In his brilliant satire, “The Supremacy of Uruguay,” E.B. White tells the story of Martin Casablanca, a Uruguayan patriot in New York for a convention who finds himself infected by a snippet of a song ...
You’re reading a report and trying to concentrate. The room is silent. But despite your best efforts to focus, a little snatch of melody – an “earworm” – keeps circling inside your head. Research ...
These songs — though wildly different musically — share one thing in common: they’re earworms. What are earworms? “Music that pops into your head without any deliberate effort to initiate or prolong ...
If you've watched the movie KPop Demon Hunters and see the word "golden", what happens? Pause and think about it for a moment. For those unfamiliar, nothing will come to mind. But if you've heard the ...
Earworms, or Involuntary Musical Imagery, are short, catchy tunes that repeatedly play in the mind, affecting over 90% of people weekly. These musical intrusions are often triggered by recent exposure ...
These songs — though wildly different musically — share one thing in common: they’re earworms. What are earworms? “Music that pops into your head without any deliberate effort to initiate or prolong ...
Brooklyn-based composer, drummer, and bandleader Leo Yucht released earworm, the debut album from his jazz group YUCHTET. The six-track, 45-minute record is now available for streaming everywhere and ...
When I’m sitting in my armchair, eating chocolate and finding it hard to motivate myself to exercise, a little voice in my head starts singing “You’ve got to move it, move it” to the tune of will.i.am ...
In today’s fast-paced marketing world, teams are expected to churn out impactful content without burning through time or resources. The real challenge? Keeping your brand front and center without ...
You are reading our weekly Well+Being newsletter. Sign up here to get it delivered to your inbox every Thursday. Happy Thursday! This week, we’re writing about catchy songs, intermittent fasting and ...
Colin Stetson released his sophomore album and the first in a trilogy of albums, “New History Warfare Vol. 1,” in 2008. Though often outshone by its successors, the work is still worth a visit due to ...
Rachel Feltman: For Scientific American’s Science Quickly, I’m Rachel Feltman. You know that feeling when you just can’t get a song out of your head—just a short part of it playing over and over?