Thursday, May 27, 2021

Singing Along

I pulled up at a stop light even with a young woman in the next lane. Though the window was closed, I could see that she was singing moderately loudly. Is there something inherently social about music that bids us to sing along? It can be suppressed, certainly, but so many of us do it even when alone that I conclude there must be something natural about it, something evolutionary. We can all watch a performance, but when those around us sing there is some movement toward joining them, at least at some level of a hum. It could be learned, as we do teach children to sing a long with us for both instructional and social reasons. Yet I think not. Not all families teach their children to sing.

It is not universal.  There is a continuum, and I am at the far end of it, rumble-humbling a bass line to everything I hear, though often audible only to myself. I hope to come back as a cello in my next life. Or perhaps I was one in a previous life. It is one more place where I have few filters, happily or sadly. 

There are those who have so little interest in music that the fit does not take them and they ignore what is going on about them with impassive faces. Though not always.  I have caught a few of those singing in the most surprising places.

5 comments:

Sam L. said...

If I "sing along", I do it quietly. Don't want to shatter the windshild, doncha know....

Mike Guenther said...

Nothing wrong with singing along with a favorite song or songs. I will say that the early rock n roll songs of the late 50's and early 60's are the easiest to sing along with.

Deevs said...

I don't listen to music that often anymore, but I do like singing along. However, I like singing in general. I'll sing to myself when the only accompaniment is in my head. I keep the level appropriately low if anyone is likely to walk up on me, but not so much when I'm definitely by myself.

Not sure how to interpret why we like singing together, though. Just communal bonding? I dunno, but for me there is no greater music than multiple human voices coming together in harmony. So, whatever the reason, it seems important. I know I'm not alone in this, but for me there's a spiritual aspect to singing that isn't limited to singing songs of praise.

Unknown said...

'Not sure how to interpret why we like singing together, though.'/?
Just plain fun for many folks,young and old.
Me,I like listening.

Texan99 said...

I'm almost incapable of failing to sing along if I know a harmony, but I'd never sing along in unison.