The soundtrack to Xanadu.
I was laughing so hard this morning listening to them discuss and play this.
It's got a nice beat, Olivia Newton-John isn't too bad singer...

Moderator: Modern Buddy Staff
I'd never wear both, it's illegal most places, and you want to hear traffic. I wear one sometimes, and keep it down pretty low. I don't do it very often, but sometimes I just need it.JettaKnight wrote: I'm gonna firmly assume that MP3 player and ear buds are way out of the question.
I haven't seen many successful speaker systems for scooters. However, I believe you can listen safely at low levels, either by using one earbud (which is actually legal in many states) or helmet headphones (that velcro into your helmet but aren't IN your ears so they allow more ambient sound. Or even...Lostmycage wrote:Quick question...
How do you safely listen to music while on a scooter? I'm gonna firmly assume that MP3 player and ear buds are way out of the question. I think the only thing I'll miss on my morning commute is Top Tracks on XM radio. Anyone have a small, but powerful enough speaker system that will work with a portable XM unit or Ipod?
you sir have just become one of my favorite board members...lol I'm telling you though nothing beats the theme song to Knight Rider ...Hahahahaillnoise wrote:My favorite riding music lately is:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IL45YOtbuy0
and
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=siJnuEeY7Ug
and stuff like that. Not normally my thing, but long, mellow repetitive songs keep me focused somehow.
Well, no music is the safest, for sure, but you can mitigate the risk by doing the one-ear-keep-it-low-remove-the-tempation-of-goofing-with-the-ipod-while-you're-riding route. It's all about your comfort level and risk assessment.Lostmycage wrote:I'm perfectly willing to forgo the music all together if means uncompromised safety. But I am hopeful for some alternatives.
Why not? (I'm being serious. Stupid, too, maybe, but serious.) I thought noise cancelling headphones were made to cancel out background noise, the wind-in-the-helmet/keep-you-from-hearing-the-turn-dinker kind of noise. I'm confused.illnoise wrote:...(Obviously you don't want to use a noise-cancelling earbud, btw)
Bb.
Noise canceling headphones work by taking the ambient sound around you (not just wind, but all of it- including blinkers, horns, traffic noise, etc) and feeding that same sound through the speakers but 180 degrees out of phase, which somewhat effectively cancels out the original sound. So, noise canceling headphones of any kind make it so (if they worked perfectly) all you hear is the music you are listening to and NOTHING else. Therefore, they would be bad!Syd wrote:Why not? (I'm being serious. Stupid, too, maybe, but serious.) I thought noise cancelling headphones were made to cancel out background noise, the wind-in-the-helmet/keep-you-from-hearing-the-turn-dinker kind of noise. I'm confused.illnoise wrote:...(Obviously you don't want to use a noise-cancelling earbud, btw)
Bb.
With the added wind from the windshield, wind noise is enough to fatigue me. Reducing fatigue is the best way to stay safe and alert. Plus I do a modest about of audio engineering so hearing is important to me. FWIW, WebBikeWorld recommends always wears earplugs.illnoise wrote:I'd never wear both, it's illegal most places, and you want to hear traffic. I wear one sometimes, and keep it down pretty low. I don't do it very often, but sometimes I just need it.JettaKnight wrote: I'm gonna firmly assume that MP3 player and ear buds are way out of the question.
Helmet/road noise has never bothered me enough to wear earplugs.
It's not all that hard.sargelee71 wrote:bunny, very nice choice! How can ANYONE resist Olivia Newton-John???? Really, how?
I totally would've paid money to see that--maybe not "good" money, but money nevertheless.ericalm wrote:It's not all that hard.sargelee71 wrote:bunny, very nice choice! How can ANYONE resist Olivia Newton-John???? Really, how?
In college, I was in a tribute band called OliviaNewtonJohnCougarMellanCamperVanBeethoven. There was one rehearsal, then we called it quits over creative differences. Really, we could not have lived up to a name like that, especially since there were like 8 people in the band but only four of us played instruments and one of those was harmonica. Another was the spoons. I've no doubt that if we'd only persevered, we could have been huge. Huger than Dred Zeppelin huge.
ha! I still own it on vinyl.bunny wrote:Thanks to my fave morning talk show gang...
The soundtrack to Xanadu.
I was laughing so hard this morning listening to them discuss and play this.
It's got a nice beat, Olivia Newton-John isn't too bad singer...
No, I wasn't quite hip enough to be into them back then. They're not really my thing, but I like a little bit of everything. I played Moody for my 12-year old neighbor and she was making fun of it the first couple times she heard it, and now it's like her favorite song.sargelee71 wrote:Illnoise, did you see ESG in Chicago in August of 2001 at Ladyfest Midwest?