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(Recommended)Popular Videos : [TEDx Talks] Transforming Noise Into Music | Jackson Jhin | TEDxUND
 
This time, I will review the popular YouTube videos.
These days, even if it's good to watch on YouTube, sometimes people skip it or don't watch it if it's too long.
When you watch Youtube, do you scroll and read the comments first?
To save your busy time, why don't you check out the fun contents, summary, and empathy comments of popular YouTube videos first and watch YouTube?
(Recommended)Popular Videos : [TEDx Talks] Transforming Noise Into Music | Jackson Jhin | TEDxUND
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LadUft_ly50

 


 

Playtime Comments : [TEDx Talks] Transforming Noise Into Music | Jackson Jhin | TEDxUND

fu*****************:

3:09 - fucking 10/10 would go to a caveman rave


se*******************:

Half past two at night, I'm watching this and slowly falling asleep. And then I get to 7:25.


Ra********:
8:37 Very Asian

It*******:
2:44 for the coco people like me lol

Iy****:

4:13 This should be an alarm.


Sa*********:

7:54

"A lot more interesting, right?"
audience member coughs xD


Je*************:

4:38 So Dream Theater - Dance of Eternity?


Li***:

6:50 am i actually the only one who thinks, that this is awesome?? I mean .. dont get me wrong but if we cut down these 5 sequences to 4 and ad more clear cutting in it, that would be an awesome sounding Sample for e.g hip hop etc..


Ac*****:
2:50 For those of you who enjoy that sweet coconut beat. And also because other people don't put the timestamp in.

MA************:
7:20 "This next sound..."
A NEW SMASH CHALLENGER APPROACHES

 


 

Top Comments : [TEDx Talks] Transforming Noise Into Music | Jackson Jhin | TEDxUND

Sh***:

Is this not all common knowledge?


co************:
If he knows all the answers why isn't he writing music and selling millions of records?

Ra*******:
I was expecting actual noise music.

Yu*********:
So you saying that cave people might have known house music before it became mainstream?

lI**************************:

The coconut music was still using western theory.


Am********:
I bet you can't change Dhinchak Pooja's noise into Music!

Lu**:
To people who know music, the concepts he has explained are what people realise when they're about 10 years old.. This is honestly one of the most uninformative Ted talks i've ever heard. This level of creativity is at the very bottom of the spectrum.

Gy********:

That sticks and coconut music is AWESOME.


Be*******:
This guy obviously hasn't heard Philip Glass's later work beyond that piece, called "Music in Twelve Parts". In a way his later work is more variable (in some ways), especially since his stuff seems to be more melodious. Also this video was boring.

Ma***********:
What I learned, Don't skip a song if you don't like it at first.

Ni***:
I like this dude

Ch*************:

So, on this island, we find a kick
sounds like this: perfect kick
"Pretty basic noise, not inherently musical or special"


Th*********:

(Shame about the dodgy audio mixing on this video.)

An interesting topic, and well-presented. The same principles are found throughout a lot of the arts. Writing for example (my field) has the idea of "the familiar and the strange," giving a simple story a little twist to make it into something completely new. The context is still understandable from the familiar side, but it's made new and interesting by the strange side.


Ja*:

Music is the balance between predictibility and variability that's a great quote


Da****:

that's a big ass coconut


Ac*:
Guys this is not like Ted talks but you have to give him credit, its a nice change of pace and is actually unique and clever

ic***:

who else like when he broke up the sample at 6:36. I found it intriguing.


Da********:
This guy know what he's talking about :)

Ri**********:
do these people not know how music works??? they acted amazed by him putting a simple kick in?

Sk*******:

He makes zero points in nearly 10 minutes of speaking. He should be our next President.


ca********************************:
me : BANGING ON THE FRYING PAN
mum : WAT IS WITH ALL THOSE NOISES
me : this is music ..

Sh***************:

Him: What makes popular music popular?
Me, an intellectual: ThE WoRd 'PoPuLAr'


il*******:
makes no sense when you put most hip-hop or pop music into the equation. It's 90% predictable shit, but people like it for some reason.

en***:

daamn that coconut tune is so groovy that it's still stuck inside my head


bi***********:

wtf?? idk what i gained from this lmao. i watched the whole thing too like i was about to learn something fantastical


Co*********:
Im sorry to dissapoint, but it isnt actually the Transformers transforming noise into music, i know, its a shame :(

Se*****:
did they record this video on a potato?

Pa*********:
I don't like criticizing the music of john cage in that way.
This is jugding without knowledge :

1/ He just play a few second of his music at 4:50,
2/ Then he puts a label "john cage = unpredictable"
3/ Then he put a judgement "unpredictable = prisonner in a cage"

BUT
If you know the composer :

1/ John cage composed A LOT OF music ALL THIS LIFE, this is not only few second, this is a long artistic way of life.
2/ John cage has a big musical universe, there is lot of pieces using rhythmic cycles and patterns (Amores, Sonata for prepared piano, in a landscape) (so they are predictable). He's inspired from Balinese gamelan sonorities, and Japanese Gagaku. This is a very reffined music whatever this guy says
3/ Pure unpredictability is never used in music even in radical atonal music like Boulez or Stockhausen, All the (good) composers play with expectation.

Please be clever and don't believe that "unpredictable" equals "John Cage's music" or any other composer

Fi********:

Music is best defined as anything that is either intended to be perceived as music by its composer or anything that is perceived to be music by any listener.
Anything more specific than that and you begin to make subjective and limiting definitions of what music really is.
There's many different ways music can be used, it can be a form of entertainment, it can be a tool, it can be a weapon, it can be spiritual rite.
Music is not a universal language, it is very heavily dependent on its region, culture, intent and purpose.
The term "music" itself is considered a western term and can even be a limiting description of itself.

