Singing from memory unleashes a surprising super power: you remember the precise key of your earworm:
https://phys.org/news/2024-08-memory-common-musical-superpower.html
@evamarie
I'm not at all surprised to learn this. I've always found this to be the case, even if I couldn't name the key.
@evamarie
One thing not mentioned is that many people who think they "can't sing" may be able to audiate the song in the correct key, but are not able to physically vocalize what they are hearing in their head at the same pitches. That can happen for different reasons.
That would be me 😁
@evamarie
We can rebuild you. We have the technology.
In all seriousness, you aren't broken. You just need the right teacher to help you.
@voltronic @evamarie John Bell used to say that if you hadn't learned to sing as a child, someone had stolen your song. I.e., if you needed help to sing and no one helped you learn, that was a theft of joy.
@t_heislen @voltronic @evamarie
That limits singing to a certain pre assigned standard.. we must recognize that singing comes in many forms.
@JazzCrafter @voltronic @evamarie I did not (and neither did John) intend to imply any standard other than the confidence to sing out.
Sorry if you misunderstood.
@t_heislen @voltronic @evamarie It's OK.. I just wanted to add a different, creative angle to this.. I have met those who, through many other activities, actions, thoughts, art, dance, meditations, quiet kindness and understandings .... "sing."
@JazzCrafter @t_heislen @evamarie
You just have to be taught how, and the stimuli you were exposed to as your brain was forming the relevant connections may be different from someone else's.