• @Varyk
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    598 months ago

    Ahahaha. Love it

    • @[email protected]
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      8 months ago

      least brutal 3-year-old/freshly born.

      I’m imagining toddlers growing up to hate their parents’ music taste, because they already fucking hated it when they played it to them when they were a fetus in utero.

      The dad hyped up “fuck yeah I’m gonna teach this kid to love Slayer because I’m playing it to him now when they’re in there!”. And then they hate it like “THIS IS WHAT THAT SHIT WAS, I HATED IT ALL THE FUCKING TIME, FUCK YOU!”

      • @can
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        208 months ago

        My kid’s going to listen to In Utero, in utero, whether they like it or not.

        • agentshags
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          18 months ago

          They are going to listen to to it and decide, nevermind ;p

      • @[email protected]
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        8 months ago

        Like there was for a while the whole “Play Mozart/Beethoven to your kid in the womb and they’ll be smarter” and shit - there’s no way everyone universally likes classical music. I know several older people who don’t enjoy music at all, which just seems bizarre.

        It’s not like every kids gonna pop out and be like “That Mozart’s Requiem was some shit, man! Play it again!”.

        • @[email protected]
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          8 months ago

          It’s also a fucking dumb approach to making the kid smart anyways. You don’t need a high iq to appreciate classical music, and there is nothing inherently intelligent about listening to music

          • @insomniac
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            118 months ago

            There is evidence listening to music in your native language is good for language development. Probably any pop music is more educational than classical music to a baby.

          • @[email protected]
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            38 months ago

            Yeah well dumb people will try dumb ways to magically make their dumb kids smart. Wicked smaht. We played them Mozart 24/7 so they’d be smaht and look at him. So smaht. And the kid grows up to be an insomniac serial killer who grew dissecting any animals they got their hands on.

        • @[email protected]
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          38 months ago

          Music wasn’t always so easily accessible as it is now. I think really only the radio was something everyone would have access to. If you had vinyl, CDs etc then you were at least somewhat musically inclined and some folks would just not be and never really get into it or invest in getting their own music. Not that they would literally never hear or listen to music but it wasn’t one of their hobbies. Compared to today where we all have access to music on demand and it would be weird if you don’t have at least some preferences or something.

      • Turun
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        148 months ago

        Young kids do not have the mental capacity to differentiate between “I learned something new” and “I always had this opinion”. They are simply incapable of the former position.

        There are psychology experiments with children that show this effect, it’s pretty wild.

        • @[email protected]
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          78 months ago

          Yeah chilhood is insane and super interesting the way we process information and emotions and the weird reality we’ve just been dragged into.

      • @Corkyskog
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        28 months ago

        I would sing my daughter Johnny Cash in NICU. She loves it now. Best part is the chords tend to be easy if she wants to learn to play, or if I ever want to learn LOL

        • @[email protected]
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          08 months ago

          If she ever expresses an interest, maybe even without, buy a guitar and learn with her. Like you’re teaching, but you’re actually learning with her. Bonding x1000. You can both sing or take turns if it’s too difficult to play and sing from the get-go.

          • @Corkyskog
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            18 months ago

            Oh just because I don’t know how to play doesn’t mean I own a few guitars haha. She is set if she ever decided to play

            • @[email protected]
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              8 months ago

              Oh haha, perfect. You have a ukulele? I highly recommend one even just for you if you want to learn. There’s something weirdly inoffensive and less threatening about a uke that it’s easier to approach while it’s literally just a mini guitar with four strings. I’ve played guitar since I was under 10 years old and I have half a dozen guitars, but I find myself playing most on these tiny, cute guitars. Like you have a minute till the water’s boiling, you can just grab it for a second and chuck it back on the corner of the sofa. Like you’re not “really playing” - you’re just killing time, but you actually are.

              Also just the fact that it has less strings literally makes it less difficult and you can still play it like a guitar. I kind of hate this trend that everyone plays it like they’re on vacation in Hawaii, because it literally is just a tiny guitar. It’s the perfect starter guitar.

              • @Corkyskog
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                18 months ago

                I don’t have a Ukulele, just an acoustic guitar I inherited from my grandma and another hybrid acoustic electric that I paid a decent chunk of change for… I also have two violins (don’t ask why) Ukulele sounds like a good thing, I often play around with the guitars when I am bored or want to annoy my wife.

                Is the finger positioning easier on a Ukulele? That’s what I have the most trouble with, I don’t have long fingers, so getting all the strings pressed firmly is challenging.

                • @[email protected]
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                  08 months ago

                  I’d say it’s easier, already because there are less strings so the amount of fingers needed and frets to press are less. Like you can play an E minor chord with just one finger on one string. The standard tuning is like the highest 4 strings of a normal guitar. I’d say the size can make it softer on the fingers as well. Other than that it’s literally just a tiny guitar. Plus you van get one for pocket change or even a decent one for less than a 100€/€. Also because it’s so small you can take it literally anywhere.

                  • @Corkyskog
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                    18 months ago

                    It’s already bought…(I have an addiction to collecting instrumenta for some reason) got a cheap starter for like $70. I am pumped for it to come in. I feel like there is a chance I could play some basic things on it after researching the chords adjustment and some tabs for certain songs. Perfect timing because my daughter just had an operation, so now she can hear sound perfectly, where before it was muffled.

                    At what age do you start them? She isn’t 2 yet, so probably some time.