I had never had an MRI
before June 2020. I have now had three, but even with all of
the time in the scanner tube, I am still having issues identifying the house
band that has been making all the sounds in the background.
Although when
most people hear the letters M.R.I., they think of Magnetic Resonance
Imaging, my brain continues to turn to music. And while some people hear
jackhammers or a cacophony, I have been spending my different time intervals in
the cylinder-shaped magnet thinking about the uniqueness of the sounds.
Could it have
been Daniel
Maman, better known by his stage name The
Alchemist,
trying to get the beats just right? Tom Morello's 1982 Fender Telecaster practicing
for the next Rage Against the Machine reunion gig? How about everyone’s
favorite Count von Count, the mysterious but friendly vampire Muppet from
Sesame Street tuning his organ? Had I simply landed inside of the arcade game Galaga?
Unfortunately, we will never know. Radiologists are not people of many
words (or clearly a sense of humor) and when I asked who got to enter his/hear
initials for the game’s high score, I just received blank stares.
For
the purpose of this post, let’s think that M.R.I. stands for Multi Recording
Interface. And for those who did not graduate from Berklee College of
Music in
Boston, MA or Belmont University in Nashville, TN, an
audio interface is a piece of hardware that expands and improves the
sonic capabilities of a computer. And in my experience, they are an
absolutely essential component in audio production.
Some strong memories jump to the forefront of my mind when thinking
of sound recording equipment. There is my former roommate and childhood
friend Danny Marcus recording on a 4-track in the living of our Washington DC
apartment. Another flashback is getting schooled on Pro Tools
by Doug Derryberry in his Brooklyn, NY recording studio. And these
days, I have my own equipment sitting in my house in
Pittsburgh, as my friend Josh Green joins me from Harlem, NY while
we figure out how to use Audacity to record our podcasts.
I know that I
am not as talented as Charlotte Gainsbourg, who made the sounds of the MRI scan
part of the music itself. Her third album, co-written and produced by
Beck, was released in 2010 and titled “IRM,” the acronym for
Imagerie par Résonance Magnétique (MRI in French), but what I am doing is
trying to keep things in perspective when dissecting a mentally heavy
procedure.
I am not sure
when I will have my next one scheduled, and multiple friends have suggested
that I request headphones the next time that I have one booked. I am open
to suggestions as to what to listen to, but maybe the soundtrack has already
been written?
Thanks for
reading!
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