can music be life altering? |
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toolis
Forum Senior Member Joined: April 26 2006 Location: MacedoniaGreece Status: Offline Points: 1678 |
Topic: can music be life altering? Posted: July 12 2006 at 06:51 |
the reason i'm posting this is that i remember fan letters to a music magazine from people with real problems in their lives (physical disabilities, poverty, general life sucking) saying stuff like: 'music changed my life', i couldn't have done it without music', 'when all others abandoned me, music was my only friend' or 'if it wasn't for music, i would kill myself'... to me, music plays without a doubt a really great role in my life but i don't believe that can really change my perspectives for life...i mean, when i listen to music i have all kinds of great feelings going on but when i turn off the stereo, it's still all there: my f**king job, my unpaid bills, this city i live in and eats me alive, and little does music help me...
what do you think? |
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Frasse
Forum Senior Member Joined: November 22 2004 Location: Sweden Status: Offline Points: 758 |
Posted: July 12 2006 at 07:19 |
People may find comfort in the lyrics.
Music can also help people with boring lifes full of problems keep going on, for example: A guy who works all day all week spends his spare time listening to music. It gives him the pause and inspiration he needs. |
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Bern
Forum Senior Member VIP Member Joined: September 22 2005 Location: Québec Status: Offline Points: 11746 |
Posted: July 12 2006 at 07:27 |
Music gave me some hope in life. Before I discovered prog and became a serious music fan, I suffered a lot of stress from my parents as they were always asking me what I was planning to study at university. It was like I had no real interests in life. I was a sad guy. I was just going through college with nothing in mind.
Now that I finally found something that really passionates me, I made it my will to continue at school. I'm currently studying History of Arts and I simply adore it. I know it may not be the best way to have a job but I didn't drop-out of school |
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RIP in bossa nova heaven. |
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MuzikLuva
Forum Groupie Joined: April 22 2006 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 81 |
Posted: July 12 2006 at 07:30 |
Sounds like you've been reading the story of my life! I live alone and work from home designing and maintaining databases. I've got music running the entire day. On weekends and vacations, I try to compose. Music is my one true escape from a mundane existence. |
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chopper
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: July 13 2005 Location: Essex, UK Status: Offline Points: 20032 |
Posted: July 12 2006 at 07:32 |
I can honestly say music changed my life (although probably not in the way you mean). In 1985 I received a phone call from someone who was looking for a bass player and had found my phone number on a piece of paper in his house. To this day I don't know how he got my number. Anyway, this lead me to join his band and we went on to make a single, spent a couple of months recording in Cyprus and got rejected by several major recording companies. After the band split, I got a "proper" job where I met my wife. One of our fans ended up marrying one of my friends, so this one phone call completely changed my life. |
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mystic fred
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: March 13 2006 Location: Londinium Status: Offline Points: 4252 |
Posted: July 12 2006 at 07:51 |
Not life changing but life enhancing. Music for me also acts as a good memory-jogger, i pull out some great old album and soon remember everything i was doing or people i knew around the time of its release. Some happy memories come flooding back when i hear an album such as "Led Zeppelin 4", when i was driving round Devon with a beautiful friend (where is she now??), but it can work the other way - at the time "A Night at the Opera" by Queen came out my Dad was in hospital with cancer and died shortly after. I was so upset i still can't play the damn thing to this day.
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Prog Archives Tour Van
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bhikkhu
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: April 06 2006 Location: A² Michigan Status: Offline Points: 5109 |
Posted: July 12 2006 at 08:44 |
The music itself cannot do anything, but it could act as a catalyst. Any real change is the resposibility of the individual.
