timesonline.co.uk — The brains behind Dreams "Kaimin" (?good sleep?) is Dr T. Endo, a neurologist who has made a science, and a lucrative CD business, out of selecting the right music to induce sleep. He divides it into three categories: melodies that fire the imagination; those that are calming and relaxing; and music that should, within ten minutes, slow the brain
Jun 22, 2008 View in Crawl 4
Closed AccountJun 22, 2008
jigglypuff
typhoon2009Jun 22, 2008
I used to leave my radio o a very low volume when I was little, on classical music to help me go to sleep. I guess it worked. Nowadays sometimes I listen to something like Metallica's Orion... any instrumental song that's not super in-your-face heavy can get me into a sort of 'time to fall asleep' trance.
maxisboredJun 22, 2008
Slayer helps me put others to sleep, does that count?
oglebyJun 22, 2008
I dont see how people are falling asleep to rhythm-less classical music. I require hypnotic rhythms. I fall asleep to Tool's Aenima album.
chromehound47Jun 22, 2008
Music, or sound, generally, can defeinitely put you to sleep. I've used certain tones to get into a waking sleep state, which is pretty cool too.
bat_21Jun 22, 2008
Go to sleep, go to sleep, close your big, bloodshot eyes. You're a dope, you're a lug, and I hope you don't wake up.
cglissonJun 24, 2008
I've been doing this since Jr. High. Now I sleep to my iPod 90% of the time, usually to block out my wife.Postal Service, Lennon, and Sigur Ros usually do the trick.
po43292Jun 24, 2008
I digg myself up. f**k you all. :)