Music’s Relativity

Musics-Relativity.mp3
Musics-Relativity.mp4
Musics-Relativity-Unplugged-Underground-XXIV.mp3
Musics-Relativity-Unplugged-Underground-XXIV.mp4
Musics-Relativity-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
Hey! Not so quick…
Can I listen to music
In a wormhole
(Such a hefty toll)

[Chorus]
On a far-out trip
(In a vehicle)
Lettin’ surround sound rip
(In my particle)… accelerator
(Later!)

[Bridge]
Depending on music’s relativity
(Always being with me)

[Verse 2]
Crankin’ up the tunes
It’ll be none too soon
Let it roll, roll, roll
(In a wormhole)

[Chorus]
On a far-out trip
(In a vehicle)
Lettin’ surround sound rip
(In my particle)… accelerator
(Later!)

[Bridge]
Depending on music’s relativity
(Always being with me)

[Chorus]
On a far-out trip
(In a vehicle)
Lettin’ surround sound rip
(In my particle)… accelerator
(Later!)

[Outro]
Depending on music’s relativity
(Always being with me)
This song never gets old
(At the speed of light threshold)
No, no never gets old

A SCIENCE NOTE

Theoretically — you could listen to music on a trip through a wormhole, depending on how the wormhole behaves physically, and assuming you’re in a vehicle or space where the laws of physics (including the transmission of sound and electromagnetic waves) still hold in some usable form.

Here’s how to think about it from a physics and sci-fi perspective:


🔊 1. You Need a Medium for Sound

  • Sound requires a medium like air or fluid to travel.

  • In space — including the space in or around a wormhole — there’s typically no air, so sound wouldn’t transmit externally.

  • But if you’re inside a pressurized spacecraft or suit with a functioning audio system (like headphones), you’d hear music just fine. The sound vibrations would move through the air or directly through your body.


🌀 2. Does Time Exist in the Same Way?

  • Wormholes might bend space and time, possibly creating extreme time dilation or causality paradoxes.

  • But unless the wormhole disrupts local time inside your ship, your brain and body would still perceive music as normal — you’d still hear rhythm, pitch, and flow over time.

  • If time locally ceases to behave consistently, then your experience of the music could distort — imagine time stuttering, slowing, looping, or even reversing.


🧠 3. Would You Perceive the Music the Same Way?

  • The human brain processes music across both hemispheres, combining temporal, emotional, and mathematical patterns.

  • If extreme gravitational effects altered your brain’s processing or auditory function (e.g., through tidal forces or radiation exposure), your perception of the music might change — it could sound slowed down, stretched, or “wrong.”

  • This is speculative, of course — we don’t actually know what a human would experience inside a traversable wormhole, if such things exist.


🔬 4. If the Wormhole Is Stable and Traversable…

Then:
✔ You could absolutely bring a portable music player.
✔ Your earbuds would work.
✔ Assuming you don’t get crushed by gravitational shear or evaporated by radiation, you’d hear the full track.


🎵 Conclusion:

Yes, theoretically, you can listen to music in a wormhole — as long as you survive the trip.

And maybe it would be fitting to play:

  • Pink Floyd – Echoes

  • Beethoven – Ode to Space-Time (okay, not a real title)

  • Your own track – The Physics of Music 🎶Physics of Music

From the album “Wormhole

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