"Amusia" is apparently a thing, which would be the inability to feel patterns in pitch, beat and/or rhythm in music, so I can definitely see those people not enjoying music so much. I can't relate at all, but I guess I can't exactly relate to what it's like to be blind either...
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Now that we are talking about disabilities... I didn't even consider deaf people... Perhaps some deaf people are not capable of liking music? (I suppose there are levels of deaf, as blind people do).
Deaf people can still feel vibrations from music, and in my experience tend to enjoy that quite a lot
I had a teacher once who used to work at a school for the deaf and he told us about their school dances. Apparently they would crank the bass way up so everyone could feel the vibrations, and apparently a lot of the kids would carry balloons around because you can really feel it in the balloons, it actually sounded like a pretty cool experience
Haha we used to do the balloon thing at raves
Well, that doesn't stop one from liking music, no? Music has such a wide range, there is music without rhythm/beat (or a very different understanding of the concept of "rhythm"), without melody or patterns in general. I think this just narrows down your choice, but doesn't make you hate music.
Note that I'm using these terms in their largest, most generic sense. Melody as elements of pitch with some kind of temporal progression. Beat as in a regular pulse around which sounds are organized. Rhythm as a form of temporal repetition or pattern (you can have rhythm without a beat). As far as I know, they're pretty much the fundamental differentiating elements versus what's just called noise.
I know there are types of music that stretches the limits of what most consider music, but I'm trying very hard to think about a single thing we'd call music that doesn't have at least one of those elements, and I just can't. Maybe you could come up with some examples, cause I really can't haha. I was thinking of things like Perendecki's Threnody, but it definitely has melodic elements, despite being mostly extremely ambiant and atonal/dissonant. John Cage's Prepared Piano stuff is basically all rhythm. Most ambiant music is extremely melodic.
Music was much better when I was younger and more emotionally vulnerable.
I also like music from before my time, when they used to let ugly people make it.
It's complicated.
Maybe you are just bad at finding new music you like. There's an insane amount out there.
The people who make good music are still mostly not conventionally beautiful.
There's like 3 regular-looking Swedes who make just about all popular music, isn't there?
Max Martin
Reconsider that statement. Outside of top40 there's no shortage of unattractive artists making amazing music. Music has always ranged from bad to good and ugly to attractive in about the same proportion
I also like music from before my time, when they used to let ugly people make it.
Are you implying only cute or handsome people do "music" nowadays? Because that is not true at all.
Um... You know there's millions of indie artists who are ugly making just what you are looking for, right? I listen to music all day, hardly any of it mainstream. Most of the really popular stuff is worse than a lot of the independent or small label stuff you'll find.
Dude the internet exists. You’re on it now. It’s not hard to find shit you enjoy if you put some time into it. Find a local scene. Enjoy music.
"when they used to let ugly people make it" funny comment, sad but true.
Funny comment but completely untrue, goddamn lol
Listen beyond what top40 stations play for you.
Streaming services have been a life changer for me. Previously I rarely listened to music because radio was too much blather and I never got my music collection to the point of being convenient. However since I started subscribing to a streaming service, I listen constantly, to music from various genres and time periods, and have rediscovered music I like that had previously been too much hassle.
Most importantly I discovered the genre that most spoke to me was one that I rarely heard in my region, or among people I knew
I used to not like music for a long time because my family was weirdly annoying about music. They made it uncomfortable to want to listen to it, making me feel embarrassed about it.
I know someone that doesn't like music, it's just overwhelming noise to them.
I don't think it's really possible to simply hate music. You might hate songs, or bands, or genres or styles; and those may be extremely hard to get away from making it seem like you hate all music. But human brains generally like musical form to some degree. It helps in learning and memorization and all sorts of other things.
It is,Misophonia is where you hate certain sounds.
I have that for the bathroom fan. It's the same resonant pitch as my left sinus. Gives me migraines.
For me, it's the sound of Styrofoam squeaking, dogs barking incessantly, and nails on a chalkboard (I think that's a lot of people though).
When I was young, I hated any music with vocals. I thought, just replace that vocalist with a saxophone or trumpet, and it'd be a better song.
I don't feel that way anymore.
I don't hate music, I also don't like music. I am indifferent to music. I don't seek it out at all, nor do I ever listen to it on my own.
Do songs ever get stuck in your head? Did you ever go to gigs when you were younger? What's your family's relationship with music like?
I used to regularly listen to music a few years ago, this was something I was able to really enjoy no matter the situation. But then I got depressed and I just can’t anymore.
Spotify will suggest me a song and I’ll be like « hey I kinda like this one ». I’ll listen to it the next day and it’ll feel super repetitive, as if I had listened to it hundreds of times already and it got annoying.
Thankfully it doesn’t happen with situational music like in games and movies, so I can still enjoy that. I’m also still able to listen to the songs I really loved before I got depressed (I don’t do it much though, don’t want them to get repetitive too). New music tho… I can’t :(
Some islamic fundamentalists introduced wide-ranging bans on music, for example Afghanistan under taliban rule or Iran for few initial years under Khomeini, so yes they probably have some strong opinions
I love certain music but find it terribly distracting to the point that I rarely listen.
I definitely met people who don’t care about music. And would prefer silence than music on the radio. I don’t believe they hate music in general.
I’m at an age where I’m just not as passionate about music as I was. Not saying only young people enjoy music. I’m just currently not inspired by it and hope to be so again soon.
100% agree, I love music and have been in the past passionate. I have gigs of old MP3's, tapes stacked in boxes and soft folders full of CD's. In my house I have easily more than a thousand vinyl records just sitting in their sleeves but today's music just doesn't do it for me. I think good music is out there to discover but it's just harder to find those gems these days. I blame many things but that's probably for another discussion, maybe I'm just getting old to be honest.
I live with a guy that seems to hate music. Haven't actually asked him about it because he just yells at the TV or radio if they have music on.
Huh, that must be... Weird? Imagine getting mad at all TV jingles 😂
I get a bit agitated at TV jingles but thats just because i hate advertisements in general
He just switches channel and screams about what he wants to watch not being on.
I hope this is a joke where you’re calling your two year old child “a guy you live with”.
Not hate per se, but my grandpa was very uncomfortable around any kind of "persistent noise", be it too many people talking at once (he usually spent the most part of family reunions in the garage, tinkering with his gadgets), loud machines running for a long time (he'd rather walk a few miles than sit in a car for longer than five minutes) ... or music. Then again he was a German WWII veteran who never went to therapy, so who knows what kind of memories he buried deep down ... he never talked about it.
So ... not exactly "hating all music" in the actual sense but I think he had a good reason to avoid it nonetheless.