Sound in "78 Tours"

I'm very interested with the use of sound in "78 Tours". I'm specifically interested in commenting on the difference between the use of music during the scenes which were zooming and spinning almost out of control, and the scenes which had music as a background noise alongside the normal ambient sounds in the man's apartment. I found it really fascinating that although the realistic nature of the animation itself hadn't changed at all, there was a sharp jolt from what felt like "animation" in the more abstract sense, and the realness of that apartment. The music played loudly and then, when we first see the apartment, it pitters off and becomes a song on the radio, and then when we transition away from that scene, everything once again has the loud, immersive soundtrack, and feels hectic and rushed again.

The simple change in sound from soundtrack to ambiance made the switch drastically more significant that it would have been had the music just kept playing. This allows us to feel calm at the end even after the whirlwind of somersaulting images we've just seen, because we end in reality, in that man's apartment.

Did other people feel similarly about this change in sound, or did people find that they didn't feel a moment of calm watching this film, even during the apartment clips? There are also a few moments of ambient pause during scenes in the park, with the child on the metal merry-go round (is that what those are called? the spinning playground equipment....?). Did those scenes also feel like a moment of relief in the film, or did they feel different?

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