
I am a big fan of classical music. Why does some music evoke certain emotions in the brain, even if it doesn’t have any lyrics? (cont’d)
David Myers, Commugny, Switzerland
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In a previous response (9 April) I see that Talia Morris thinks that people can be trained to associate certain emotions with particular types of music, which is certainly not the whole story.
At the age of 8, when radiograms (a radio/record player combo) came on the market, the first recording my father bought was of Beethoven’s Emperor Concerto. When I should have been in bed, I hid downstairs and listened to the music, spellbound. It seemed beautiful beyond anything I had imagined – and still does. No training was involved.
Alex Jones, Sydney, Australia
I have never experienced any emotional reaction to music other than boredom and a desire for it to stop.
Sam Edge, Ringwood, Hampshire, UK
In previous responses to this question, I saw no reference to the associative power of music.
Like aromas, a sound – especially a melody – can remind us of an emotionally charged event in our past, leading to a positive feedback effect that reinforces such connections when we hear the piece again.
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