The Most Calming Song in the World Isn’t Great

It’s kind of annoying, actually
The Most Calming Song in the World Isn’t Great

I would say that this week has caused a moderate to high amount of stress. As a man taunted by anxiety even when stuff is going pretty swell, I have my methods of dealing with it. One of them is to listen to calming music, as if I was putting on a playlist for an nervous dog, except in this scenario, my brain is the dog. But these past few days in particular, the usual ambient soundscapes and weird hippie handpan music werent cutting it.

So I wondered if science had put time into this pursuit, and went to find out what the most calming song in the world is supposed to be. 

Sure enough, a study popped up, with an almost too definitive answer. Among their top calming songs were a couple of the artists I expected to see, like Mozart and Enya. The runaway number one calming song, though, was something Id never heard of. When I listened, I realized that was probably for a good reason. Its called “Weightless,” and its by a British ambient band called Marconi Union. It's supposed to reduce anxiety by 65 percent, apparently specifically in people who arent me.

It was developed by the band in concert (pun intended) with scientists, and to me, that sounds like a recipe for bias. Supported by the fact that this song isnt only not calming to me, but vaguely stressful. Right away, you hear a thumping kick drum, and were off to a bad start. It sounds like a slightly fast heartbeat, which isnt generally soothing. If a sound has ever driven a character in an Edgar Allen Poe story insane? Off the “soothing list.”

The rest is pretty much par for the course for any music meant to calm the mind — cat-standing-on-a-keyboard extended synth tones, a sporadic tinkling of different bells. Then, just as the bass drum fades out, and you think, “Oh good, they told him to stop,” suddenly, whether its coming from the bells or something else, little grinding cymbal sounds pop up. By the time you get halfway through, there are what I would definitely call too many bells,” and the song seems to be increasing in volume, making me turn it down a little, instead of drifting blissfully through the soundscape.

At the 3:52 mark, theres an isolated sort of high-pitched whistle, and this song is officially stressing me out. By 5:35, they are whatever the ambient version of wailing on their instruments is. Id describe what Im hearing as the worlds quietest cacophony, like a monk carrying a bunch of prayer bowls just tripped and fell next to a lake. 

The cherry on top? The music video for the song features a fleet of drones, which just mostly makes me think about both the surveillance state and/or modern war. The last shot is one drone hovering and staring directly into camera, because nothing is more peaceful than “being watched.”

In summation, if youre stressed out and need a song to center you, dont listen to scientists or their stupid anxiety-curing songs, just stick with Willie Nelson. Now thats the good stuff.

Scroll down for the next article
Forgot Password?