Musical chairs
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Musical chairs | |
---|---|
Players | variable |
Age range | usually children |
Setup time | 1 minute |
Playing time | variable |
Rules complexity | Low |
Strategy depth | Low |
Random chance | Music stoppage may seem random to players, but is under the control of the leader |
Skills required | quick reaction time |
Musical chairs is a game played by a group of people (usually children), often in an informal setting purely for entertainment such as a birthday party. The game starts with any number of players and a number of chairs one fewer than the number of players; the chairs are arranged in a circle (or other closed figure if space is constrained; a double line is sometimes used) facing outward, with the people standing in a circle just outside of that. A non-playing individual plays recorded music or a musical instrument. While the music is playing, the players in the circle walk in unison around the chairs. When the music controller suddenly shuts off the music, everyone must race to sit down in one of the chairs. The player who is left without a chair is eliminated from the game, and one chair is also removed to ensure that there will always be one fewer chair than there are players. The music resumes and the cycle repeats until there is only one player left in the game, who is the winner.
[edit] Cultural references
"Playing musical chairs" is also a metaphorical way of describing any activity where items or people are repeatedly and usually pointlessly shuffled among various locations.
"Musical chairs" is or was formerly also known as "Going to Jerusalem." Laura Lee Hope describes it under that name in chapter XIII of The Bobbsey Twins at School, as does John P. Marquand in chapter XXXI of Wickford Point.
In the musical Evita, during the song "the art of the possible" Juan Perón and a group of other military officers play a game of musical chairs which Perón wins, symbolizing his rise to power.
In mathematics, the principle that says that if the number of players is one more than the number of chairs, then one player is left standing, is the pigeonhole principle.
See also: Chinese fire drill
[edit] Versions
Instead of using chairs, one version of the game has players sit on the ground when the music stops, the last to sit being eliminated. This is known as 'musical bumps'. In 'musical statues', players stop moving when the music stops, and stay standing in the same position. If any player is seen moving, they are out of the game.
In the non-competitive version of "musical chairs" one chair but no player is eliminated in each round. All players have to sit down on the remaining chairs, while their feet must not touch the floor. A Cold Wind Blows is another noncompetitive substitute for "musical chairs."
[edit] The game's name in different languages
- Cantonese: 爭凳仔 (literally fighting for chairs)
- Danish: "Stole dans" (Chair dance)
- Dutch: "Stoelendans" (Chair dance)
- Filipino: "Trip to Jerusalem"
- French: "Chaises musicales" (Musical chairs)
- German: "Reise nach Jerusalem" (Journey to Jerusalem)
- Portuguese: "Dança das cadeiras" (Dance of the chairs)
- Russia: "Море волнуется" (Sea is storming)
- Romania: "Pǎsǎricǎ mutǎ-ţi cuibul" (Birdie, move your nest)
- Spanish: "El juego de las sillas" or "El juego de la silla" (The game of the chairs)
- Swedish: "Hela havet stormar" (The whole sea is storming)
- Thai: "Kao'ee Dontri" (Musical retards)