In our case... the practice room can get over 100 degrees in the heat and chilling cold in the winter... no AC at all... only fans. So definitely in our case the temperature does make a huge difference. We get so dehydrated that after drinking a 44 oz. of Gatorade I still feel thirsty after we practice for only 2 hours!
In our case... the practice room can get over 100 degrees in the heat and chilling cold in the winter... no AC at all... only fans. So definitely in our case the temperature does make a huge difference. We get so dehydrated that after drinking a 44 oz. of Gatorade I still feel thirsty after we practice for only 2 hours!
It might be making a difference, but I would find it difficult to believe what you're hearing is due to the effect of air temperature on the sound waves themselves.
I know that the EMF thing sounds a little "fringe" - but if you exhaust all other conventional explanations, then it only seems logical to investigate the unconventional. It would be interesting to log EMF levels at different periods. Maybe even a .5 variation in surrounding EMF fields could make a noticeable difference?