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Why would a deaf person associate suspense with vibration? The audio adds an element to the presentation - but only for those who can interpret the intent. For someone who is deaf, you may as well run a jackhammer in the next room. |
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I know a deaf guy who loves clubbing, and oddly enough, dancing. He's always right up at the front by the speakers, and he dances to the bass kick and any other bass lines that might happen to be there. |
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Even stranger is that he has really good taste in music. |
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Yeah, a good bass line is felt, and it's true, deaf have excellent taste in music. I'm profound...ly deaf. |
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there's always one - my ex was fairly deaf (he had selective hearing) and his taste in music was appalling. |
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The only selective hearing I've come across is the nocturnal deafness one that many men seem to develop after they have babies. |
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I have a friend who has a condition called Ushers syndrome. (See link) She was born deaf and never really got the hang of speaking and over the last 30 years has been going blind. She loves music.
In the past I've taken her to Dub nights and to some hard house nights in nightclubs. She feels the music and knows how to move.
I've given her an acoustic guitar, mouth organ and a keyboard to play. The guitar she feels through her stomach, mouth organ - lips and the keyboard she plays for the sensation.
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