sevenELIXIR wrote:born in 1997??? I was 14 that year... I feel old
Heh, you don't even know from old!
Moderators: Aesthetics, Drones, Hexagon Sun
sevenELIXIR wrote:born in 1997??? I was 14 that year... I feel old
Pantheon wrote:Could the sense of nostalgia be attributed to this proposition:
BOCs music is full of little aural cues that make you want to explore each one in greater depth. Different people will be drawn to different ques, but there are so many embedded that generaly people will spark with a great number of them. That is the reason that many of us were drawn to Twoism, to find the answers to questions that their music raises within us. To let us explore these little sound tip-bits farther. Is this sense of wonder and curiosity that it raises in us the same kind of wonder we felt so strongly when we were infants? This link could account for why so many of us from all eras and backgrounds feel the same nostalgia. BOC have often said that they take their childhood as a primary inspiration, but again and again people only seem to associate that statement with questions like:
Where were they when they were little?
What did they do, what did they read/listen too...
Perhaps its more apt to ask what kind of things/sights would make them interested, confused...
Like drawing from the philosophical questions they asked when they were little, and the little micro events they sparked with when they were little. Like the sound of a broken car, a pair of bad speakers, interference on the radio, the sound of a voice echoing in a large stairwell... The kind of micro events that would fascinate you when your little but are often unnoticed when older. Perhaps BOCs music encourages people to question these little micro events once more, taking pleasure in their occurrence.
For instance the dial up tone was mentioned to be nostalgic, but perhaps not because it was commonly heard as a child. But rather because it evoked a sense of wonder and pleasure in its occurrence as an infant.
[/RAMBLE]

Pantheon wrote:Could the sense of nostalgia be attributed to this proposition:
BOCs music is full of little aural cues that make you want to explore each one in greater depth. Different people will be drawn to different ques, but there are so many embedded that generaly people will spark with a great number of them. That is the reason that many of us were drawn to Twoism, to find the answers to questions that their music raises within us. To let us explore these little sound tip-bits farther. Is this sense of wonder and curiosity that it raises in us the same kind of wonder we felt so strongly when we were infants? This link could account for why so many of us from all eras and backgrounds feel the same nostalgia. BOC have often said that they take their childhood as a primary inspiration, but again and again people only seem to associate that statement with questions like:
Where were they when they were little?
What did they do, what did they read/listen too...
Perhaps its more apt to ask what kind of things/sights would make them interested, confused...
Like drawing from the philosophical questions they asked when they were little, and the little micro events they sparked with when they were little. Like the sound of a broken car, a pair of bad speakers, interference on the radio, the sound of a voice echoing in a large stairwell... The kind of micro events that would fascinate you when your little but are often unnoticed when older. Perhaps BOCs music encourages people to question these little micro events once more, taking pleasure in their occurrence.
For instance the dial up tone was mentioned to be nostalgic, but perhaps not because it was commonly heard as a child. But rather because it evoked a sense of wonder and pleasure in its occurrence as an infant.
[/RAMBLE]

Users browsing this forum: Rikkiebags and 21 guests