"According to the critical period hypothesis, the brain of the young child is particularly well suited to the task of language learning."
-Psychology Gleitman, Reisberg, and Gross
So all my little chickadees here comes your exposure to the world of music according to me. Let this be your own critical stage with your young under-developed musical minds. There's so much out there in the world for you to listen to and feel good about yourself, or feel bad. But as long as your adolescent and nascent brains are developing a vast musical vocabulary, let me and the other contributors to this blog help drive your next CD, vinyl, or iTunes purchase (or free download but please don't).
We will provide album reviews, thoughts on music and how it affects our lives, thoughts on our own music writing processes, how songs and albums interact with our lives, the ways we rock out, and plenty of sweet articles/videos/quotes/excerpts about psychology, life, and music to always keep you informed on how the world works.
The contributors to this blog will include myself, Ariel (REL) Bitran, a good friend of mine Jamie (Jaimito) Straz who attends the UofMiami, a skinny Asian boy named Ryan (Ryan) Harrington, Kyle Deas, and members of my nuclear family: Alberto Bitran and Debbie Bitran. Hopefully, this diverse candidate selection will provide not only interesting musical vantage points but polarizing writers who all greatly dislike some of another's music.
So now put this link in your bookmarks toolbar so you can click on it everyday drooling, wanting to know more about how the contributors and I can enliven your lives with our melodic narratives. Do it. Now.
Insert cheesy music quote here: "Music produces a kind of pleasure which human nature cannot do without" Confucius
-Psychology Gleitman, Reisberg, and Gross
So all my little chickadees here comes your exposure to the world of music according to me. Let this be your own critical stage with your young under-developed musical minds. There's so much out there in the world for you to listen to and feel good about yourself, or feel bad. But as long as your adolescent and nascent brains are developing a vast musical vocabulary, let me and the other contributors to this blog help drive your next CD, vinyl, or iTunes purchase (or free download but please don't).
We will provide album reviews, thoughts on music and how it affects our lives, thoughts on our own music writing processes, how songs and albums interact with our lives, the ways we rock out, and plenty of sweet articles/videos/quotes/excerpts about psychology, life, and music to always keep you informed on how the world works.
The contributors to this blog will include myself, Ariel (REL) Bitran, a good friend of mine Jamie (Jaimito) Straz who attends the UofMiami, a skinny Asian boy named Ryan (Ryan) Harrington, Kyle Deas, and members of my nuclear family: Alberto Bitran and Debbie Bitran. Hopefully, this diverse candidate selection will provide not only interesting musical vantage points but polarizing writers who all greatly dislike some of another's music.
So now put this link in your bookmarks toolbar so you can click on it everyday drooling, wanting to know more about how the contributors and I can enliven your lives with our melodic narratives. Do it. Now.
Insert cheesy music quote here: "Music produces a kind of pleasure which human nature cannot do without" Confucius
3 comments:
I bookmarked it, and I'm excited to improve myself through this blog.
Excellent Julia York! I'm glad to have you aboard.
Rock on dude.
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