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Subject: BS: ASMR From: Donuel Date: 10 Aug 25 - 10:07 AM ASMR ASMR (Autonomous Sensory Meridian Response) is a relaxing sensation triggered by specific sounds or visuals, often described as a ``tingling' feeling in the head or spine. People watch ASMR videos for stress relief, relaxation, and sleep improvement. People can share certain triggers for ASMR, but triggers are different for most people. The bad news is that only 20% of people have this phenomenon. My trigger is the finale of Nessun Dorma. It is a feeling of well-being combined with a tingling sensation in the scalp and down the back of the neck, as experienced by some people in response to a specific gentle stimulus, often a particular sound. It's not an orgasm, which has its own spectrum of response, but it is a very pleasant sensation that can raise hairs in the back of your neck. |
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Subject: RE: BS: ASMR From: Helen Date: 10 Aug 25 - 02:19 PM Yes, Nessun Dorma! And also Max Bruch's Adagio Appassionato for violin & orchestra, Op 57. I often listen to that and then immediately play the track again. I remember the first time I ever heard it. It was on the radio in my car. I stopped at my destination but couldn't stop the music until it was over. I was crying when I got out of the car and went into the shop. I found the CD set online and bought it very soon after that. It's not just listening to a piece of music for me. It is an experience every time. |
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Subject: RE: BS: ASMR From: Stilly River Sage Date: 10 Aug 25 - 04:30 PM Yes! The second movement of Beethoven's Seventh does that for me. And Barber's Adagio for Strings. There are others. It may to tie into the first time I remember hearing these in specific contexts, it all comes flowing back. And since folks on Mudcat are here because of music, there may be high percentage of members who know exactly what this feeling is. |
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Subject: RE: BS: ASMR From: Charmion Date: 10 Aug 25 - 04:35 PM The Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis, by Ralph Vaughan-Williams. I listen to it when I need to de-stress. |
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Subject: RE: BS: ASMR From: Stilly River Sage Date: 10 Aug 25 - 04:40 PM That one also. And Vaughan Williams The Lark Ascending. |
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Subject: RE: BS: ASMR From: Backwoodsman Date: 10 Aug 25 - 04:44 PM Edward Elgar’s ‘Nimrod’ for me… |
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Subject: RE: BS: ASMR From: Helen Date: 10 Aug 25 - 05:00 PM Was there a cartoon with the second movement of Beethoven's Seventh? I have a vague memory of it. Pachelbel's Canon O Holy Night performed here by Celtic Trio and choir A lot of O'Carolan's harp compositions - too many to name. Some of Hildegarde von Bingen's compositions. |
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Subject: RE: BS: ASMR From: Helen Date: 10 Aug 25 - 06:32 PM Here are some of my favourite O'Carolan tunes which stop me in my tracks - I have to stop and listen to them every time I hear them because they speak to my soul: Bridget Cruise 3rd Air, Luke Dillon, Mrs Judge, Mrs MacDermott Roe (The Princess Royal), Michael O'Connor 2nd Air, Captain O'Kane, Eleanor Plunkett, Carolan's Welcome, Blind Mary, Carolan's Cup, Carolan's Farewell to Music, and The Fairy Queen. Carolan's Farewell to Music also brings to mind the Welsh song David of the White Rock, which is (supposedly) his song on his deathbed. These are the lyrics I learned at school and the tune in the Ivor Novello publication, Sing Care Away had the most beautiful harmony as well. I know there are different English translations of the lyrics but this is the version I know. 1. Bring me, said David, the harp I adore; I long, ere death calls me, to play it once more. Help me to reach my belov’d strings again; On widow and children, God’s blessing remain. 2. Last night I heard a kind angel thus say, “David fly home on the wings of thy lay”. Harp of my youth, and thy music, adieu; Widow and children, God’s blessing on you. |
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Subject: RE: ASMR - Autonomous Sensory Meridian Response From: keberoxu Date: 10 Aug 25 - 07:18 PM Too many to list, in terms of stimulating pieces of music. When I feel it, I know it. |
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Subject: RE: ASMR - Autonomous Sensory Meridian Response From: Helen Date: 10 Aug 25 - 07:44 PM I know what you mean, keberoxu. I remembered a thread I started - OMG, it was nearly 20 years ago, how time flies! Classical music - what makes you listen? On reading Donuel's explanation of ASMR (Autonomous Sensory Meridian Response) I realise that that is probably what I was trying to explain in the first post on that thread, on which, BTW, the last person to post was - drum roll please!! - keberoxu in 2023! Yay!! :-) |