There's a few thousand dollars worth of Ethnomusicology you'll never need. Cheers.


Kl********:
- food tastes good because you get nutrition's and minerals
- breathing fresh air feels good because you need oxygen for your respiration chain even though oxygen is a poison for cells.
- sex feels good because you need to reproduce before you die
- you get the hang of what i mean - live invented a lot of rewards for things you need to do to continue living .
- so what does music do ? why does it feel so good ? its just vibes ? everything has a vibe . maybe it synchronizes us ? not only in a social way but in a physical ?

lets transcend and become one being with one consciousness . its determinated by live anyway . we started probably as one cell that divided and evolved different with each of its new parts but we were one and we should probably become one again before we reproduce ourselves again . we were just gathering different information all the time . we invented the internet to connect again and share knowledge . can see you where this leads to ?
one of the attributes of live : emergence - larger entities arise through interactions among smaller or simpler entities such that the larger entities exhibit properties the smaller/simpler entities do not exhibit (#wiki)
....the code of the first cell is still somewhere hidden in us . we are still all the same. your children are basically you in an evolved form . try to watch humanity from the sight of that first cell . what have we become in 3 billion years ? religion is like antibodies hitting on the own body . ISIS is cancer and politic is self poisoning(at least partially) . we adapted so much to the environment that we forgot to adapt to ourselves . everything that is invented to work all time , ends where it started . circles are fundamental . just like electron paths . lets go back to the basics(become one being again by swarm think . let the internet become an intranet and grow further until we vanish back to nothing when the universe does close its circle .)

 


 

[TEDx Talks] We gathered comments about popular videos and looked at them in summary, including play time, and order of popularity.

It's a good video or channel, but if you're sad because it's too long, please leave a YouTube channel or video link and I'll post it on this blog.

 


 

[TEDx Talks] Channel Posting

[TEDx Talks] 7 Ways to Make a Conversation With Anyone | Malavika Varadan | TEDxBITSPilaniDubai

[TEDx Talks] A motion for masturbation -- the naked truth | Jane Langton | TEDxSFU

[TEDx Talks] A musical genius | Usman Riaz | TEDxGateway

[TEDx Talks] BEATBOX | Beasty | TEDxBordeaux

[TEDx Talks] Beatbox brilliance | Tom Thum | TEDxSydney

[TEDx Talks] Cambia tu mente, cambia tu vida | Margarita Pasos | TEDxManagua

[TEDx Talks] Coronavirus Is Our Future | Alanna Shaikh | TEDxSMU

[TEDx Talks] Faster than a calculator | Arthur Benjamin | TEDxOxford

[TEDx Talks] Hope invites | Tsutomu Uematsu | TEDxSapporo

[TEDx Talks] How To Skip the Small Talk and Connect With Anyone | Kalina Silverman | TEDxWestminsterCollege

[TEDx Talks] How to Have a Good Conversation | Celeste Headlee | TEDxCreativeCoast

[TEDx Talks] How to learn any language in six months | Chris Lonsdale | TEDxLingnanUniversity

[TEDx Talks] How to stop screwing yourself over | Mel Robbins | TEDxSF

[TEDx Talks] How to travel the world with almost no money | Tomislav Perko | TEDxTUHH

[TEDx Talks] How to triple your memory by using this trick | Ricardo Lieuw On | TEDxHaarlem

[TEDx Talks] I Was Almost A School Shooter | Aaron Stark | TEDxBoulder

[TEDx Talks] Intermittent Fasting: Transformational Technique | Cynthia Thurlow | TEDxGreenville

[TEDx Talks] Mathematics and sex | Clio Cresswell | TEDxSydney

[TEDx Talks] Pełna moc możliwości: Jacek Walkiewicz at TEDxWSB

[TEDx Talks] Power Foods for the Brain | Neal Barnard | TEDxBismarck

[TEDx Talks] Programming your mind for success | Carrie Green | TEDxManchester

[TEDx Talks] Quit social media | Dr. Cal Newport | TEDxTysons

[TEDx Talks] Select the right relationship | Alexandra Redcay | TEDxUpperEastSide

[TEDx Talks] Stand Alone to Stand Apart | Bhuvan Bam | TEDxJUIT

[TEDx Talks] Sólo cambié mi actitud y todo cambió | Juan Bautista Segonds | TEDxSanIsidro

[TEDx Talks] The Most Unexpected Acoustic Guitar Performance | The Showhawk Duo | TEDxKlagenfurt

[TEDx Talks] The Secret of Becoming Mentally Strong | Amy Morin | TEDxOcala

[TEDx Talks] The Skill of Humor | Andrew Tarvin | TEDxTAMU

[TEDx Talks] The Super Mario Effect - Tricking Your Brain into Learning More | Mark Rober | TEDxPenn

[TEDx Talks] The lady stripped bare | Tracey Spicer | TEDxSouthBankWomen

[TEDx Talks] The mathematics of weight loss | Ruben Meerman | TEDxQUT (edited version)

[TEDx Talks] The most important lesson from 83,000 brain scans | Daniel Amen | TEDxOrangeCoast

[TEDx Talks] The person you really need to marry | Tracy McMillan | TEDxOlympicBlvdWomen

[TEDx Talks] The secret to self control | Jonathan Bricker | TEDxRainier

[TEDx Talks] The surprising beauty of mathematics | Jonathan Matte | TEDxGreensFarmsAcademy

[TEDx Talks] Top hacker shows us how it's done | Pablos Holman | TEDxMidwest

[TEDx Talks] Waking up as a meme-hero | Andras Arato | TEDxKyiv

[TEDx Talks] We should all be feminists | Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie | TEDxEuston

 


 

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