Paramedial Resonance

1 play (1 listener)

0 shouts

Add to my Library Share
Paramedial Resonance (PMR) traces its roots back to 2003 when an unfortunate college student participated in a research internship that required him to begin work at 7 AM, entailing leaving home at 6 AM. Since the fellow was narcoleptic, and not to mention, NOT a morning person, he ran a high risk of falling asleep at the wheel and causing a major crash on I-65 during rush hour during his commute. However, one way he could prevent himself from falling asleep was to use his voice… in this case, sing along to CDs. This is where he learned how to sing. Or ‘sing’, as is the case with him.

In 2006, this further unfortunate lab researcher had a virus invade his brain’s frontal lobes, damaging them and giving him some degree of musical ‘talent’. (No, really, frontal lobe damage is very well known to generate musical talent!)

Around this time, it was discovered during a laryngopharyngoscopy (a long name for a painful procedure involving a tube being stuck up your nose and somehow ending up in your throat) that one of this guy’s vocal cords was paralyzed due to a nerve being severed during a surgery 22 years prior. However, lucky for him, his second vocal cord had trained itself to stretch across the larynx to resonate against the stuck paralyzed vocal cord. In the medical audiology field, this is known as Paramedial Resonance. Hence the name.

PMR is currently based out of Central Indiana, USA. His only instrument is a synthesizer (i.e., all these songs were synthesized). He’ll be ready to sing in a few months upon assembly of an actual, live band. He refuses to make a fool out of himself without a band that will do the same along with him.
Read more… Edit

Top Albums



Shoutbox

Leave a comment. Log in to Last.fm or sign up (it’s free).
See all shouts

Featured Tracks

Play Free MP3 Abulia (Who Cares) 3:27
Play Free MP3 Akathisia 3:14
See all tracks

Related Journals