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Subject: RE: ASMR - Autonomous Sensory Meridian Response From: GerryM Date: 10 Aug 25 - 10:02 PM Helen, it might have been "A Ham in a Role". The musical credits at https://intanibase.com/iad_entries/entry?shortID=5574#google_vignette mention Beethoven's 7th. |
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Subject: RE: ASMR - Autonomous Sensory Meridian Response From: Stilly River Sage Date: 10 Aug 25 - 11:04 PM The finale of Saint-Saëns Symphony No. 3 (the organ symphony). Gets me every time. YouTube. We're discussing a Mudcat mixtape far different than the Blue Plate specials we produced years ago. Now it can be everyone's YouTube ASMR playlist. |
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Subject: RE: ASMR - Autonomous Sensory Meridian Response From: Helen Date: 10 Aug 25 - 11:58 PM Thanks GerryM, but that wasn't the one I was vaguely remembering. I think someone at Mudcat mentioned it and I watched it but I can't remember how it related to the discussion it was in or what the music was. I just remember it was classical music. If I'm lucky I'll wake up at 2am and it will suddenly pop into my head. No wait - thank the gods for internet searches - I just searched for cartoons with classical music and... Looney Tunes | Bugs the Pianist |
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Subject: RE: ASMR - Autonomous Sensory Meridian Response From: GerryM Date: 11 Aug 25 - 03:10 AM Helen, OK, but ... you said, Beethoven's 7th, and I don't think there's any of that in there. |
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Subject: RE: ASMR - Autonomous Sensory Meridian Response From: Helen Date: 11 Aug 25 - 04:25 AM No there isn't. I just vaguely remembered a clever cartoon with classical music. It might not have been the Bugs Bunny cartoon. It might have been another one, and it might have been a different piece of music. (I'm getting old and senile, you know. :-D ) The Beethoven's 7th just reminded of a clever cartoon. Still searching. |
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Subject: RE: ASMR - Autonomous Sensory Meridian Response From: GUEST Date: 11 Aug 25 - 04:31 PM One segment of Disney's "Fantasia" is backed by a movement from Beethoven's "Pastoral". It's the one with the pegasuses (pegasi?). |
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Subject: RE: ASMR - Autonomous Sensory Meridian Response From: Helen Date: 11 Aug 25 - 07:04 PM I just listened to Beethoven's 7th and it wasn't the piece I was thinking of for the cartoon. It was one of the piano cartoons so it could have been a Tom & Jerry cartoon. |
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Subject: RE: ASMR - Autonomous Sensory Meridian Response From: GUEST,.gargoyle Date: 11 Aug 25 - 09:27 PM HELEN - It is a medley of classic tunes..... Sincerely, Gargoyle |
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Subject: RE: ASMR - Autonomous Sensory Meridian Response From: GUEST,paperback Date: 11 Aug 25 - 11:47 PM Arron Copeland is nice so is Howard Shore but in my heart of heart SCOTLAND THE BRAVE |
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Subject: RE: ASMR - Autonomous Sensory Meridian Response From: GUEST Date: 11 Aug 25 - 11:54 PM THE END OF ALL THINGS |
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Subject: RE: ASMR - Autonomous Sensory Meridian Response From: mayomick Date: 12 Aug 25 - 04:12 AM I like the one where they do the fingernails on the microphone.... |
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Subject: RE: ASMR - Autonomous Sensory Meridian Response From: Helen Date: 12 Aug 25 - 04:19 AM Fingernails on a blackboard. Now that would be the opposite of Donuel's definition of ASMR in his first post. :-( |
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Subject: RE: ASMR - Autonomous Sensory Meridian Response From: Manitas_at_home Date: 12 Aug 25 - 07:45 AM There was only one Pegasus in Greek mythology. The plural you're looking for would be flying horses. |
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Subject: RE: ASMR - Autonomous Sensory Meridian Response From: Stilly River Sage Date: 12 Aug 25 - 11:12 AM I was thinking about that, the opposites. Penderecki comes to mind as one who is not only not soothing, he's quite intentionally jarring. |
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Subject: RE: ASMR - Autonomous Sensory Meridian Response From: Stilly River Sage Date: 26 Aug 25 - 10:27 AM This morning a favorite piece that always causes this ripple of pleasure reminded me that while I don't remember the initials there is a thread about it here on Mudcat. Beethoven Romance #1 Both of them have this effect - what sublime little nuggets of music. |
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Subject: RE: ASMR - Autonomous Sensory Meridian Response From: Stilly River Sage Date: 16 Sep 25 - 11:50 AM On Jessye Norman's birthday yesterday my local station played Dido's Lament from Purcell's Dido and Aeneas. About the saddest sad song I can think of (next to the Barber mentioned above.) |
