Saturday 1 June 2013
Thursday 13 December 2012
Six Reasons Why Music Is Important To Us
Ever wonder why music is so important to us and has such an impact on our emotions? Well wonder no more here they are ! The number one reason is 'Positivity', two & three reasons are 'Diversion and Mood Management', fourth reason is 'Forming Relationships', fifth reason is 'For Personal Identity' and the sixth reason is 'To Learn About Others (and the World)'
Would you like to find out more, well click on this this link which will take you to the article "The Psychology of Music: 6 Reasons We Love (and Need) Music" where these 'reasons' were published.
Related articles
Saturday 24 November 2012
Saturday 25 August 2012
Music and Images
Can you "see" while listening to music or do you belong to those who don't associate images with music?
In our modern world it is hard not to associate music with visual elements. Images and music are often and present together so it becomes more difficult to "dissociate music from images". In the past however things were a little different :
"....... those who have a good musical culture love music have no visual representations when listening to their favorite kind of music. Any association between music and mental representations maybe accidental and temporary." More
Sunday 5 August 2012
What Exactly Is Music?
Exactly what is music? How does the scientific community attempt to answer these sort of questions related to music and and its effects on human beings? What happens inside our brains when emotions are released while we are listening to music? In fact what what makes our brains in the first place to connect to these 'electrical impluses and "converted sound vibrations" ?
"Electrical impulse and converted sound vibrations are just the beginning of the madness that our brain must sort out and deal with " More
Related articles
Friday 27 July 2012
Why Does Music and Art Exist ?
The story of the evolution of aesthetics makes interested reading, why for example does music or visual art exists at all ? How important were aesthetics in human evolution and later in human societies ? The following article offers some interesting insights into these questions.
"One of the great mysteries of art is why it exists. Although our desire to create and enjoy art is so widespread that it appears as natural as eating or reproducing -– nearly every culture draws, dances, sings, recites poetry and tells stories -– the origins of human aesthetics are not clear-cut. What’s peculiar is that from a biological point of view art appears to serve no adaptive advantages whatsoever." More
Related articles
Sunday 10 June 2012
Let Us Have A Go 'At Musical Thinking' !
Do you ever ask yourself why your like music ? Do you wonder what exactly is in music that moves you ? Also why does listening to music has such an emotional impact on you ? What about your tastes in music, where do they come from ? Marvin Minsky attempts to answer some of these questions in in his article "Music, Mind, and Meaning"
"Why do we like music? Our culture immerses us in it for hours each day, and everyone knows how it touches our emotions, but few think of how music touches other kinds of thought. It is astonishing how little curiosity we have about so pervasive an "environmental" influence. What might we discover if we were to study musical thinking?" More
Friday 30 March 2012
Why Do We Feel The Way We Do When We Listen To Music ?
Why do we feel the way we do when we listen to music ? Maria Popova in her article " 7 Must-Read Books on Music, Emotion & the Brain" attempts to answer this question by providing the reader with
"..... seven essential books that bridge music, emotion and cognition, peeling away at that tender intersection of where your brain ends and your soul begins." Read More
Wednesday 7 March 2012
Rock Music: Are We Witnessing Its Demise ?
During the past few
"If you take a glance at music history over the past 50 years, you’ll notice rock bands used to dominate the pop charts. At one time, even in the recent past, rock was synonymous with popular music." Read More
Related articles
- The Timeless of Rock Music (the-music-digest
. blogspot .com) - Alltopics.com Offers Hottest News on Rock Music (prweb.com)
Tuesday 28 February 2012
The Benefits That Music Can Bring You
Music
"Music can also be a great source of healing. It can calm and soothe, rejuvenate, energize, relax,and restore. Music can have an amazing transformative effect in harmonizing our body systems. In fact, studies have shown that using music inspire has brought about positive effects on the nervous, endocrine, and immune systems." MORE with the intention of healing
Wednesday 4 January 2012
Various Affects of Music On The Brain
Via Scoop.it - the psychology of music
"Brain functioning, moods of an individual, emotions and behaviors have great connection with music. All of them can be altered, changed and improvised according to the requirements and perceptions with the assistance of ... "Via health.ezinemark.com
Sunday 1 January 2012
The Sounds of Colour: A look at Synaesthesia in Relation to Music and Colour
Let us begin this article by asking the question what is 'synaesthesia'? Well synaesthesia can be described as people having 'hallucinations'. A hallucination roughly speaking is usually an error of the brain in its interpretation of the mass of sense-data, which our senses send to the brain. The the most common example of this is the falling sensation, this is when a person thinks they are physically falling when they are on the verge of falling to asleep.
