Current:Home > StocksThese scientists explain the power of music to spark awe -Core Financial Strategies
These scientists explain the power of music to spark awe
View
Date:2025-04-19 13:29:02
This summer, I traveled to Montreal to do one of my favorite things: Listen to live music.
For three days, I wandered around the Montreal Jazz Festival with two buddies, listening to jazz, rock, blues and all kinds of surprising musical mashups.
There was the New Orleans-based group Tank and the Bangas, Danish/Turkish/Kurdish band called AySay, and the Montreal-based Mike Goudreau Band.
All of this reminded me how magnificent music has been in my life — growing up with The Boss in New Jersey, falling in love with folk-rockers like Neil Young, discovering punk rock groups like The Clash in college, and, yeah, these days, marveling at Taylor Swift.
Music could always lift me up and transport me. It's the closest I've ever come to having a religious experience.
The body and brain on music
This got me thinking: Why? Why does music do that?
So I called up some experts to get their insights on what underlies this powerful experience.
"Music does evoke a sense of wonder and awe for lots of people," says Daniel Levitin, a neuroscientist at McGill University who scans the brains of people while they listen to tunes.
"Some of it is still mysterious to us," he says, "But what we can talk about are some neural circuits or networks involved in the experience of pleasure and reward."
When you're listening to music that you really like, brain circuits involving parts of the brain called the amygdala, ventral tegmental area and the nucleus accumbens come on line, he explains. These are the same areas that get activated if you're thirsty and you have a drink, or if you're feeling "randy and have sex."
That triggers the production of brain chemicals that are involved in feelings like pleasure.
"It modulates levels of dopamine, as well as opioids in the brain. Your brain makes opioids," he says.
Neurons in the brain even fire with the beat of the music, which helps people feel connected to one another by literally synchronizing their brain waves when they listen to the same song.
"What we used to say in the '60s is, 'Hey, I'm on the same wavelength as you man,'" Levitin says. "But it's literally true — your brain waves are synchronized listening to music."
Music also has a calming effect, slowing our heart rate, deepening our breathing and lowering stress hormones. This makes us feel more connected to other people as well as the world around us, especially when we start to dance together.
"Those pathways of changing our body, symbolizing what is vast and mysterious for us, and then moving our bodies, triggers the mind into a state of wonder," Dacher Keltner, a University of California, Berkeley, psychologist, told me.
"We imagine, 'Why do I feel this way? What is this music teaching me about what is vast and mysterious?' Music allows us to feel these transcendent emotions," he says.
Emotions like awe, which stimulates the brain into a sense of wonder, help "counter the epidemic of our times, which is loneliness," Keltner says. "With music, we feel we're part of community and that has a direct effect on health and well-being," which is crucial to survival.
That could be why music plays such a powerful role in many religions, spirituality and rituals, he says.
A rocker weighs in
All this made me wonder: Do musicians feel this way, too?
"Yeah, I definitely experience wonder while playing music on a regular basis," says Mike Gordon, the bass player for the band Phish.
He suddenly vividly remembers dreams and doesn't want to be anywhere else, he says.
"It's almost like these neural pathways are opening. And it's almost like the air around me crystalizes where everything around me is more itself," Gordon says. "I develop this sort of hypersensitivity, where it's now electrified."
veryGood! (8666)
Related
- Opinion: Gianni Infantino, FIFA sell souls and 2034 World Cup for Saudi Arabia's billions
- Save $126 on a Dyson Airwrap, Get an HP Laptop for Only $279, Buy Kate Spade Bags Under $100 & More Deals
- Investigator says Trump, allies were part of Michigan election scheme despite not being charged
- Starbucks versus the union: Supreme Court poised to back company over 'Memphis 7' union workers
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- Fast-food businesses hiking prices because of higher minimum wage sound like Gordon Gekko
- After Tesla layoffs, price cuts and Cybertruck recall, earnings call finds Musk focused on AI
- More than 1 in 4 US adults over age 50 say they expect to never retire, an AARP study finds
- Taylor Swift makes surprise visit to Kansas City children’s hospital
- 'Extraordinary': George Washington's 250-year-old cherries found buried at Mount Vernon
Ranking
- Elon Musk's skyrocketing net worth: He's the first person with over $400 billion
- Former Wisconsin college chancellor fired over porn career is fighting to keep his faculty post
- What is record for most offensive players picked in first round of NFL draft? Will it be broken?
- Divided Supreme Court wrestles with Idaho abortion ban and federal law for emergency care
- Trump's 'stop
- Biden tries to navigate the Israel-Hamas war protests roiling college campuses
- Hazmat crews detonate 'ancient dynamite' found in Utah home after neighbors evacuated
- Jury sides with school system in suit accusing it of ignoring middle-schooler’s sex assault claims
Recommendation
A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
Pelosi says Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu should resign
Havertz scores 2 as Arsenal routs Chelsea 5-0 to cement Premier League lead
Christina Applegate Suffering From Gross Sapovirus Symptoms After Unknowingly Ingesting Poop
South Korea's acting president moves to reassure allies, calm markets after Yoon impeachment
North Carolina legislators return to adjust the budget and consider other issues
Ex-officer wanted for 2 murders found dead in standoff, child found safe after Amber Alert
A look at the Gaza war protests that have emerged on US college campuses