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    Phil Collins - I Don't Care Anymore Personality Type, MBTI

    What is the personality type of Phil Collins - I Don't Care Anymore? Which MBTI personality type best fits? Personality type for Phil Collins - I Don't Care Anymore from 1980s Music and what is the personality traits.

    Phil Collins - I Don't Care Anymore
    INTJ

    INTJ (5w4)

    Phil Collins - I Don't Care Anymore personality type is INTJ, so they are extroverted, intuative, enthusiastic, and brilliant. They are often highly intelligent and often more detail-oriented than their extroverted counterparts. INTJs are also often more introverted than their extroverted counterparts, which amplifies their brilliance.

    INTJs love to learn new things, and they love to teach those things. They are often teachers and professors of many subjects, but INTJs also love to learn about and teach people and may be great businesspeople and entrepreneurs.

    INTJ - Personality: Myers-Briggs® Type Indicator® (MBTI®)

    The Myers-Briggs Type Indicator® (MBTI®) is a versatile instrument that can be used to help you determine your personality type, along with the types of others. It is also used by counselors and therapists to help them determine how to best work with you. Since the Myers Briggs Institute is not a psychologist, they do not claim to give you a "diagnosis" of your type. They simply want to help you understand yourself and others better and guide you on the path of self-discovery and growth.

    “I Don't Care Anymore” is a song written, performed, and produced by English drummer Phil Collins (with co-production by Hugh Padgham). It is the third single from Collins' second solo album, Hello, I Must Be Going! (1982). It is one of the artist's most recognisable signature songs, and a favourite of many Collins fans worldwide.

    This song is considered "dark" in tone, and is comparable to Collins' earlier hit single “In the Air Tonight”, as both contain powerful drum kit along with simplistic synthesizers and guitar riffs, coupled with angry lyrics directed at Collins' failed first marriage. The drums also illustrate the gated reverb recording technique that defined Collins' sound throughout the 1980s. During “I Don't Care Anymore”, the drum track switches several times between "standard" studio sound and a gated reverb overlay. The song earned Collins his first Grammy Award nomination for Best Male Rock Vocal Performance in 1984, but lost to Michael Jackson's “Beat It”.

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