How did you know I have a parrot photo as a screensaver?
The parrot in the video was lovely, but a bit out of tune

Once I met a parrot I fell in love with, he was supposed to talk very well, but he talked only to me. The vet who had him was desperate, due to the parrot's stubbornness, but he refused to sell him for less than 6.000 euros
My grandma has a parrot like the one in a video, but she (the parrot, not my grandma

) doesn't sing. The only sound she produces are inarticulate cries...
Yesterday I started listening fanatically (again) to the hooters' song. My god, bondi, it's addictive!
And since it's a multi-national forum,:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bKj82imM ... re=related
ps As for the question you posted, music is just an auditory stimulus/signal. Every signal (optic, auditory, aptic etc) produces biochemical reactions. How we interpret it at the semantic level (the emotions produced by a song,etc), is a totally different story. I dunno whether or not a soundwave would produce the same effect on a parrot. The fact is that every stimulus/signal received by the respective receptor (ear, eye, skin,etc) is submitted to several energy conversions until it reaches mind (electrical pulse, hormones, ion fluctuations etc)
ps2. I think I'll adopt the title of the song that Pluto posted as my signature (rock lobster- hey, that's me!

)
btw, who are "flock of Seagulls"? I surely won't say "hi" to strangers
