IELTS Speaking for Success - 🎼 Music (S08E30) + Transcript
Episode Date: April 4, 2023What kinds of music do you like to listen to? When did you start listening to that type of music? How much time do you spend listening to music every day? When do you listen to music? How do you feel ...when you listen to music? Tune in and have a great day! - Book a class with Rory here: https://calendly.com/rory-duncan89/successwithrory Get exclusive episodes on IELTS Speaking parts 1, 2, and 3: https://linktr.ee/sfspremium Our course on Phrasal Verbs: https://successwithielts.com/podcourses Transcript: https://successwithielts.com/s08e30 Our IELTS Writing podcast: https://linktr.ee/wfspremium Find an IELTS Speaking Partner: https://links.successwithielts.com/ieltspartner Our social media: https://linktr.ee/successwithielts © 2023 Success with IELTS Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, Sunshine. I'm Maria.
And my name is Rory, and we're the host of the IEL Speaking for Success podcast.
The podcast themes to help you improve your speaking skills,
as well as your listening skills along the way and give you some nice coincidences.
We're starting this podcast to give you gorgeous grammar and fabulous vocabulary for your high-I-old school.
B'an 9th school.
Shall we do a coincidence?
Oh, yes.
Okay, so you are just like, it's in the open now.
We are doing the coincidence.
All right, so what's our coincidence?
I don't know. What is our coincidence?
I have some good news.
Do you?
The booking system for your classes is up and running.
Oh, that's fantastic.
That's music to my ears.
Music to your ears, you say.
Shall we talk about music?
Let's talk about music.
But the link to book classes with me is in the description of this episode.
Yes, and the booking system for Rory's classes is up and running.
It means that it's ready to go, it's working, so you can book classes with
our Rory, our educated netty speaker, and his classes and everything he's going to tell you
will be music to your ears, dear listener. So make sure to book your spots now. The link is in the
description. What kinds of music do you like to listen to? Well, it would be easier to talk about
the kind of music I don't listen to, to be honest with you. You just need to look at my playlist
on YouTube and you can see it encompasses like the full range of genres.
right now, although at the moment
it's like, it's remixes
of old pop solombs, mostly, now that I think
about it. When did you start
listening to that type of music?
Well, it's hard to pin down exactly when.
Like, well, since
the algorithm occasionally
throws me a curveball and I wind up
going down a bit of a rabbit hole, although I would
say it would be around about the time I started
going to the gym properly, when I needed
music with like a good beat and lyrics that I could
listen along to while I work out.
How much time do you spend listening to music every day?
I have absolutely no idea.
I would say at least an hour or so.
I mean, sometimes more than that if I'm at the gym and I ramp the volume up on a tune.
When do you listen to music?
Well, at the risk of sounding like a broken record,
whenever I go to the gym, really, or when I go for a walk,
I also like it when my friends share music with me as well.
I suppose when my friends share music, that happens at random intervals.
the gym's more frequent. I don't do it whenever I work or read though. I don't, I have no idea how people can do that kind of thing. It's very distracting. How do you feel when you listen to music? I think it depends on the activity I'm doing. So, for example, when I'm at the gym, it leaves me feeling pumps up and ready to do whatever the routine requires of me. It enhances the feeling of relaxation whenever I'm out walking. And whenever I'm with friends, it can add to the general humor. Actually, if we've made it,
make up our own lyrics to the songs as well.
Dear listener, we do have our premium episodes for you where we discuss Speaking
Part 2 and 3 using Super Fresh IOT's topics.
This week on our premium, Rory is describing a place he visited where the air was polluted.
And in Speaking Part 3, we talk about pollution in general.
The links are in the description. Do check them out if you want super detailed preparation for your speaking.
We also have coincidences.
And jokes along the way.
Mm-hmm.
So music. We listen to music.
Right, don't forget this too. Not too like two, but listen to something.
Listen to us, listen to Rory, don't listen to Rory, don't listen to anything but our premium episodes.
So listen to music.
And Rory, you told us something about your playlist on YouTube.
