Placebo & Ghosthunter
So, you think the right chords can coax a ghost out of a room? Let me show you how sound actually tricks the brain—no need for a Ouija board.
I feel the idea of coaxing something unseen with a chord progression is almost poetic, like trying to paint a feeling in the dark. Maybe the music just nudges us into remembering what feels like a presence, but the room stays quiet. If you want to prove it, let me listen first. Sometimes the best Ouija board is a well‑placed piano.
Alright, fine. Play me your “haunted” piano, but don’t expect me to fall in love with a dusty old room. I'll listen, then you can tell me if it’s magic or just your nerves.
Sure, give me a moment to set the keys. When you hear the first few bars, let me know what comes up—whether it feels like a story or just the echo of my own thoughts.
The opening chord feels oddly familiar—like the hum of a city at night, not a spectral whisper. I can’t swear there's a presence, but I’d bet the rhythm is just echoing the room's own vibrations. If you’re looking for proof, keep it simple, not melodramatic.
It’s funny how a chord can feel like city lights flickering instead of ghosts. Maybe the room is just a resonant canvas, and the music is painting over its own background. I’ll keep the next part low‑key, just a quiet line and let you decide if it’s anything more than a trick of echoes.
That quiet line feels…empty. Just your piano’s own breath. No ghosts, no hidden vibes—just the room settling back into silence. If there's something else there, you'll need more than a single chord to pry it out.