Ask HN: What do you listen to focus when you're working
What do you listen to when you're working that keeps you super-focused?
For me, I have a few different goto sources - white noise tracks (noisli), video game soundtracks, and movie scores (esp Hans Zimmer) that I listen to on repeat. Sometimes I listen to a single deep house track over and over, and I can't stop writing.
I'd love your perspective.
I'm researching for an article I'm writing on flow state and productivity.
13 comments
[ 3.7 ms ] story [ 43.7 ms ] threadBrian Eno's Music for Airports to get me into the mood for code. If this doesn't then http://rainymood.com. :)
For physical prep, loosening my body helps a lot before a long session and in between sessions.
Genres like trance help me focus because of a typical track's long duration, repetitive structure, and grandiose buildups.
When I need a little bit more stimulation, I switch to a less regular, more punchy EDM genres like electro house, or something with dubstep-inspired drops.
Tomba/Tombi sountrack is nice too.
I can listen to some songs when I need focus, but not super-focus. For those, I tend to listen to the same thing on repeat for several days or a week in a row, similar to you.
Some examples are: Koyaanisqatsi, Ian Anderson's "The Secret Language Of Birds" album, and Tool's Ænima.
In noisy environment can be helpful brown noise. I also tried focus@will (sample is here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5OGJRx76zLY). From my experience 45-60 minutes is maximum.
If I need high focus and think about solution music is just another source of distraction for me. As background for tedious tasks it depends on my mood.
Edit: More to the actual question, my favorite album to work to is "Immunity" by Jon Hopkins.
I've found that it lulls me into being present in the moment. With any intake of caffeine, there is a tendency to start thinking about new projects, past mistakes, daydreaming, etc. White Noise has been a really good solution to that tendency for me.
https://github.com/tedmiston/zero-noise
Before that I used SimplyNoise (https://simplynoise.com) which is good, but still uses Flash and so is resource hungry if you're running on battery.
I also work from my home office as much as possible which has a very consistent AC fan that blocks most outside noise.
The only things on my desk every day are a minimal coffee mug and a wind-up timer for timeboxing.