I have a confession. I’ve
not seen the movie Frozen. I’ll admit
that I’d probably like it if I saw it. Then why haven’t I? Maybe it’s because
everyone else has seen it and can sing the songs from memory. Maybe it’s
because when I get the choice to watch Frozen
or do something else, the “something else” has always seemed more interesting.
Truth is, I’m not sure.
What I do know about
myself is that I don’t like musicals, as a general rule. From my point of view,
too often the pacing of a musical comes to a screeching halt when the music
starts up. Meaning, the songs don’t progress the story.
Out of love for my wife,
I watched Phantom of the Opera with
her once. I really struggled with it. The music was good. The characters were
interesting. The sets were beautiful. But I didn’t like it. How can that be? I
don’t recall the specific details, but there was a scene where the characters
were basically running for their lives. What would any sane person do in that
situation? I can say pretty confidently that they wouldn’t stop to sing about
the danger they were in—yet that’s what happened. Ugh.
But this blog isn’t a
rant about musicals, believe it or not. In fact, a musical recently helped me
realize something pretty wild.
While going to high school
in the late 1980’s, there was a musical that was pretty popular called Chess. One of the songs even became a
hit on the radio: One Night In Bangkok.
I ended up buying the cassette version of the musical and I listened to it over
and over.
With the recent advent of
digital downloadable music, I was able to find the original soundtrack and buy
it online a few days ago. (I could have found it for free, I’m sure, but the
author in me wants to have creative people actually get paid for their work.)
I hadn’t listened to Chess for years, yet as the songs began
to play, I found that I could sing along. It was trippy to recall lyrics and
how they were sang after such a long period.
Around this same time, I
was asked to cover a high school math class. I generally shy away from teaching
math because while I learned it in school, I simply don’t remember it. Even when
I looked at what the students were doing and tried to understand what was going
on, it didn’t come back to me nearly as easily as the lyrics and music to Chess.
Why is that?
It’s one of the mysteries
of the human brain, I’m sure. I’ll bet there are dozens of studies out there
that prove people can recall songs easier than other things. Heck, there may
even be some theories on why that is.
Maybe it means the human
mind is designed to recall music better than math facts—yet students are
required to take more math classes than music classes. Perhaps all the math
classes are needed to help people think in a way that doesn’t come as natural
as recalling music. Hmmm.
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