Jump to content

Your Ad Could Be Here

Influence of music on our mood


Recommended Posts

  • Noob

What's up, guys?
This is my first topic in your community, let me share an interesting article which I've found in the Internet! 

Music and Mood

Music’s beneficial effects on mental health have been known for thousands of years. Ancient philosophers from Plato to Confucius and the kings of Israel sang the praises of music and used it to help soothe stress. Military bands use music to build confidence and courage. Sporting events provide music to rouse enthusiasm. Schoolchildren use music to memorize their ABCs. Shopping malls play music to entice consumers and keep them in the store. Dentists play music to help calm nervous patients. Modern research supports conventional wisdom that music benefits mood and confidence.

Because of our unique experiences, we develop different musical tastes and preferences. Despite these differences, there are some common responses to music. Babies love lullabies. Maternal singing is particularly soothing, regardless of a mom’s formal musical talents or training. Certain kinds of music make almost everyone feel worse, even when someone says she enjoys it; in a study of 144 adults and teenagers who listened to 4 different kinds of music, grunge music led to significant increases in hostility, sadness, tension, and fatigue across the entire group, even in the teenagers who said they liked it. In another study, college students reported that pop, rock, oldies, and classical music helped them feel happier and more optimistic, friendly, relaxed, and calm.

Music, Attention, and Learning

Everyone who has learned their ABCs knows that it is easier to memorize a list if it is set to music. Scientific research supports common experience that pairing music with rhythm and pitch enhances learning and recall. Music helps children and adolescents with attention problems in several ways. First, it can be used as a reward for desired behavior. For example, for paying attention to homework for 10 minutes, a child can be rewarded with the opportunity to listen to music for 5 minutes. Second, it can be used to help enhance attention to “boring” academic tasks such as memorization, using songs, rhythms, and dance or movement to enhance the interest of the lists to be memorized. Instrumental baroque music is great for improving attention and reasoning. For students, playing background music is not distracting. Third, musical cues can be used to help organize activities – one kind of music for one activity (studying), another for a different activity (eating), and a third kind for heading to bed. Fourth, studies show that calming music can promote pro-social behavior and decrease impulsive behavior.

Music and Anxiety

Many people find familiar music comforting and calming. In fact, music is so effective in reducing anxiety, it is often used in dental, preoperative, and radiation therapy settings to help patients cope with their worries about procedures. Music helps decrease anxiety in the elderly, new mothers, and children too. Music’s ability to banish worries is illustrated in the Rogers and Hammerstein lyrics,

“Whenever I feel afraid, I hold my head erect
And whistle a happy tune, so no one will suspect I’m afraid…
And every single time,
the happiness in the tune convinces me that I’m not afraid.”

Any kind of relaxing, calming music can contribute to calmer moods. Calming music can be combined with cognitive therapy to lower anxiety even more effectively than conventional therapy alone.

Some studies suggest that specially designed music, such as music that includes tones that intentionally induce binaural beats to put brain waves into relaxed delta or theta rhythms, can help improve symptoms in anxious patients even more than music without these tones; listening to this music without other distractions (not while driving, cooking, talking, or reading) promotes the best benefits.

Music and Moods

An analysis of 5 studies on music for depression concluded that music therapy is not only acceptable for depressed patients, but it actually helps improve their moods. Music has proven useful in helping patients with serious medical illnesses such as cancer, burns, and multiple sclerosis who are also depressed. If it can help in these situations, it may be able to help you and your loved ones experience more positive moods.

Music and Sleep

Many people listen to soothing music to help them fall asleep. This practice is supported by studies in a variety of settings. Just don’t try listening to lively dance music or rousing marches before you aim to fall asleep. Conversely, if you’re trying to wake up in the morning, go for the fast-tempo music rather than lullabies.

Music and Stress

Since ancient times, it has been known that certain kinds of music can help soothe away stress. Calming background music can significantly decrease irritability and promote calm in elderly nursing home patients with dementia. Music, widely chosen, lowers stress hormone levels. On the other hand, every parent of a teenager knows that certain kinds of music, particularly at high volumes, can induce stress. Knowing that certain kinds of music can alleviate stress is one thing; being mindful in choosing what kind of music to listen to is another. Choose your musical intake as carefully as you choose your food and friends.
Mental Health, Naturally: The Family Guide to Holistic Care for a Healthy Mind and Body (Copyright © 2010 American Academy of Pediatrics]

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

hey music man!

it's amazing how much our lives are influenced by music. Regardless of race, creed and culture, music is an integral part of our existence.  We bookmark memories and stages in our lives with music, to a point where you cant listen to a great song because you subconsciously linked it to a traumatic experience. Some songs give you a shiver up the spine, or make the hairs on the back of your neck stand up. 

 But its not just humans. Animals also respond to music, and plants have also been found to respond positively to classical music and negatively to heavy metal! 

I'll never forget a documentary i watched where a pianist living in Africa befriended a local herd of elephants by putting his piano in the back yard and serenading them. They would gather around and were so gentle and obviously affected by the music. A matriarch had previously left the herd after the traumatic loss of her young to poachers would visit him at night on her own when he played one particularly sad and solemn tune. But for that moment she seemed so content... 

cheers, Neil

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 24/03/2017 at 11:42 AM, MusicMan4Ever said:

What's up, guys?

Do you really need to ask?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'll just throw in my .002 here. 

 

I like the article.

 

I think most of use know on some level that music affects us although we may not be aware of how deeply or how it does what it does. I believe we have had some similar topics in the past. Always a great subject to delve into.

 

Scientific studies are great and informative, especially if they were done well with good data. Yet I like to hear the ideas expressed in layman terms in a way I can take and apply or reflect on.

 

Music is a language. Some say it's a universal language. While this may hold true on the surface, I suspect that to truly understand it we need some point of reference. For instance, I doubt I would understand the " language" of Chinese music. Understanding and appreciating are two different things. That music might not " speak" to me on an emotional level.I could see the musical structure by listening to it though. That would only be my superficial understanding of it.

 

Music conveys emotion as any other language does, only it seems to do so on a deeper level and in a more universal way. " Call and Answer" is a form of statement and response.

 

It doesn't surprise me that some kinds of music elicit violent responses, tension and negativity. The artist who wrote the music was simply conveying what they felt inside. The music transmitted that feeling and others picked up the vibe. At some point the artist said to themself, " I'm not  happy,  I hate everything, I hate myself, I hate society, etc. When they write music what's going to come out? Why do others relate to it? Simple, they feel the same way or they want to adopt that feeling.

 

In other cases the artist has a pleasant feeling and they want to portray something fresh, new, alive. It all comes out in the wash eventually. Choose your music carefully :)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.

Your Ad Could Be Here



  • Current Donation Goals

    • Raised $1,040.00
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By continuing to use our site you indicate acceptance of our Terms Of Service: Terms of Use, our Privacy Policy: Privacy Policy, our Community Guidelines: Guidelines and our use of Cookies We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.