@likwidlightexp
THE LIKWIDLIGHT EXP
@likwidlightexp · 4:55

EVOLUTIONARY MUSIC

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It's de evolutionary. It's more animalistic caveman type of stuff, you know what I'm saying? So evolutionary music would be stuff from the Bronze Age on up to the Renaissance on up to jazz and some high forms of art, rock boys, Prince and Stevie Wonder and stuff like that. Stuff that you have to expand your mind and your brain, you know what I'm saying? In order to enjoy and understand stuff that touches high emotions than you activates high centers of your brain

In this episode I discuss the benifits of what I call evolutionary music

@rocio
Rocío (Ro) Christensen
@rocio · 3:56
This is super interesting, cause of course, immediately I'm thinking, like, the music that I like, would I qualify as something that, like, expands my brain or closes it off? And I don't know. I don't listen to classical music all that much. I listen to jazz. I love to see live jazz. And yeah, but I don't know. I think it I think it really depends
@Quinne
Quinne Brown Huffman
@Quinne · 0:23
Peace feeder myth. I love your thoughts. I love the thoughts you spark in my mind about music and understanding the influence of it. Thank you. Keep talking. Keep putting it out there. I think it's really important what you are covering and yes to evolutionary music. Yes, yes
@likwidlightexp
THE LIKWIDLIGHT EXP
@likwidlightexp · 1:24

@r.o

I know for a fact from playing that you mentioned improvision, that jazz musicians, they're not just playing anything. They know theory, they know the mathematics behind when they're improvising. They know exactly what they're doing mathematically. So it's really like doing mathematics and arithmetic just at the speed of light while you listening to them improvising. I don't know, as much as maybe a lot of great musicians, I can play a little bit. You're absolutely correct. I appreciate your insight
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