Bass Function Collapse: Difference between revisions

From FizzWiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Created page with "Bass function collapse is the phenomenon of hearing music through your phone speakers, and then putting on your headphones to hear the bass, only to find out that the bass notes (and therefore the chords) are different from what your phone lead you to believe. This phenomenon can be especially frustrating if you, having initially listened on a phone, automatically filled in the gaps with notes that sound better than what ended up being on the recording. It's thought by..."
 
TBM (talk | contribs)
m Some grammar corrections (pls check if the corrections are correct if needed)
Tags: Visual edit Mobile edit Mobile web edit Advanced mobile edit
 
(One intermediate revision by one other user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
Bass function collapse is the phenomenon of hearing music through your phone speakers, and then putting on your headphones to hear the bass, only to find out that the bass notes (and therefore the chords) are different from what your phone lead you to believe. This phenomenon can be especially frustrating if you, having initially listened on a phone, automatically filled in the gaps with notes that sound better than what ended up being on the recording.
Bass function collapse is the phenomenon of hearing music through your phone speakers, and then putting on your headphones to hear the bass, only to find out that the bass notes (and therefore the chords) are different from what your phone led you to believe. This phenomenon can be especially frustrating if you, having initially listened on a phone, automatically filled in the gaps with notes that sound better than what ended up being on the recording.


It's thought by some that in the era of social media, this phenomenon can be exploited by musicians to go viral by intentionally releasing music that sounds impossibly good on a phone (at the cost of it's actual collapsed version).
It's thought by some that in the era of social media, this phenomenon can be exploited by musicians to go viral by intentionally releasing music that sounds impossibly good on a phone (at the cost of its actual collapsed version).


"I heard this song on TikTok and looked it up after, but I was really disappointed with the bass function collapse."
"I heard this song on TikTok and looked it up afterwards, but I was really disappointed with the bass function collapse."


"The bass function collapse on this song is brutal. Hearing it with headphones makes it surprisingly unlistenable."
"The bass function collapse on this song is brutal. Hearing it with headphones makes it surprisingly unlistenable."
[[Category:Music Theory]]
[[Category:Music Theory]]
[[Category:Sound Design]]

Latest revision as of 04:29, 12 June 2026

Bass function collapse is the phenomenon of hearing music through your phone speakers, and then putting on your headphones to hear the bass, only to find out that the bass notes (and therefore the chords) are different from what your phone led you to believe. This phenomenon can be especially frustrating if you, having initially listened on a phone, automatically filled in the gaps with notes that sound better than what ended up being on the recording.

It's thought by some that in the era of social media, this phenomenon can be exploited by musicians to go viral by intentionally releasing music that sounds impossibly good on a phone (at the cost of its actual collapsed version).

"I heard this song on TikTok and looked it up afterwards, but I was really disappointed with the bass function collapse."

"The bass function collapse on this song is brutal. Hearing it with headphones makes it surprisingly unlistenable."