Jeremy McCreary
Bought it anyway
- Region
- USA
- City
- Carlsbad, CA
I listen only to ambient sound in traffic, but listening to music with bone conduction earphones is safe enough on exercise laps around my sleepy neighborhood. Many benefits with the right music, whether or not I pedal in time with it, but especially when I do.
So 2 questions for you:
Q1. When safe to listen to music, do you make any attempt to (a) flex your cadence to sync with the beat, or conversely (b) bring music that syncs well with your preferred cadence?
Q2. If yes to (b) above, what's your preferred cadence, and what music works well with it?
NB: Not looking to get into a big debate about the wisdom of listening while riding. We have other threads for that. Let's just assume here that you have a safe place. Thanks!
Much research has been done on cycling, running, and walking with music. The many benefits are clear. When these activities are done strictly in time with the music, they're said to be synchronous. Otherwise, they're asynchronous.
Spin classes to music are generally asynchronous, but the right music can still motivate performance, elevate mood, distract from suffering, fight boredom, and make the whole session a more positive experience — all of which make you more likely to do it again.
Personally, I much prefer the synchronous route. But not so easy to find sufficiently motivating music that also syncs well with my strongly preferred 90 rpm cadence.
Why? Because motivating (aka driving, propulsive) music tends to have a tempo in the 110-140 bpm range — especially around 120 bpm. (This is no coincidence. It's apparently hard-wired into the human brain.)
So 2 questions for you:
Q1. When safe to listen to music, do you make any attempt to (a) flex your cadence to sync with the beat, or conversely (b) bring music that syncs well with your preferred cadence?
Q2. If yes to (b) above, what's your preferred cadence, and what music works well with it?
NB: Not looking to get into a big debate about the wisdom of listening while riding. We have other threads for that. Let's just assume here that you have a safe place. Thanks!
Much research has been done on cycling, running, and walking with music. The many benefits are clear. When these activities are done strictly in time with the music, they're said to be synchronous. Otherwise, they're asynchronous.
Spin classes to music are generally asynchronous, but the right music can still motivate performance, elevate mood, distract from suffering, fight boredom, and make the whole session a more positive experience — all of which make you more likely to do it again.
Personally, I much prefer the synchronous route. But not so easy to find sufficiently motivating music that also syncs well with my strongly preferred 90 rpm cadence.
Why? Because motivating (aka driving, propulsive) music tends to have a tempo in the 110-140 bpm range — especially around 120 bpm. (This is no coincidence. It's apparently hard-wired into the human brain.)
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