7 September 2008 - Posted in AskFreelancers, Freelance, Interviews

AskFreelancers: Music you listen to when working

AskFreelancers is where I ask freelancers a question, this time I asked the question, “What styles or artists do you listen to when working on contracts”. Personally I like to listen to music without lyrics when I am coding because it requires concentration and I often find myself distracted as I start to sing along, so I tend to prefer more jazz and chillout music, however when I am designing I tend to listen to more Indie and the older tunes that my parents would listen to.

I asked the question on the FreelanceSwitch forums and it was quite clear that most people preferred more relaxed lyric free music as well when they were working with popular artists including Steve Vai, The Beatles and Bon Jovi. Below are some of the best answers that the freelancers gave, complete with links to the artists last.fm profiles if you fancy a listen.

Thomas Byttebier (bytte) of The Hot Seat said:

I have found that when I need to write code and think logically that I can’t concentrate when there’s music on with a singer and much dynamism so in this case I mostly listen to instrumental music that has not much dynamism. I’m thinking of ambient, noise, minimalist music. It helps me to get into “the zone” - working focused with not much distraction. Something that helps even more to reach “the zone” is listening to this kind of music with headphones. It’s like it’s a massage for the brain. Bands are Loscil, Fuck Buttons, Stars of the Lid, Yellow Swans, Oren Ambarchi, Black Dice, Four Tet, Zach Hill projects, Grails, Tortoise, Tim Hecker, Tarentel, Pan Sonic, Isan, Ignatz, John Zorn, Fennesz, Susumu Yokota, Flössin, The Drift, White Rainbow

When I’m designing I can take all kinds of music and even prefer non-instrumental, dynamic music. Everything indie, post-punk…

Last.fm is a great resource for new music. You can check out my profile at http://www.last.fm/user/bytte (and by merging this post with my last.fm profile you can clearly know whether I’m coding or designing at the moment… :) )

Matt Hill of Frisk Design agreed:

Yep, I’m the same — I can’t listen to music when I’m doing codey stuff.

But if I’m designing or doing HTML/CSS stuff that I find straightforward, then I’ll listen to anything. I’m currently going through a phase of female solo vocalists of different genres. Currently liking Duffy, Beth Rowley. But Pink Floyd, The Beatles and a whole plethora of rock, pop and classical is never far away.

and Dinsky of GreenBook said:

I have a very wide range of songs in my “working” playlist. For me, the music usually serves the purpose of blocking everything else out. It’s on, but I’m not actively listening to it. HOWEVER, what’s going on in my headphones definitely has a big impact on how I work.

It all depends on the project. For example:
While I’m working on the grass roots spoken word festival artwork, or the small town art supplies store, my headphones are full of Neil Young, Bob Dylan, Joni Mitchell and Devendra Banhart.
When I’m working on less-artsy projects such as my personal trainer’s promo, or the cleaning company’s website, it tends to swing the way of Arcade Fire, Early David Bowie, and Black Rebel Motorcycle Club.

“I think the key is in listening to music that I already know very very well. This way, it doesn’t pull me out of the zone I’m in.”

When designing my bf’s next album cover, not only do I listen to the album I’m designing for, but also the artists that have influenced it. In this case, U2 and ACDC.
During personal projects such as GreenBook, or a pro bono logo for the animal shelter, I listen to a mixture of all of these artists.
Of course, the Beatles are prevalent throughout no matter what I’m working on.

For me, I think the key is in listening to music that I already know very very well. This way, it doesn’t pull me out of the zone I’m in. Instead, it acts like a wall between me and the rest of the house and helps me concentrate on what I’m doing. It also helps me out a lot to have a constant stream of creativity and art going through my ears, it keeps my own creative juices flowing!

Conclusion

As you can probably see, it is common when doing jobs that require concentration such as coding we tend to opt for lyricless music which puts us into the “zone” and for designing we choose Artists that inspire us. What do you listen to when working? Do you have favourite artists that help in your inspiration? Leave your comments below and if you want to view the forum thread to see what other members said, you can do so here.

Image Credit: felipedan

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10 Comments

  1. Nick Lewis said...

    Personally, my favorite genre is classical piano music. I think Chopin, and Beethoven work best. However I’ll also listen to jazz — usually Monk, Ellington, or Hancock. (yeah, I wanted to be a classical pianist, but ended up scooping ice cream and packing boxes: nothing like that kind of job to motivate you to learn how to design, and build websites for money! :-D ).

    What seems most important to me is that the music doesn’t have vocalists. Words are very distracting for me. I feel like hearing words, even if I’m not listening to them, requires brain power that would be better put to the task at hand. Its words that I’m hearing in the office that drives me to put on headphones in the first place.

    Nice sport coat!

    September 8th, 2008 at 3:00 am

  2. Stellaris said...

    I like to listen to ambient and space stuff when marking up pages, partly because my box is a little loud. All-time faves are Carbon Based Lifeforms and Dargaard.

    Anything too aggressive distracts me lots, so while I really dig the new Slipknot album, it’s not the best choice for concentrated work. I believe that the music you listen to can easily influence your output in general, so I try to go for something calm.

    September 8th, 2008 at 8:27 am

  3. Eli said...

    Trance/techno/ambient, soft kinda music for me, although I like it loud and on good headphones (got these ones).

    DJ Shah and Armin Van Buuren are a good place to start.

    September 8th, 2008 at 9:25 am

  4. Brian said...

    I listen to a pretty wide variety of music, as you can see from my last.fm page at http://last.fm/users/CaponeX. And if I’m not listening to music from my own collection, I wind up streaming in XFM Manchester from the UK. Keeps me going and gets my creative juices flowing.

    September 8th, 2008 at 1:00 pm

  5. Mella said...

    I’m also an ambient fan. I find that the drone puts my mind in a state conducive to creativity.

    Brian Eno, Hammock, The Album Leaf, Sigur Ros, and especially Stars of the Lid. I usually just create a Last.FM station playing “Music like Stars of the Lid.”

    I just wish we still had access to Pandora here in Canada, because that was much better than Last.FM at finding music that I’m referring to. In Last.FM, some people tend to apply the term “Ambient” to artists that I would consider far from it.

    September 8th, 2008 at 1:43 pm

  6. Matt said...

    Depending on the mood, and or the project/deadlines. I personally like piano heavy Jazz, but that is just me.

    September 9th, 2008 at 1:45 am

  7. Andris said...

    I’m a melodycore-addict. My favourite bands while working are: Lagwagon, NOFX, No Use For A Name, The Ataris, Bad Astronaut

    check out my last.fm-profile:
    last.fm/user/linzprod

    September 10th, 2008 at 9:25 am

  8. 5ivedance said...

    Personally like GHIBLI piano, hoho..Spirited Away

    September 14th, 2008 at 7:26 pm

  9. Haitham said...

    wow i’m surprised tech-house/minimal is not mpore popular with designers … am I alone?

    Booka Shade, Steve Bug, M.A.N.D.Y. … stuff like that, especially Get Physical

    podcasts are good too, cuz its a long track without switching to iTunes or whatever… deep house cat is good, gareth emery podcast, release yourself … stuff like that .. oh and radio 1 essential mixes

    March 25th, 2009 at 6:24 am

  10. Haris said...

    Thanks for the Information

    April 15th, 2009 at 4:41 pm

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