The most typical of these synaesthesia experiences is probably in relation between music and colour. This is when a person sees colour when he or she hears music, this is often known as as 'colour hearing'. This particular experience has been known since antiquity.
A number composers have actually been fascinated by this concept of 'colour hearing'. They have included Sir Arthur Bliss, whose composition 'The Colour Symphony', offers a vivid recollection about his own personal colour perceptions that may have passed through his mind and imagination while he was composing this symphony. Each and every one of the titles of the movements is in fact a colour. 'The 'First Movement': Purple the Colour of Amethysts, Pageantry, Royalty and Death. The 'Second Movement': Red the Colour of Rubies, Wine, Revelry, Furnaces, Courage and Magic. 'The 'Third Movement' : Blue the Colour of Sapphires, Deep Water, Skies, Loyalty and Melancholy. The 'The 'Fourth Movement': Green the Colour of Emeralds, Hope, Joy, Youth, Spring and Victory.
For other composers musical keys seemed to have held a great deal of interest. Beethoven for instance is known to have referred to the B minor key as a black key. If one accepts black as being a symbol associated with death together with suffering and many other darker emotions, Beethoven must have thought of this key as gloomy and sad. This music however is not as nearly as so dark, tragic and heartbreaking as when the key of B minor was used by J.S. Bach in his own compositions. The music which flowed from this genius mind in the B minor key is some of the most despairing, desolating and painful music within that key.
The Russian composers Rimsky-Korsakov and Scriabin both developed strong associations between particular musical keys and colours though each interpreted these associations in their own way. Though generally there are disagreements among composers on what colours relate to what musical keys, these differences are fundamentally unimportant compare to whether these types of relationships and connections exist any way.
Different parts of the orchestra have even being given colours, black for instance has been given for strings and voices, red for brass and drums, blue for wood. It has even been suggested that to help to make orchestral scores easier to read, the above colours ought to be used in the printing of the staves committed to the different families of musical instruments. Associations have also been made between timbre and colour such as cello - indigo blue, human voice - green, trumpet - red, bassoon – violet and so forth.
So irrespective whether or not an individual person has actually have has personal knowledge of “colour hearing” for themselves, there do exist people for which the synaesthesia experience connecting music and colour is a very real experience and not simply an 'hallucination'.
Friday 23 September 2011
Can Listening To Music Make You A Happier Person ?
Are we a happier person after listening to music ? Well there have been various studies over the years trying to answer this question . Here is an article which expounds on the subject further.
"Music & Emotions: Can Music Really Make You a Happier Person? Music affects us all. But only in recent times have scientists sought to explain and quantify the way music impacts us at an emotional level. Researching the links between melody and the mind indicates that listening to and playing music actually can alter how our brains, and therefore our bodies, function". MORE
Wednesday 31 August 2011
Choosing The Right Genre Of Music
When deciding on what music to listen to it is important to choose the right genre of music for the mood you are in at the time.
" Research has proven that music could be a major mood lifter particularly when one is undergoing tough times. At least every person encounters a downhill in life and during such times, music would probably be the best thing to address such situations else one would find it extremely tough to cope. " MORE
Tuesday 19 April 2011
A Musical Synesthesia Experience
Maurice Ravel - "Daphnis et Chloƫ - Suite No.2" ('Daybreak')
This is a great example of French impressionist music. The synesthesia experiences this piece of music evokes in me is that of a sound picture in where waves from the sea are lapping to the shore while I watch a summer sunrise and experiencing the first breezes of the morning across my face.
This is a great example of French impressionist music. The synesthesia experiences this piece of music evokes in me is that of a sound picture in where waves from the sea are lapping to the shore while I watch a summer sunrise and experiencing the first breezes of the morning across my face.
It occasionally happens that a great work is better known by excerpts. Such has been the fate of Maurice Ravel's Daphnis et Chloeevery since its creation. While occasionally performed as a ballet, itis usually heard in concert, represented by its final three numbers: "Lever du jour" (Daybreak), "Pantomime" and "Dansegenerale ." Ravel himself designated these excerpts as Suite No. 2 after the score's completion in 1912. MORE
Monday 7 February 2011
Gary Moore The Blues and Rock Guitarist Dies
Yesterday the sad death of Gary Moore the blues and rock guitarist was announced.
His fine rock and blues guitar virtuoso playing will be sadly missed.
