You might have a hard time imagining Stephen Hawking listening to Beyoncé. Now a recent study has shown a correlation between the music a person likes and their intelligence.The study was conducted by prowling around social-networking sites like Facebook and comparing students' favorite bands with their university's average SAT score.
Students who say their favorite bands are Beethoven, Bob Dylan and Sufjan Stevens get higher scores on their SATs than people who listen to Lil Wayne, whose fans are reportedly the dumbest of all.
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We do have some suspicions about the methodology at work here. The "I'm smarter than you, I don't listen to T.I." argument could pretty easily be countered with "I'm not buying the results of any study that says Billy Joel fans are smarter than people who listen to jazz."
Here's the complete list in all its infuriating glory.
Indie Dude or Ugly Lady?
Beck: The singer-songwriter may fool you into thinking he's a butter-churning Amish dame, but his synthesis of rock, blues, funk, and every other genre under the sun has made him an indie rock staple. Recent effort "Modern Guilt" is a minimalist 60's psych rock trip produced by Danger Mouse and features guest vocals from Cat Power. How's that for raisin' the barn?
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Bradford Cox: Madonna sure seems to have lost her curves and grown a few feet. Damn Kabbalah. But breathe easy, material girls--it's only lead singer of Deerhunter and mastermind of Atlas Sound. Awkward, maybe. Lanky, yes. But Cox and his band can churn out shoegaze punk like no other. Look out for "Microcastles" later this year.
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Devendra Banhart: Sorry to disappoint--we haven't discovered the first guitar-weilding bearded lady. It's the eclectic freak folk artist that's literally charmed the pants off of Natalie Portman with his impeccable eyeliner. His gender-ambiguous name and eccentric music are confusing, yes, but "Smokey Rolls Down Thunder Canyon" was considered one of the top albums of 2007.
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Chris Walla: Delicate and pensive like a fresh violet pansy, it's excusable to mistake Death Cab for Cutie guitarist for the sex with a higher emotional IQ. Walla's lush instrumental arrangements and literate, hopelessly romantic sensibilities have contributed to the band's not-so-fragile success, especially on their latest album, "Narrow Stairs".
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Conor Oberst: Your soulful eyes, your quavering voice, your poignant lyrics--it's enough to make an indie chick swoon. That is, unless you look like an indie chick with split ends and a coke-fueled pallor. Thank God your first trip to the barber in years coincided with the release of the first album from your solo project with the Mystic Valley Band. Indie chicks, re-commence swooning.
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Ben Kweller: Don't let the long hair and girlish gaze trick you--he is all man. With songs named "Fight" and "Sawdust Man" on his newest album due out in January, "Changing Horses", Kweller has transitioned from a pop/punk/folk Dashboard Confessional-type to a gritty musician and solidified his, uh, manhood.
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Dave Monks: While the fashionable scarf and peacoat screams more Sex and the City than rock star, the Tokyo Police Club singer and bassist embodies the intellectual nature of indie music (exhibit A: a song called "Tessellate"). With the recent release and critical acclaim of their first LP, Elephant Shell, expect more verbose lyrics. And, maybe, Burberry scarves.
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Evan Dando: Though he may look like a midwestern housewife, there's nothing mild-mannered about the frontman of The Lemonheads. Dando and his band fearlessly straddled rock, country, metal, and punk with positive results in both the underground and mainstream. After disappearing for years,he and a new Lemonheads lineup have re-emerged and will be releasing a new album in 2009.
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Nick Thorburn: He might have a penchant for white face paint and a womanly aesthetic, but with his numerous musical projects, he creates shockingly dark indie mash-ups of all genres. Whether it's with either of his current bands--Islands and Human Highway--Thorburn never fails to put on an intensely dramatic show. Just listen to Islands' new album, "Arm's Way".
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Ezra Koenig: Even with prep-school outfit and a mom haircut, Koenig manages to establish truckloads of credibility with his band, Vampire Weekend. A little Ivy League music mastery here, a little Paul Simon's "Graceland" there, and you get indie magic and nationwide praise. Currently, SPIN's "Best New Band" is touring the world, participating in every music festival fathomable.
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Comments:
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Thursday 19 March
By Devynn
too bad i didn't take the SAT. i took the ACT. so your study can go suck it!
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Thursday 19 March
By Justin
God. Like me.
Reply
Thursday 19 March
By Kate
I guess that makes you eclectic, lol. It would be interesting to find out the exact SAT score-music preference ratio they found for all music times.
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Thursday 19 March
By xanj
people who compare test scores with intelligence are stupid, knowledge is not the same as intelligence
Reply
Thursday 19 March
By SLL
I think this study is BS, because I feel like the music that you listen to is more reflective of the school that you attend and not the other way around. The way that the scientist went about the trial is all wrong. In my opinion when someone is fresh out of high school, they know what they like, but when they get to college they are easily influenced to listen to whatever types of music are played the most their college's functions. So it could be determined that a person who scores high on there SAT goes to a certain school (averaging a higher SAT), and then they are influenced by people already there to listen to other types of music.
I.E. i used to listen to crap... did well on my SAT... went to a better school outsdie the city I am from... and started listening to different types of music due to the new enviroment i was placed in.
Maybe if the "scientist" would have conducted his reasearch a little better he could prove a correlation. Or maybe there is a correlation. This is all my opinion anyway :)
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Monday 03 May
By Namelessnaysayer
I listen to classical music and to rock, plus a lot of metal and deatcore, and all the other " 'cores" out there. I go to a hick country school. Music does not reflect what school you go to in all cases, although it may fit coincidetally in with some people.
Sunday 10 May
By Damian
I listen to Screamo like Senses Fail and The Devil Wears Prada and I skipped a grade... so wtf now?
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