Metal is good for you....

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I love metal music and listen while working from home. It actually helps me concentrate and reduces stress. For these reasons, having great gear is of utmost importance. Now if only I could get my employer to pay for my upgrades...:tongue:

\m/
 
In the early days of my hifi journey -that's the mid '80s- I have found in a friend's house ( his father was a huge jazz collector ) Led Zeppelin II and Made in Japan.
In the '90s some Suicidal Tendencies 🙄😕😛 and Rage Against the Machine, to speak of dirty guitars.
 
"Heavy Metal" could mean so many things. To some, it is Zeppelin. To others it is Gorgoroth. To me, it is neither.

So, how does the study define "Heavy Metal"? All of the above?
I keep some tungsten TIG electrodes in by bedside drawer.

Just having the metal nearby has the required effect.
I have not tried putting them under my pillow yet.

Ahgggg. No measurement results, so many will not believe me.
 
When I'm sad I don't want to listen to Happy by Pharrell, I want to listen to something sad, something that understands me. It's about connecting to the music that way. - Leah Sharman, UQ's School of Psychology
I don't want to listen to Pharrell at all, it just pisses me off irrespective of my mood before hand. What does that say about me?
 
When I'm sad I don't want to listen to Happy by Pharrell, I want to listen to something
sad, something that understands me. It's about connecting to the music that way.
Let us take Pharell out of the equation, because he doesn't belong there.
The point of the quoted paragraph is to persuade people that you fight
sadness with another sadness. That is a nonsense in my book.

So the logic behind this is when you're hungry, don't eat, find something
that makes you hungry even more and you will get rid of it. With time,
you will find out that you don't need food anymore and you will become
totally cool, 6 feet under.:drink:
 
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