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Subject: RE: ASMR - Autonomous Sensory Meridian Response From: Stilly River Sage Date: 28 Feb 26 - 11:12 PM refresh |
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Subject: RE: ASMR - Autonomous Sensory Meridian Response From: GUEST,gillymor Date: 01 Mar 26 - 06:56 AM I experience physical sensations from a lot of musical pieces, usually when I'm not anticipating it- The Hebrew melody from Smetana's Moldau. When Planxty transitions from The Blacksmith to "Black Smithereens" on the Black album. Gives me chills. At the first note of Jimi Hendrix' guitar solo on Little Wing from the live album Hendrix in the West. The vocal duo by Tony and Maria that introduces Tonight from West Side Story. Talk about tension and release, the song seems almost anticlimactic after it. Also from WSS when the entire ensemble joins in on on Tonight at the end of the first act. What a moment. The final stage of Chopin's Barrcarole. O Mio Babbino Caro from Puccini's Gianni Schicchi, either orchestral or vocal. The crescendo at the beginning of Ravel's Daphnis et Chloe Suite. And lots more. |
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Subject: RE: ASMR - Autonomous Sensory Meridian Response From: Stilly River Sage Date: 01 Mar 26 - 11:35 AM I refreshed that last night so I could find it again today, after a friend told me about a therapist who years ago had patients choose a piece of music and it was used in some way as part of the therapy; after wearing out the original cassette (!) a long time ago she recently decided to get another copy of the same artist and performance, now on CD. However it works, whether placebo effect or something else, she feels a physical response and said that playing that again after all of this time was remarkably soothing. (We're talking in the 1970s or 80s in California's wide-ranging attitudes toward alternative treatments for things, but if it works, it works.) |
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Subject: RE: ASMR - Autonomous Sensory Meridian Response From: Helen Date: 01 Mar 26 - 03:08 PM I thought I had mentioned this 5CD set in this thread before, but maybe I did in the Classical music thread I linked to on 10 Aug 25 - 07:44 PM: Vivaldi*, John Alldis Choir, English Chamber Orchestra, Vittorio Negri – Sacred Choral Music Vol. 3 There are some amazingly beautiful pieces of music on that set, and I am hoping that one or two of them will be on my funeral playlist, e.g. on CD 1, Track 9 109 Domine Deus, Rex Coelestis and CD 5, 06 RV 635- Introduzione al Dixit, in A- 01. Ascende Laeta, on also on CD 5 Track 15 RV 595- Dixit Dominus, in D- 07. Judicabit. Too many others on that CD set to list. |
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Subject: RE: ASMR - Autonomous Sensory Meridian Response From: Helen Date: 01 Mar 26 - 03:47 PM Just listening again to some of my faves and I'm taking Introduzione al Dixit, in A- 01. Ascende Laeta off my list. I'm going to come back with a few more choices, but meanwhile: Erbarme Dich [from St. Matthew Passion] The story is that I bought my first record player in the mid '70's and the Thijs van Leer record called Introspection was one of the first vinyl records I bought. At that time I lived in a shared house with a few of my student friends. It was an old weatherboard house with a big garden in a lovely suburb. I have a clear memory of sitting in the lounge room, reading a book and listening to that album. A lovely peaceful memory. About 20 years later I bought the house, and later Hubby & I married and he moved in and we are still here. Note: we have a brick house here now but the old house brings back some memories for me including waking up in September 2001 and watching the 9-11 twin towers news reports on TV. A couple of my other choices are by Bobby McFerrin: Faure's Pavane (which Thijs van Leer also plays beautifully) and Vivaldi's cello concerto Largo. Note: I'll have to research the full name of the concerto. Yeah, I know. Some people laugh at Bobby McFerrin's song Don't Worry, Be Happy, but I saw a fantastic TV show called What is Music and McFerrin was a feature artist conducting classical music while singing his beautiful wordless accompaniments so I bought his CD called Paper Music. Beautiful! |
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Subject: RE: ASMR - Autonomous Sensory Meridian Response From: Stilly River Sage Date: 01 Mar 26 - 04:32 PM I've pulled up the piece that my friend used for a therapeutic application and likes so well - I love classical music but this wouldn't be my go-to focus and make my brain happier piece. Smetana String Quartet No. 1 "From my life". (I'd go with Má vlast or The Moldau portion of it if I was using Smetana. And I love the Bartered Bride.) |
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