Arthur Lintgen

Arthur B. Lintgen (born 1942) is an American physician who can recognize classical phonograph records with the naked eye. He lives in Philadelphia. He claims no extrasensory powers. This ability was verified by James Randi in 1982.[1][2]

When Lintgen sees a vinyl record, he can recognize the music in a couple of seconds. Based on the physical construction and the grooves and contours on the record, he can recognize sections where music is loud or quiet, the length of each movement and so on. Then he uses his extensive knowledge of European classical music to recognize the music. He can also draw extra information about the structure of the vinyl; for example, because records from different companies are slightly different, he can sometimes guess the conductor.

However, his ability is strictly limited to classical orchestral music by and after Beethoven. He says instrumental and chamber music creates unrecognizable patterns, and that pre-Beethoven orchestral pieces are usually too alike in structure to identify. When given an Alice Cooper recording as a control, he said it looked "disorganized" and "[like] gibberish". Beethoven's Fifth Symphony is the most common record he is asked to identify; on one occasion he identified the record on a guess without even glancing at it.

References

  1. SECKEL, AL (19 October 1987). "Science / Medicine : The Man Who Could Read the Grooves" via LA Times.
  2. "Extraordinary Occurrences: The Time James Randi Said "Yes"".
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