Who likes Harry Potter? http:/…
Who likes Harry Potter? http://tinyurl.com/d879fh
Who likes Harry Potter? http://tinyurl.com/d879fh
drumFunny in funny places contest! http://tinyurl.com/cnekd7
How to get featured on drumFunny: http://drumfunny.com/2009/04/08/mankini/
Ever get tired of seeing lame videos of people playing Ditty on youtube? http://tinyurl.com/cczsob
Banished Beyond music for Circle of Life! Possibly the best drumFunny post to date. Please RT! http://tinyurl.com/d8hz7n
The OM NOM NOM-ALIERS http://tinyurl.com/dm9zea Green machine enjoying some noms!
The Aimachi Street Fighter!!! http://tinyurl.com/ce5dwe
Conceived and developed by the Magnetic Musical Training project, FieldDrum is the unholy union of mild-mannered percussion instruments and super-powered electromagnets. The electromagnets, mounted under the top head, are programmed to repel and attract the student’s sticks toward or away from the head. For those of you who haven’t guessed, the goal is here is to circumvent the boring, conventional tools of rhythm and motor skills and allow the drum to play itself. Whether the FielDrum can produce more than uneven legatos at this stage is still unclear. Whether it can produce a reliable alternative to actual drummers (who must constantly be fed, groomed, etc.) is equally uncertain.
This article comes from Discover Magazine and was highlighted as one of their top 100 stories in 2008. A team of Swedish investigators tested the relationship between a person’s intelligence and their ability to keep a steady beat. A sample of 30 men listened to the “steady clonk” from a sampled cowbell and then played back the beat on a drum pad. Subjects attempted to replicate beats at seven different tempos. Scientists then compared the results with participants’ IQs. The results showed those with the highest IQs kept the closest beat.
The scientific explanation:
“The neural mechanisms that control the accuracy and stability of the subjects’ tapping operate below the level of conscious attention, the researchers claim, and reflect the precision of neural firing itself. Millisecond variations in neural activity are known to affect learning and information processing, so it makes sense that those with the best timing are also the brightest, the researchers say. Their brain networks probably have less “noise.” In areas of the brain previously linked to IQ, the star percussionists also had more white matter—the fatty material that sheathes connections between neurons and boosts signal speed—indicating a larger amount of neural hookups there.”
A video response from drumFunny contributor Egor bolsters the scientists’ conclusions. Asked to comment on the link between intelligence and tempo control, Egor responded ”Rah ruh ra ra fers da boom ra fri flo,” and later went on to add, “da ra roo so tra skawr iz da fer ruh.”
See below for Egor’s full response and personal demonstration along with the original article.