Research identifies classical music’s unique selling point
Music, an abstract stimulus, can arouse feelings of euphoria and craving, similar to tangible rewards that involve the striatal dopaminergic system… These results indicate that intense pleasure in response to music can lead to dopamine release in the striatal system... Our results help to explain why music is of such high value across all human societies.Those extracts are from a paper in the journal Nature Neuroscience. Complex science needs to be treated with respect and caution, but the findings do resonate with recent paths about the links between classical music and hallucinogens, kinetic art (thanks go to Norman Perryman for the heads up), therapy, and ecstatic traditions such as Sufism. They also suggest exploitable similarities between music and tangible reward systems such as sex and gourmet food, and more importantly to opportunities for the medical application of music – in particular as a palliative for Parkinson’s disease, because a loss of dopamine-secreting neurons causes the disease. If I was still responsible for music promotion I would forget the over-exploited entertainment factor, and instead work at communicating classical music’s unique selling point, the feel good factor.
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Comments
Exploration of this area is hampered by the inadequate vocabulary that classical music has available to describe such phenomena, and I know that Norman Perryman considers “kinetic art” a compromise description of his consciousness raising performances that he uses for lack of a more suitable alternative. All the evidence suggests these are areas worth exploring further, but we do need to be cleverer at describing them.
You are quite correct in the dangers of building expectations of “pleasant” and “relaxing” experiences. One of the many paths that led me to this post is Sufi music. This generates “euphoria”, “craving” and “intense pleasure”, presumably by dopamine release. But it most definitely falls outside the conventional definitions of “pleasant” and “relaxing”.