As a former music major, I was intrigued by your thread title -- but then I found that what you really meant was "Scientific impossibilities in lyrics".
A scientific impossibility in music would be a high C played by a contrabassoon.
Oh, well.
Isn't a "scientific impossibility" just an "impossibility"?
But erm...Would not being able to scratch your right elbow with your right hand be a scientific impossibility, or a physical impossibility? Or Both?
I think one reason this error strikes me so strong (no pun intended) is because I learned back when I was like 12 (that was around 1966) that you could judge the distance of a storm by measuring the time between the lightning and the thunder, and multiplying it by what ever the speed of sound in miles/min is (that was the way the article in the science mag I read it in showed it I believe).
Scientific impossibilities wear white lab coats and thick eyeglasses. They're commonly found near microscopes or arrays of glassware filled with brightly colored water. When you meet them on on the tennis court you'd never know they were scientific.Isn't a "scientific impossibility" just an "impossibility"?
Talk about bah humbug. Artists use artistic license.
Think of the love that you eat
When you salt your meat.
I think their days are 21 hours long.The Beatles' song "Eight Days a Week" sounds uncomfortably like "110%" (ick ick ick) but it works if we go back to ancient Rome, when the civil week was eight days long.
Is that a euphemism?
I think their days are 21 hours long.
Billy Joel spoke of Billy the Kid being a legend in his time "east and west of the Rio Grande". Bit of a problem since the river doesn't go north and south.
Billy Joel spoke of Billy the Kid being a legend in his time "east and west of the Rio Grande". Bit of a problem since the river doesn't go north and south.
A low C (in the contrabassoon range) on a clarinet is scientifically impossible. A high C played by a contrabassoon is just practically impossible.As a former music major, I was intrigued by your thread title -- but then I found that what you really meant was "Scientific impossibilities in lyrics".
A scientific impossibility in music would be a high C played by a contrabassoon.
Oh, well.
Y'all aint from New Mexico, then, air ya?Billy Joel spoke of Billy the Kid being a legend in his time "east and west of the Rio Grande". Bit of a problem since the river doesn't go north and south.
A low C (in the contrabassoon range) on a clarinet is scientifically impossible. A high C played by a contrabassoon is just practically impossible.![]()