So it's on on YouTube.
Yeah. A playlist is just a collection.
of music that's being put together, usually by you or in my case by the YouTube algorithm
because I'm far too lazy to do it myself.
And your playlist encompasses the full range of genres.
There's everything on there.
Like it was pop from the 90s the other day and today it was classical music.
So yeah, there's a lot.
But if I say something encompasses something.
So it kind of includes different things or types, right?
Yeah.
So for example, I can say that,
This festival encompasses everything from music to food, for example.
It includes.
So this is a nice one.
You can say, like, okay, I listen to different genres, genres or like musical genres.
And my playlist encompasses the full range of genres, like different genres.
And Rory prefers remixes of popular songs, yeah?
Well, right now I do.
Or rather, right now the algorithm thinks I prefer.
remixes of popular songs.
But a remix is just someone modifying the original music to add a new beat or to add in a new
sound or to bring together elements of other songs.
It's hard to pin down when exactly.
So to pin down is a nice phrase or verb.
Okay.
So it's hard to say.
It's hard to kind of, you know, to pin down when you have a pin and you kind of like pin,
Pin, Rory, help me out with the explanations.
I'm running out of ideas.
When you pin something down, if something is hard to pin down, then it's hard to say any...
No, I don't know.
Actually, now we're struggling to pin down the meaning of the phrase to pin down.
No.
To pin down means to give the exact definition or description of something.
If something is hard to pin down, then it's difficult to give an exact definition or exact
information about it.
There.
Ah, ah, I pinned it.
down. Rory, we need more examples. Come on. Nature speaker.
What? Well, it's difficult to pin down the origins of, oh God, I don't know, um, social media,
because I know nothing about it. Or it's hard to pin down, uh, where the word,
glass comes from. I'm just looking at the glass there. I don't know where the word glass
comes from. Again, because I know nothing about it. So something is vague or mysterious,
then it's difficult to pin down. When the examiner asks you such questions as like,
when did you start?
When was the last time you did something?
You go like, I don't know when exactly.
So it's hard to pin down when exactly.
I started listening to this kind of music.
And then where you said something about the algorithm,
which throws occasional curveball at me, what is this?
Yes, like some, the occasional curveball is when something random happens.
So, for example, one day I'll be listening to music on the algorithm
and it'll be nice, like beats from the,
Early 2000s, when I was a child, and then I'll get something modern randomly because that's what the algorithm does.
And that's a curveball because it's something unexpected.
It's from American baseball terminology, apparently.
But it's difficult to pin down.
Could you give us another example, another sentence?
Well, what?
Sometimes IOT's questions can give you the occasional curveball with random questions like,
do you like chocolate? Did you like chocolate yesterday?
That's a curveball?
It's totally unexpected.
Who asks that kind of question?
So, for example, every so often life will throw you a curveball.
Okay, so life throws a curveball at us, something like unexpected, difficult to deal with, right?
Well, why is this so difficult?
A carve ball, it's really easy to understand.
Well, it might be easy to understand, but how do you use it in a sentence?
You know, how do you use it accurately?
Maria's question about the correct use of using curveball in the questions was quite the curveball for me,
because I didn't know how to answer it.
And then Rory used a very nice structure.
Go down the rabbit hole.
No, is it the rabbit hole or a rabbit hole?
It doesn't matter.
You just wind up going off on a bit of an adventure
in order to find out about something.
Like when you go on Wikipedia and you start off looking at one thing
and then before you know it,
like you have 300 tabs about a million different subjects on the go.
And a rabbit hole is a difficult or complicated situation
that is difficult to get out of.
An adventure.
Rory prefers music with a good beat.
A beat is like...
It's the same as rhythm, not a beat.
Well, they're different things, but they overlap.
And if you listen to a soul, the song has lyrics.
We don't say the song has words.
The song has nice lyrics.
And what do you call these lyrics, this part of the song?
that is repeated.
I don't know.
The chorus?
Yeah, the chorus, right?
So the chorus is this usually catchy words that they repeat, the chorus.
