To add to this with a similar example, consider that some people prefer listening to foreign language vocalists because it allows one to appreciate the sound of the vocal instrument without focusing on the words.
To me, most music sounds like a foreign language (though one that sounds exactly like English), unless I’m familiar with the lyrics beforehand, in which case I can “hear” them just fine.
Yes, most people don’t care much about the actual lyrics. Which explains the phenomenon thomblake was trying to use for tenuous support of another hypothesis, yet remains modded to 3 for some reason (7 if you include his parent comment).
Right, because the words (i.e. the lyrical semantics, as differentiated from the qualities of the sounds the words make) are a small, perhaps negligible component of what people like about many of these songs.
If you were trying to draw some other inference from this fact, you’re going to have to be more specific about why that inference follows.
To add to this with a similar example, consider that some people prefer listening to foreign language vocalists because it allows one to appreciate the sound of the vocal instrument without focusing on the words.
To me, most music sounds like a foreign language (though one that sounds exactly like English), unless I’m familiar with the lyrics beforehand, in which case I can “hear” them just fine.
Like this?
Probably.
Yes, most people don’t care much about the actual lyrics. Which explains the phenomenon thomblake was trying to use for tenuous support of another hypothesis, yet remains modded to 3 for some reason (7 if you include his parent comment).
Right, because the words (i.e. the lyrical semantics, as differentiated from the qualities of the sounds the words make) are a small, perhaps negligible component of what people like about many of these songs.
If you were trying to draw some other inference from this fact, you’re going to have to be more specific about why that inference follows.