I recommend this bird-themed electronic album
My senior year of college, I began sleeping on a couch in a busy room in the house where I lived - not because I didn't have a room in that house, but because I'd had a diabetic seizure in my room in that house and had only been saved by my friend hearing me thrashing around through the wall. I then slept on the couch in the downstairs living room for several months out of a paranoia it would happen again.
It was not a quiet room! I started listening to a lot of music to get to sleep. A lot of it was ambient music, but some of it was weirdly rhythmic. In the very last weeks of my senior year I got into this album by Dominik Eulberg as some kind of weird quasi-techno sleep aid.
I am now recommending his more recent full album, Avichrom, which is apparently bird-themed. I like it a lot and I get that every track is named after a differently-colored bird in German. I have been struggling to perceive the birdyness in the music itself but I do recommend it.
I like when artists in fields other than my own explain their inspirations, because it's often completely impenetrable to me (in an interesting way). They might claim to be drawing inspiration from things I have no knowledge of or cannot see in the work myself. I have this experience constantly in art museums.
You know you have been come a real expert in your scene when someone says "I took inspiration from [incredibly deep cut concept, described philosophically rather than concretely]" and you immediately know what they're talking about. "Ahh yes, I can see it too," you'll say, and then find yourself unable to describe the mental leap to outsiders without yammering for forty-five minutes.
This is the serenebrained way to react to deep-cut artist statements... if you want, you can also prove your expertise to yourself by getting turbo-level mad about some offhand statement buried deep in an artist's random comment about their work. I sometimes have to stop myself going into "bitch eating crackers" mode about random throwaway lines from Steam store page descriptions which intimate the author's deep value judgements about various genres and themes. We should all seek to reduce this behavior in ourselves. Probably. It's hard, though!