh oh" I think it's called Tarzan Boy but I'm not sure. Now it's "I drove all night" bye Celine Dion.

"Bring a smile to your life, hug a weiner dog!"
 
Posts: 6909 | Registered: Fri May 02 2003Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Pluba Freshman
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Hey Dj, the yellow brick road has been on my mind alot lately! Hmmm - wonder why?
Witch + Cairn Terrier + Dorothy
B---- + Yorkshire Terrier + D (1st letter of real name)

Yea, I think I know why it's been on my mind!! LOL
 
Posts: 660 | Registered: Wed May 21 2003Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Exceptional Pluba
Picture of Dj's Doxies
Posted Hide Post
quote:
Originally posted by Rayna:
Hey Dj, the yellow brick road has been on my mind alot lately! Hmmm - wonder why?
Witch + Cairn Terrier + Dorothy
B---- + Yorkshire Terrier + D (1st letter of real name)

Yea, I think I know why it's been on my mind!! LOL



LOL, that's funny.
Big Grin

"Bring a smile to your life, hug a weiner dog!"
 
Posts: 6909 | Registered: Fri May 02 2003Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Joe
Pluba Understudy
Picture of Joe
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Most of the time it's not a bad song that gets stuck in my head. Normally its my favorite songs or a song that I listen to for a period of time...I am in a band at my school and listen to the songs we play over and over until our conductor thinks it sound good...when I leave that class I have the last song we played stuck in my head..

When I put repeat on my CD player while I'm on the Internet or doing something else with no sound exept for the CD, the song that's playing gets stuck in my head....

"Your friend in time, Joe"
 
Posts: 282 | Location (City, State): Cocoa Beach, Florida, USA | Registered: Thu June 19 2003Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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