What do you call the parts they don't repeat then?
Verses.
Oh, okay.
What song do you like the chorus to?
Having a ball.
Don't stop me now.
I don't know.
Revers.
Having a ball.
Yeah, I am the queen, queen.
Yes, I like queen.
Not the queen, queen.
Yeah, we talked about that before.
That's coming out on our bloopers.
It's the Nissan Black Friday event where you can...
Wait, wait.
Isn't it like a month long now?
Nissan Blackfri Month?
Does that work?
It's the Nissan Black Fry Month event.
On remaining 2025 Rogan Centra,
get zero percent financing.
Plus, get $1,000 Nissan bonus on kicks models.
This Black Friday, you've got a whole month
to catch all the exclusive offers waiting for you.
See your local Nissan dealer or Nissan.
For details.
Conditions apply.
How much time do you listen to music and you say like, I have absolutely no idea?
So this is a nice phrase and you should say it with this intonation and like really mean it.
Like I have absolutely no idea.
That's like saying how much time do you spend breathing every day?
I don't know.
Most of it.
Okay, maybe not.
Like you should be spending most of your time breathing.
Bad example.
And then you say at least an hour or at least an hour.
at least 30 minutes, like minimum 30 minutes.
And then if I'm at the gym or when I commute to work, right,
when I travel to work, when I go home, I usually listen to music.
And then you say something like, I ramp up the volume.
Ramp up the volume.
But if you ramp up, that just means that you make it louder very quickly.
So if I listen to my favorite song, I can if I ramp up the volume and it's just...
Yeah, like I can ramp up the volume on my loud speaker.
by just pressing and holding the plus button.
And then the question was like,
when do you listen to music?
And Rory says something like,
at the risk of sounding like a broken record.
I had to get in an idiom there for music.
And so, at the risk of sounding like a broken record,
just means I don't want to repeat myself,
but here I am repeating myself talking about the gym again.
But why do you think that I use the idiom, Maria?
Could it be because we are working on a course to do with idiom?
Oh yes.
You heard it here first.
We have a course on phrasal verbs and we will have a course on idioms soon, so stay tuned.
I haven't actually shilled for the phrasel verbs course in quite some time.
Successwithalcylop.com forward slash podcourses.
There we go. I've done it now.
If something happens at random intervals, it happens just like when it happens.
So not like regularly, but at random intervals.
So what happens at random intervals?
Oh, my friend sends me music, uh, random intervals.
Currently, it's just one friend that sends me music, but occasionally others do as well.
So I don't really know when to expect it, but when I do it, it's always good.
When I'm working out, so when I'm doing exercise, right, and Rory does exercise like this.
There's that broken record again.
I feel pumped up, right?
So Rory does his exercises, and he feels pumped up.
He feels, you know, like energized.
Yes, Rory?
Yes.
And then we can say that music enhances the feeling of relaxation.
So that's why when people meditate, they can listen to some like, oh.
Wow.
Do they do that?
Oh, yeah.
Personally, I listen to some om.
I think you can say, yes, I om when I am meditating.
Yeah, so music enhances the feeling of relaxation.
And you know what?
I asked Chad GPT this question.
do you know chat GPT
everyone is talking about
chat GPT and how to use it
in IOT? You asked chat GPT
how it felt when it listened to music?
The question is like, how do people
usually feel when they listen to music?
So just in general. And
chat GPT, so this artificial
intelligence. So Robert told me
people can have a range of
emotional responses when they listen to music.
For example, upbeats and cheerful
music can often evoke feelings of happiness. So you can say, okay, I usually feel happy when I listen
to upbeat and cheerful music. Upbeat is like, hey, I'm having a ball. Don't stop me. Nah, na, na, na, na.
Sadness. When we listen to slow one, melancholic music. Yes, that does sound like the answer
that you would get from a robot. Yeah, but you can use these words, you know, like, okay, when I listen to
slower melancholic music.
I feel sad
because the chat deputy can't feel
anything, but you can just use the words.
Okay, okay, one more, one more, Rory.
