Music

Study Soundtracks: What Gets You Through Deadline Season?

As deadline season of first semester swiftly approaches at Cardiff University, we asked some of our contributors what they listen to whilst typing away in the ASSL.

   Words by Alice Lumley

As someone with ADHD, it is essential for me to have music playing whilst I attempt to study. It must be music without lyrics, or there may end up being accidents (like the time I wrote half of Taylor SwiftÔÇÖs lyrics into an essay about politics). I believe I have hit the jackpot with the artist Four Tet. They are an electronic ÔÇÿbandÔÇÖ from London, who specialise in making music that I associate with cool nightclub scenes in films that you were always envious of, but disheartened when you found out they werenÔÇÖt real. I need music that makes me excited to work and stops me from falling asleep ÔÇô and this is the only artist that has succeeded at that. Their unique beats and sounds tickle parts of my brain I did not know existed.

However, if you search for them on Spotify and an artist with a lot of unintelligible symbols comes up ÔÇô fear not, that is him. Happy studying!

Words by Haris Hussnain

Outside of studying, I like listening to indie music and power metal. However, the soundtracks I listen to whilst revising or writing essays are a bit unorthodox and can be found in old Nintendo games. It is mostly Crazy Frog racer soundtracks, with Super Mario being played occasionally. I associate these tracks with playing on old Nintendo consoles, so it helps when doing university work by getting rid of any stressful, negative emotions.

Words by Leona Franke 

If I donÔÇÖt listen to music whilst making my way through required reading, or writing an essay, I feel like Jack Torrance from The Shining ÔÇô tapping away at my keyboard to empty silence. The uncanny quiet is honestly unbearable to me, but throughout the course of University, IÔÇÖve found that I keep returning to a select few artists in my Spotify. Not only this, but there seems to be one artist that reigns triumphant in my studies. I personally cannot comprehend doing any work at all if I donÔÇÖt have the familiar voice of Nick Drake in my ears. Whilst I have read and written plenty of different things over the last three years, I always just know that his album ÔÇ£Five Leaves LeftÔÇØ will forever set the mood. Maybe itÔÇÖs the calming guitar, the rich sound of every chord, or maybe it is the natural poetry that came from him, or maybe itÔÇÖs just the warm hug of a familiar album. Whilst Drake may never have visited Cardiff, IÔÇÖll forever associate those red gates of the ASSL with him. It is funny how music can do that.

Words by Caitlin Evans

ItÔÇÖs October, weÔÇÖve just settled back into uni life, and the deadlines are already lurking. The soundtrack of the season? Study music. Apologies if youÔÇÖre a silent-studier, but please continue reading for some top-tier music recs.

I cannot study in silence without being sucked into a whirlpool of my own thoughts. IÔÇÖm sure many of you are the same, and everyone has different tastes (for example, my housemate listens to Mario Kart music) but here are my personal favourites, to help inspire your study soundtracks.

SpotifyÔÇÖs ÔÇÿIndie RoadtripÔÇÖ ÔÇô Basic? Slightly. Effective? Absolutely. Something about soft indie music soothes my brain into study mode.

LoFi beats ÔÇô This is magic! I donÔÇÖt think I have ever stayed focused for as long as I have listened to lofi beats. I use SpotifyÔÇÖs ready-made playlists, and they work an absolute charm.

Disney soundtracks ÔÇô Okay, hear me out. ÔÇÿBe our GuestÔÇÖ from Beauty and the Beast is surprisingly motivational study music.

Finally, honourable mentions go to any form of classical music, a dark academia playlist if you want to feel like a Hogwarts student, and Taylor Swift (literally, any Taylor Swift album).

Go create those playlists, and letÔÇÖs get through this semester!

Words by Billy Edwards

Study music, then! In advance – this is going to be a bit scattershot. WeÔÇÖll start with English Folk Rock of the 60/70ÔÇÖs ÔÇô an obsession in first year that turned out to be a chilled, pastoral treat. Some recommended albums are Fairport ConventionÔÇÖs ÔÇ£UnhalfbrickingÔÇØ, John MartynÔÇÖs ÔÇ£Bless The WeatherÔÇØ, anything with Sandy Denny, Tim BuckleyÔÇÖs ÔÇ£Happy SadÔÇØ (his son JeffÔÇÖs ÔÇ£GraceÔÇØ isnÔÇÖt bad, either), and of course Nick DrakeÔÇÖs evergreen ÔÇ£Pink MoonÔÇØ, though all three of his albums will enrich your life and studying tenfold. However, sometimes you just want to get down to it, breeze through work and take it all out on the keyboard ÔÇô ÔÇ£Entertainment!ÔÇØ by Gang of Four, ÔÇ£Pink FlagÔÇØ by Wire, ÔÇ£Led Zeppelin IIÔÇØ, and everything by The Clash I regularly blasted through first year. Sometimes work can take a lot from you, and so you require something to heal. Here you need Joni MitchellÔÇÖs ÔÇ£BlueÔÇØ or ÔÇ£HejiraÔÇØ. ÔÇ£Astral WeeksÔÇØ by Van Morrison, everything Neil Young did in the 1970s, and RadioheadÔÇÖs ÔÇ£In RainbowsÔÇØ were albums I turned to. Few things are as calming as AmericaÔÇÖs greatest band, The Beach Boys ÔÇô try ÔÇ£SurfÔÇÖs UpÔÇØ or ÔÇ£SunflowerÔÇØ, and of course ÔÇ£Pet SoundsÔÇØ. And then thereÔÇÖs jazzÔǪ 

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