I have been thinking about earworms recently. In particular, I have been wondering two things:
  1. Why does a particular song sometimes get stuck in my head? Sometimes I wake up and find that an earworm has taken hold overnight, with no apparent rhyme[*] or reason.
  2. Why do I get recurring earworms? There are several songs that just come back to me from time to time. For instance, I frequently find Suddenly Seymour, from Little Shop of Horrors, floating through my brain.
Does anyone else find themselves vulnerable to these things? Or is it just me?

While I am on the topic of music, here is another "Is it just me?" question: It seems that, for every romantic relationship of significance that has ended in a break-up, I have a song that conveys the spirit of the relationship ending[**]. Is this normal? Or is this just me being weird?

[*] Besides one that might be in the song itself.

[**] And, no, I am not going to share the details of the relationships, or the songs, on LiveJournal. Though I might spill the beans if you strike up a conversation about it in person.


Tags:

From: [identity profile] skitten.livejournal.com


I wake up with a tune in my head nearly every morning... *lol* sometimes it takes a while for them to go away...Bu is very good a getting a *much* worse one stuck there instead...

From: [identity profile] envoy.livejournal.com


It took me a long time to reclaim St. Patricks Day by John Mayer.

From: [identity profile] winewiskeywomen.livejournal.com


La Vie En Rose was bouncing around upstairs for 3 days last week- and that answers both questions.

From: [identity profile] imandunewen.livejournal.com


the small part of "a little priest" from sweeney todd that i know has been harassing me for the better part of a week now and won't leave. it's starting to bother people around me. i need help.

From: [identity profile] bammba-m.livejournal.com


It's because your iBrain only came with "repeat" and not "shuffle"

The recurrence of the same particular earworms is probably because your iBrain came with a faulty or cheap or beta version memory set with regards to the repeat function. Alternatively, you might be trying to use a PC memory set with your iBrain, which is only compatible with MacMemory.


(duh)


i find trying to think up another song, or listening to the offending song usually banishes annoying earworms.
Edited Date: 2008-01-16 02:29 am (UTC)

From: [identity profile] acelightning.livejournal.com


Whatever it is that makes a song "catchy" is the same thing that turns the song into an earworm. And, of course, the composers of popular music want their songs to be catchy, or at the very least to have a good "hook" (the musical phrase that gets stuck in your brain).

The only way to get rid of an earworm is to replace it with something worse. Useful songs for that are things like "Yummy Yummy Yummy (I've Got Love In My Tummy)", "The Song That Doesn't End", the chanted ending of "Hey Jude", "99 Bottles Of Beer", or almost any song by Nirvana ;-)

From: [identity profile] squeektoy42.livejournal.com


Ooooo...*cracks fingers* ;-)

Well...there are lots of theories on the reasons why songs get stuck in our heads. Neurologically speaking some believe that because the general person can't help but have an emotional response to music that whenever the emotion evoked by a song is felt or sensed(even in our subconscious) that the song/songs we have associated with that emotion will come back to us. And if there is a particular song that you like AND that evokes a common emotion for you, that song will pop up often. Also, waking up with a song in our heads is thought to maybe happen because we hear something that reminds us of it in our sleep, or in dreams something happens that the same effect. Realize, of course, these are all theories that people who study the brain/music have come up with because it's a rather hard thing to really nail down a concrete answer, or even how to organize a study. (But that doesn't keep us crazy musician types from still talking about this and trying to study it!)

It seems that, for every romantic relationship of significance that has ended in a break-up, I have a song that conveys the spirit of the relationship ending[**]. Is this normal? Or is this just me being weird?

I have a theory on this...there are more good songs written about the end of a relationship than about the beginning/existence of one. Hence why it is easier to find the right one for when a break-up happens. I don't understand why composers have such a difficult time but seriously...throughout most genre's of music it's really difficult to find really great, honest love songs that don't drive you nuts. But the end of love...there are some incredible songs out there.

And I hope I haven't gone too crazy in my response...


From: [identity profile] friend-of-tofu.livejournal.com


*gasp* "Suddenly Seymour" has been a reliable if sporadic earworm for me for *years* in spite, probably because of, how horrible it is.

HOW DID YOU KNOW??

(The breakup song thing sounds quite normal, though)

From: [identity profile] blur01.livejournal.com


I dont listen to the LSoH sound track that often so I dont know those songs off the top of my head so they rarely get stuck for me. For other reasons I do sometimes get the dentist's song going in my head. *smile*

The other songs / music I like to call "the sound track to my life". For a while I would post what song I woke up from my dream singing. Not that the songs have stopped but I have stopped posting them.

I was explaining to someone the other day, as I pulled my ear buds out of my ears and paused the iPod...Im pretty sure that I would sieze up and fall over if I had to go for too long without music. Its such an important part of my life and has been since almost as early as I can rememeber. At the age of 4 I was given my own radio and told I could tune to any radio station I wanted. So I did.

From: [identity profile] posicat.livejournal.com


I would guess that certain patterns in the music reinforce neural connections that recognize patterns. This may be one of those structures that have evolved in our mind to remember music, it is a method of archiving information in tribal man (us included). If this pattern is sensitive enough random background noise may trigger the neurons to fire rather than the song itself. Remembering the song itself may trigger that memory over and over as well, making the connection even stronger, this would be useful for archival as the song (in theory stored information) would be self-reinforcing. (Yes, I took an AI programming class in college, why do you ask?)

So, essentially we're neural-net core memory re-freshing it's memory state.

This has no basis in cold hard fact, but it seems a likely theory of the nature of the phenomenon.

From: [identity profile] frogcastle.livejournal.com

Sesame Street songs


Oh, also Sesame Street songs can be fun earworms to torture other people with. I can't tell you how fun it is to start singing "C is for Cookie and that's good enough for me" and then have people singing it days later. *insert maniacal laughter here*


From: [identity profile] frogcastle.livejournal.com

Another Solution


But if you don't want earworms - and I still think that term is awful and reminds me of a nasty parasite - another solution is to stop listening to the same music over and over. That's a habit that's just asking for it. I mean, come on! Doesn't it get on your nerves the 5th time you hear a song in the same day? It makes me want to bite someone's head off, which is another huge reason I subscribe to xm radio.

From: [identity profile] chezelliott.livejournal.com


I am currently subjecting myself to the ultimate earworm generator: VH1's Greatest Hits of the 80s (you should know that "Time After Time" is #19). I must also confess a secret weakness for VH1's "One-Hit Wonders" and some of the Time-Life music informercials, mostly because they make me reminisce, in a good-ish way.
And I love "Suddenly Seymour." Ellen Greene has the most amazing set of pipes, and I love the way the song goes from kitschy to almost operatic.
Go see "Enchanted." It's a bit predictable, but who can pass up watching Disney poke fun at themselves? And there's a dragon!
.

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