Tagged
music
Page 2
Jonathan Chang • October 18, 2012
Many musicians crave perfect pitch, but is it all it's cracked up to be?
Arielle Duhaime-Ross • October 17, 2012
Scientists demonstrate that musicians are better at understanding speakers in noisy environments
Justine E. Hausheer • July 20, 2012
Because you can procrastinate for another few minutes…
Allison T. McCann • June 8, 2012
This seriously hip new retainer lets you listen to music through your teeth
Scienceline Editors • February 10, 2012
Our favorites of the week
Sarah Fecht • November 4, 2010
Experimental artist Eleanor Morgan has a thing for arachnids
Olivia Koski • June 16, 2010
This evening at the Union Square subway station a large crowd gathered around a violinist rocking his heart out.
Ferris Jabr • March 12, 2010
A mashup of music and technology at the MIT Media Lab
Ferris Jabr • February 22, 2010
Astronomer Greg Laughlin and composer Philip Glass try to hear the "music of the spheres" at the Rubin Museum's latest Brainwave event
Mara Grunbaum • February 5, 2010
Rhythm in animals reveals evolution of human music
Shelley DuBois • March 18, 2009
Scientists listen to the mating songs of disease-carrying mosquitoes in hopes that they’ll use what they learn to control wild populations.
Carina Storrs • December 16, 2008
Clarinet with whale songs: click to listen Distorted clarinet riffs filled the air. Then howls, hauntingly low and distant, syncopated by short squeals accompanied them. The duet was no experimental […]
Christopher Intagliata • March 26, 2008
At a meeting of Brooklyn's Secret Science Club, neuroscientist and composer Dave Sulzer explains how our brains compose music — even when we're completely unaware of it.
Is it true that an astronaut brought an iPod to space? What other weird stuff has made that trip?
Karina Hamalainen • March 24, 2008
- Asks JB from Denver, CO
Eric R. Olson • February 28, 2008
How one woman brought two worlds together.