Some Links
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gary_Moore
http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/2011/feb/06/gary-moore-thin-lizzy-dies
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-12377862
http://www.classicrockmagazine.com/news/gary-moore-dies
"Moore grew up on Castleview Road opposite Stormont's Parliament Buildings, off the Upper Newtownards Road in east Belfast and started performing at a young age, having picked up a battered acoustic guitar at the age of eight. Moore got his first good-quality guitar at the age of 14, learning to play the right-handed instrument in the standard way despite being left-handed. He moved to Dublin in 1968 at the age of 16. Moore's early musical influences were artists such as Albert King, Elvis Presley and The Beatles. Later, having seen Jimi Hendrix and John Mayall's Bluesbreakers in his home town of Belfast, his own style was developing into a blues-rock sound that would be the dominant form of his career." MOREGary Moore is best known for his involvement with the rock band 'Thin Lizzy' who he first joined in 1973 and rejoined them several times more throughout his career. Before joining 'Thin Lizzy' Moore was with the rock band 'Skid Row'. In 1974 he joined Jon Hiseman's ‘Colosseum II’ and stayed with them until 1978 when he then followed mainly a solo career. Gary Moore however collaborated with many major artists throughout his solo career like George Harrison, Albert Collins, BB King, Albert King and Greg Lake,Ginger Baker, Jack Bruce, the Beach Boys and Ozzy Osbourne, just to name a few.
His fine rock and blues guitar virtuoso playing will be sadly missed.
Some Links
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gary_Moore
http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/2011/feb/06/gary-moore-thin-lizzy-dies
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-12377862
http://www.classicrockmagazine.com/news/gary-moore-dies
Monday 31 January 2011
The Oscar Winner Composer John Barry Has Died
John Barry the Oscar Winner composer died suddenly yesterday (30th January 2011) of an heart attack, he was 77 years. John Barry was best known for his James Bond soundtracks, including 'Dr No', 'Goldfinger' and 'You Only Live Twice'. He also composed scores to other films including 'Born Free', 'Midnight Cowboy' and 'Out of Africa'. His most recent film score was in 2001 for the war thiller film 'Enigma'. MORE
MORE
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-12321610
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Barry_(composer)
MORE
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-12321610
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Barry_(composer)
Wednesday 26 January 2011
Music And The Chill Factor
A recent study by scientists at the ‘The Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital – The Neuro at McGill University’ have found that listening to music releases dopamine, a neurotransmitter in the brain that is more closely related to the pleasures that go with rewards like food, drugs and sex. If a volunteer enjoyed a particular piece of music this produced a chill like response in them which in turn increased the volunteer's dopamine level. It also resulted in an increase in the volunteer's heart rate, breathing and sweating.
".....this is the first demonstration that an abstract reward such as music can lead to dopamine release. Abstract rewards are largely cognitive in nature, and this study paves the way for future work to examine non-tangible rewards that humans consider rewarding for complex reasons.” MORE
Wednesday 12 January 2011
Mick Karn: In Memory Of The Former Japan Bass Player
In memory of the multi-instrumentalist of Mick Karn who died on 4 January 2010 after suffering from cancer, he was 52 years old. He came to prominence in the early 1980's as bass player with the band Japan who he helped to co-founded along with David Sylvian and his younger brother Steve Jansen in 1974. After Japan broke up in 1982 he went on to have a solo career and released a number of albums.
source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mick_Karn
Other Links
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-12118209
Mick Karn offical home page : http://www.mickkarn.net/
....... .was an English multi-instrumentalist musician and songwriter, who came to fame as the bassist for the art rock band Japan, from 1974 to 1982. In June 2010, he was diagnosed with advanced stage cancer, and died in January 2011. "
"The band Japan, whose other members included David Sylvian, keyboardist Richard Barbieri and Sylvian's brother Steve Jansen as drummer, began as a group of friends, who all studied at the same school. As youngsters they played music as a means of escape, playing Sylvian's two-chord numbers – sometimes with Karn as the front man, sometimes with Sylvian at the fore, guitarist Rob Dean joined the band later. "
source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mick_Karn
Other Links
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-12118209
Mick Karn offical home page : http://www.mickkarn.net/
Tuesday 11 January 2011
Captain Beefheart: Few Words In His Memory
In memory of Don Van Vliet better known as Captain Beefheart who died on the 17th December 2010 aged 69.
He certainly was one of the great original geniuses of popular music of the 20th Century. With his gritty and growling voice and his fusion of blues, jazz and psychedelia he carved out sound that was uniquely his.
quoted from http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-11811289
Other Links
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-12024652
http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/captain-beefheart-dead-at-age-69-20101217
He certainly was one of the great original geniuses of popular music of the 20th Century. With his gritty and growling voice and his fusion of blues, jazz and psychedelia he carved out sound that was uniquely his.
" His work, whether in music or drawing, was never mainstream and only ever gained a relatively small following, but he was a larger-than-life character who pushed the boundaries of his art in a way which influenced many who followed in his wake "
quoted from http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-11811289
Other Links
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-12024652
http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/captain-beefheart-dead-at-age-69-20101217
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