I love that. Like,
I went to all this effort to talk to your
robot in order to find the word
sad. No, melancholic
music, uh, eh? Or
up, up beats. That would have been better,
but like, what's the very specific word
to describe a very specific feeling? You probably
would put that in your part three answers, but not
in your part one. No, no, but can I say, for
When I listen to soothing and calming music, I feel relaxed.
Huh?
Soothing, calming music?
I feel relaxed.
And it kind of encourages the feeling of tranquility.
So you listen to our premium episodes and you go like a long relaxation and the feeling of tranquility.
And also they, chat DPT told me about nostalgia.
So, Rory, when can I feel nostalgia?
When you listen to music that you listened to when you were a child, probably.
Yeah, and chat d pt, g, g, g, j, j, j, j, j, j, j.
Listening to music from a certain period of time can bring these memories.
So evoke feelings of nostalgia and sentimental attachment.
Yeah, also inspiration, you get inspired.
And also excitement.
High energy, fast-paced music, fast-paced, that you do.
They're usually in shops.
So high energy music, so like, buy, bye, buy, buy, all the clothes, all the jewelry, all the jewelry.
You don't feel excited.
Bro, you don't seem to like the answers.
Well, what's, what, what's, what's, what's.
They're not natural.
They sound like they were written by a robot.
But why not?
Why can't I say, like, okay, how do you feel when you listen to music?
Oh, when I listen to upbeat and chill for music, I usually feel happy.
How is it not natural?
Okay, that's fine.
But maybe they're looking for like a specific genre of music.
here. What kind of music is upbeat and cheerful?
Pop music? Okay. So when I listen to jazz, I feel what? Relaxed. Or sad?
I don't know. Some people absolutely hate jazz. When I listen to jazz, I feel annoyed.
When I listen to blues, I feel blue. Oh, no. That's not nice.
Anyway, you're listening. So, people have been talking how to use chat GPT. If you don't know what it is,
please Google, it's like, you know, a buzzword, everybody's talking about this.
And people talked about how to use chat GPT in terms of IELs.
How can chat GPT help you with IELS?
And there are certain ways, and actually, maybe we can talk about it, Rory.
Like to have a separate episode about chat GPT and IELD.
If you want to hear me rage against the machine, then which is a band.
So there you go.
That was a musical answer.
Yeah, because it's kind of something new, you know, the listener, chat GPT,
can chat DPT,
BPT, write a good
ILS essay, or can
it help us with speaking,
with grammar, like, you know,
and anyway,
thank you very much for listening.
Bye.
I'll see you next time.
What kinds of music do you like to listen to?
Well, it would be easier to talk about the kind of music
I don't listen to, to be honest with you.
You just need to look at my playlist on YouTube
and you can see it encompasses like the full range,
of genres right now, although at the moment it's like it's remixes of old pop solombs
mostly now that I think about it.
When did you start listening to that type of music?
Well, it's hard to pin down exactly when, like, well, since the algorithm occasionally
throws me a curveball and I wind up going down a bit of a rabbit hole, although I would say
it would be around about the time I started going to the gym properly, when I needed music
with like a good beat and lyrics that I could listen along to while I work out.
How much time do you spend listening to music every day?
I have absolutely no idea.
I would say at least an hour or so.
I mean, sometimes more than that if I'm at the gym
and I ramp the volume up on a tune.
When do you listen to music?
Well, at the risk of sounding like a broken record,
whenever I go to the gym, really.
Or when I go for a walk,
I also like it when my friends share music with me as well.
I suppose when my friends share music
that happens at random intervals
the gym's more frequent
I don't do it whenever I work or read though
I don't I have no idea
how people can do that kind of thing
It's very distracting
How do you feel when you listen to music
I think it depends on the activity I'm doing
So for example when I'm at the gym
It leaves me feeling pumps up
And ready to do whatever the routine requires of me
It enhances the feeling of relaxation
Whenever I'm out walking
And whenever I was friends
it can add to the general humor.
Actually, if we make up our own lyrics to the songs as well.
