Big news for DJs everywhere: scientists have figured out a surefire way to make people boogie. Surprisingly, it has little to do with audible sound, like a repetitive guitar lick or killer drum solo.
A recent research study found that low-frequency bass make people more likely to dance at a live music performance, even if they can’t actually hear the extremely low sounds. A recent research study ...
To find out how different aspects of music influence the body, researchers turned a live electronic music concert into a lab study. By introducing levels of bass over speakers that were too low to ...
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Follow the bass. That’s probably the best way to understand the music of Djoser, a Virginia-based producer and DJ whose most penetrating dance tracks use frequencies low enough to reach the unknowable ...
August 5, 2014 - It's the day of the big game – before heading out to the field, you put on your headphones and blast some music to pump you up. The music seemingly empowers you to do great things.
The term bass music is a catch-all for darker, urban breakbeat electronic music styles that include drum n' bass, dubstep, trap and some of the more aggressive takes on electro. The phrase only came ...
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Angelo State University hosts fall Low Brass Studio Concert
The Angelo State University Low Bass Studio Program is guiding West Texas into autumn with their fall concert on Friday, Nov.
NAMM (The National Association of Music Merchants), the largest global non-profit music trade organization, along with Bass ...
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