Is it possible to get high off dubstep




















Instead, she said her son attended Identity Fest and died of cardiac arrest after ingesting a mix of Ecstasy, amphetamines and marijuana. For some musicians, the heavy drug culture that continues to flourish with the electronica scene has become unsettling reality at massive festivals like Bisco. Timbre Coup played at Bisco in and , but made a decision not to return this year. Both Live Nation, the company organizing Identity Fest, and MCP Presents, the producer of Camp Bisco, declined to comment about the drug culture at their respective events or the medical emergencies.

Nevertheless, the two events had eerily similar troubles with drug overdoses. Bisco had 35 fans seek medical treatment at Ellis Hospital over three days, with 12 being admitted — primarily for drug overdoses. Identity Fest sent 22 people to hospitals, with four being admitted in critical condition, excluding the two fans who died.

The confusion of what drugs were circulating at such concerts also makes treating overdose cases more difficult, said Dr. Many of the people who overdosed at Bisco were unsure of what they had taken or could only identify the substances by ever-evolving street names.

Barrowman said the majority of overdoses coming into the Ellis emergency room were people who had taken a number of substances. This year an even larger number of Bisco fans receiving treatment from Ellis ended up in intensive care, said Dr. Perhaps even more disturbing was the degree of damage incurred by those who had overdosed: long lasting seizures, muscle breakdown, clogged kidneys and respiratory failure.

They fall into everything, break stuff, don't move out of the way of incoming traffic, slobber over bouncers which just infuriates them and generally FAIL at any level of dignity. And just look at you in confusion when you ask them to do anything, especially wipe their face. Looking like a brain-dead dribbling zombie with your mouth wide open and a crusty white polo is not a good look.

Beyond the statistically monitored rise in usage and the anecdotal evidence, it's also true that certain drugs become "It drugs": their effects come to define the mood of an era, affecting people who never actually take the substance in question.

Amphetamines defined punk and postpunk; there was a talk-talk speediness, a brittle, irritable feel of intellectual unrest to British music culture at that time which is why I picked Totally Wired as a title for the companion volume to Rip It Up.

LSD, via not just the sounds but the album covers and poster art and clothing styles, affected far more people in the Sixties than ever actually took acid. Ecstasy, likewise, set the tone for much of the Nineties. The fact that K has been a fixture on the clubland drug menu for a good while wouldn't necessarily prevent it from being suddenly promoted to "It drug" status.

Sometimes chemicals are "waiting" for the social conditions to be ripe and for the exact right sound that synergises with their effects to arrive. What about wonky as music? I'm digging the dubstep-aligned sector of wonky-Zomby, Joker, and others associated with the Hyperdub label. But a lot of the other stuff that gets called "wonky" has more to do with underground hip-hop than dubstep.

And a lot of it just sounds like second-rate J Dilla. This sort of wonky is a bit like trip-hop meets 8-bit chip-hop, anyone? Quite arresting, at first, but over the long DJ mix haul, rather grating: less head-nod, more headache. Musical hallucinations are a form of auditory hallucinations , in which patients hear songs, instrumental music or tunes, even though no such music is actuallyplaying.

Most patients realize they are hallucinating , andfind the music intrusive and occasionallyunpleasant. Irvin Eykman Professional.

Can music make you cry? The first finding is that being moved to tears by music is not unusual. The majority 63 percent reported feelingsad when music made them cry , and Zora Gorbe Professional. Why does music feel like a drug? Now neurologists report that this human response to music -- which has existed for thousands of years, acrosscultures around the world -- involves dopamine, the same chemicalin the brain that is associated with the intense pleasurepeople get from more tangible rewards such as food or addictive drugs.

Romero Patzschke Explainer. Can music make you smarter? Playing a musical instrument makes you smarter ,it has been claimed. New research suggests that regularly playingan instrument changes the shape and power of the brain and may beused in therapy to improve cognitive skills.

It can evenincrease IQ by seven points in both children and adults, accordingto researchers. Alexis Niso Explainer. What is Idosing? I-Doser is an application for the playback ofproprietary audio content.

The developer claims the separatelypurchasable content aims to simulate specific mental states throughthe use of binaural beats, some of it is named after variousrecreational drugs. Felicidad Dunhoo Explainer. Why do certain songs give you goosebumps?

Music can send chills up some people's spines and give them goosebumps. Accordingto new research, this could mean they experience more intenseemotions. Goosebumps are actually part of our fight orflight response. It could be linked to our brains releasingdopamine, a reward hormone. For the full list of songs that students in an earlier, larger study found chill-inducing, click here and go to Table S1.

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