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Why can I listen to radio for hours but when I listen to music I actually like I feel exhausted after 1 or 2 albums?

I hope this is the right community to ask. Are radio stations doing something to songs? Or is it the playlist they use? Or is it me?

Can I achieve the "radio effect" for any music somehow?

24 comments
  • There’s a few things at play:

    • Radio stations tend to play “radio edits” which are usually versions of a song that may have a bridge or section of the song removed or shortened to fit play length requirements
    • Radio stations have commercial breaks which break up blocks of music and provide your brain with a different “variety” of sound (voices/speech) as opposed to a CD or playlist that plays music with no breaks
    • Similarly, radio stations typically have a host or DJ who will announce song names/info between tracks playing, giving your brain a brief break between songs.
    • Also: some radio stations do play songs slightly faster than their album versions play, which cab shorten a song by a handful of seconds. This allows them to cram in those announcer breaks between songs or potentially play additional ads.

      I think this is less common now than it used to be though.

  • There’s lots of reasons including psychology.

    When you listen to Radio you generally don’t know what songs will be played unless the DJ teases what’s coming. When they tease it’s always something that the vast majority will like.

    So with radio you have the anticipation factor which helps bridge the advert gap (if the station plays adverts in between tracks)

    When you listen to radio you are often distracted or doing something else.

    If you put in an album then you now exactly what order the tracks will be and unless you skip tracks will inevitably have some that are fillers. Also, you are more likely to concentrate on the music which involves more thinking. All of this leads to boredom or fatigue.

  • I'm weird as hell in that I enjoy music, but I rarely ever sit down and listen to it. Then the other day I learn that my three-year-old discovered Bush's Glycerine on the way home from daycare and has now been asking for it on our Google Home. I realize, "Dude, I fucking loved Glycerine.", and immediately set to assembling a playlist over the course of three days, made up of mostly older music I grew up with. But you bet your ass I still don't listen to it. Anyway.. That's my TED Talk on music.

  • Could be off base here, but for me an album can be a fairly emotional experience. If it's something you've spent years listening to you may be feeling emotions (knowingly or otherwise) from your past experiences. I don't know if it's the feeling you're feeling, but I often find myself pleasantly exhausted after a good album :) and it's good to take a break after a couple of those, in the same way you usually wouldn't watch several movies back to back!

  • If you're playing full albums there are so few songs on an album that are as good as the singles that get played on the radio. I bought a lot of tapes and CDs as a teenager and was very disappointment when there weren't more than a couple on the album I liked (most of which were the singles).

24 comments