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#51
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"Aidan Stanger" wrote in message
... North Woolwich: "Don't Pay The Ferryman" nonpc "Don't Pay The Fairyman" at Queen's Park? /nonpc ;-) Ian |
#52
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"TheOneKEA" wrote in message
om... What music would be played at stations like Richmond "Surrey Seems To Be The Hardest Word" - Elton John/Blue and Ealing Broadway? "Sexual 'Ealing" by Marvin Gaye. Ian |
#53
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"Helen Deborah Vecht" wrote in message
... Edgware bus station has piped 'Baroque' music. Presumably there's not point in fixing it if it's not baroque? ;-) Ian |
#54
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In message , CJG Now
Thankfully Living In The North writes I think Brussels or somewhere plays classical music in the train stations. Suppose to sooothe the passengers. I also think the over-reactionay monkeys who manage London Underground also came up with the idea it reduces graffti and vandalism as a bit of Beethoven will put off even the hardened teenage thug. There's more to it than that. There have been a number of studies which suggest that some types of classical music (*) engage often undeveloped parts of the mind much more than others. Some people (and I make no judgements whatsoever) simply love this while others are scared stiff. (*) This is a complex area, but current research suggests that it is the essentially patterned-based styles of most 18th-century music that do the trick - hence the endless Vivaldi, Bach and Mozart. These styles differ from house, garage, club-remix or whatever because they are not mind-numbingly repetitive - when ideas comes round again they are almost always presented in subtly different ways. So, even though the listener may not (and should not be expected to) quantify what these are, the difference in musical patterning is what engages the brain - and in so doing, stops one focusing on the lateness of the train or bus. Later "classical" styles such as bleeding chunks of Wagner tend not have this effect - either you know and love it and want to hear the next 18 hours, or you dismiss it since you have no intention of sitting in a station for a very long day merely in order to hear your best-loved music. This is known as the "Classic FM" effect. Saying that. The toilets opposite Baker Street station are probably the cleanest and best enviroment non-metal box toilets I have ever been in. And they play classical music there. And you don't need a 20p to get in. Classical music can be good, but it is an umbrella term. A pop song may be good - but something emanating from the Elizabethan age or the period of Victorian Music Hall songs can sound as remote from modern pop music as a Bing Crosby hit from the 1950s. Engaging the brain in a meaningful way, however sub-consciously, is the main issue for me. -- Paul Terry |
#55
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#56
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"Cast_Iron" wrote in message
... There was an episode some years ago where a club adjacent to an underground station played a particular type of music on a Saturday night that attracted a particular type of person. Some of these people thought it amusing to play games such as throwing the ticket collectors box down the escalator, with the ticket collector still inside. I'm fascinated to know what type of music it was, and what era. I'm guessing Jazz Funk, early 80s - that seemed to have the greatest feeble lamebrain proportion of any type of music ever. (OT: I was once personally described as a "feeble lamebrain" in the NME! My proudest moment! ) -- John Rowland - Spamtrapped Transport Plans for the London Area, updated 2001 http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Acro...69/tpftla.html A man's vehicle is a symbol of his manhood. That's why my vehicle's the Piccadilly Line - It's the size of a county and it comes every two and a half minutes |
#57
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John Rowland wrote:
"Cast_Iron" wrote in message ... There was an episode some years ago where a club adjacent to an underground station played a particular type of music on a Saturday night that attracted a particular type of person. Some of these people thought it amusing to play games such as throwing the ticket collectors box down the escalator, with the ticket collector still inside. I'm fascinated to know what type of music it was, and what era. I'm guessing Jazz Funk, early 80s - that seemed to have the greatest feeble lamebrain proportion of any type of music ever. Haven't the faintest idea what variety of music it that "caused" the aggro, but it was replaced IIRC with decent 50/60s music. Your time period is right although I can't remember exactly which year. |
#58
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Ian F. wrote:
"Aidan Stanger" wrote in message ... North Woolwich: "Don't Pay The Ferryman" nonpc "Don't Pay The Fairyman" at Queen's Park? /nonpc ;-) No, the song for Queen's Park is "Innuendo" |
#59
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CJG Now Thankfully Living In The North wrote:
I think Brussels or somewhere plays classical music in the train stations. Suppose to sooothe the passengers. Not only Brussels, in fact, but almost every major station in Belgium has classical music playing; both on mainline rail, as well as on the metro. There was an experiment a few years ago in Ghent, where they played music in the trams, but that wasn't a big success, and the idea was abandonded. SticheL (Belgium) |
#60
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On Fri, 13 Feb 2004, Sam Holloway wrote:
On Thu, 12 Feb 2004 21:39:58 -0000, "pinter" wrote: "Kat" wrote in message ... In message , RayB writes Classical music was being played through the newly installed speakers in the ticket hall and on the ramp at Dagenham Heathway this morning and tonight we had Piano Music to listen to. Is this happening at other stations? Maybe someone can suggest some appropriate music for various stations. City Thameslink: 'Twenty four minutes from Tulse Hill', Carter USM tom -- Suspicion Breeds Confidence |
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