It can also be a great comfort. "Misplaced Childhood" has done that for me during some rough times. |
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ElwoodHerring
Forum Senior Member Joined: November 12 2005 Location: United Kingdom Status: Offline Points: 232 |
Posted: July 12 2006 at 09:04 |
If music doesn't affect you emotionally, then the problem is one of three things:
1) Perhaps you're not listening to the right sort of music (for you) 2) You don't have an "ear" for music in general, or are tone deaf (not an insult; a great deal of people apparently don't have sufficient aural resolution to appreciate fine harmonies and subtle tones in music.) 3) You are Mr. Spock. (Again not an insult; music has the ability to convey all sorts of emotions, but only if you're "tuned" to them in the first place. Spock would have a hard time appreciating any kind of music, I reckon.) I have been listening to all genres of music for over 30 years, starting with classics like Beethoven and Mahler when I was in my teens. They completely blew me away at the time, and still can. There is nothing, and I mean NOTHING more emotionally charged than Mahler's Resurrection symphony. If that doesn't move you then there's no hope. But Rock music can do it too. In fact any type of music (providing it is played with conviction) can move me. There is something intrinsically human about music. Every musician leaves part of him/herself in their work, I reckon. Music can also attach itself to memories in a powerful way (as in Mystic Fred's point about Queen.) When my best friend was dying of cancer, I gave him a copy of Pink Floyd's Division Bell (which had just been released then). The last song on that album, "High Hopes" reminds me of him ever time I hear it, as it was the last piece of music he ever heard. Highly appropriate too, as it happened. Music has definitely altered my life, in all sorts of ways. I can't live without it. I write music, I write ABOUT music, I analyse it, I play it, I (used to) perform it, and even research the history of it. (see my website http://www.herring.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk) But I still can't explain exactly what it is, or why it has the effect on me that it does. Maybe if I knew, the magic would go away (and I don't want that to happen!) p.s. Read this story about one man's quest to regain his hearing and hear his favourite piece - it's quite moving. http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/13.11/bolero_pr.html Edited by ElwoodHerring - July 12 2006 at 09:15 |
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[IMG]http://www.herring.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk/DRMkillb.JPG">
Right the Copyright Wrongs (Bill Thompson's BBC blog - essential reading!) |
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man@arms
Forum Senior Member Joined: March 31 2006 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 238 |
Posted: July 12 2006 at 09:17 |
Prog has given me an escape from all the madness of the world in general and the day-to-day montony of my own life in particular. But, I wouldn't say it's more life changing than being a father. Having kids has been completely life altering and more so than any other experience I have ever had including: religion/spirituality, travel, drugs, sex or anything else I can think of. |
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Teaflax
Forum Senior Member Joined: June 26 2005 Status: Offline Points: 1225 |
Posted: July 12 2006 at 10:15 |
Music is as close as I come to religion, and other than my wife and
step children, nothing can evoke such strong emotions in me.
I wept like a child when I first saw Yes play Gates of Delirium at the Wolf Trap outisde DC (in 1999?) - it was entirely unexpected (I had avoided set list spoilers online) and I had not though I would ever get to hear that song live in my lifetime. The reaction took me somewhat by surprise, but in hindsight, it shouldn't have - that's a song I can hardly listen to at home because it's so emotionally draining. Not a week goes by that some song doesn't either give me shivers, bring tears to my eyes or just make my chest swell with joy. I have a colleague who doesn't listen to music at all; she considers it all just noise. To me, that's one of the saddest things I have ever heard. |
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Empathy
Forum Senior Member Joined: June 30 2005 Status: Offline Points: 1864 |
Posted: July 12 2006 at 10:36 |
There are entire curriculums at many music schools outlining a degree in "Music Therapy". So, I'd say yes.
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Pure Brilliance:
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Bob Greece
Prog Reviewer Joined: July 04 2005 Location: Greece Status: Offline Points: 1823 |
Posted: July 12 2006 at 10:43 |
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The Wizard
Prog Reviewer Joined: July 18 2005 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 7341 |
Posted: July 12 2006 at 11:15 |
Music gave me something to be passionate about, and it also got me intrested in other things related such as literature and philosophy.
So yes!
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Barla
Forum Senior Member Joined: April 13 2006 Location: Argentina Status: Offline Points: 4309 |
Posted: July 12 2006 at 11:26 |
When I listen to music I just forget all the problems I have. It's, as you said, a therapy !!
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ElwoodHerring
Forum Senior Member Joined: November 12 2005 Location: United Kingdom Status: Offline Points: 232 |
Posted: July 12 2006 at 11:52 |
I know what you mean, it was a long time before I came to terms with the fact that there were people who just don't like music at all. Unbelievable but true. They really don't know what they are missing. There must be some kind of switch in their brains which is permanently "off". Weird. |
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[IMG]http://www.herring.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk/DRMkillb.JPG">
Right the Copyright Wrongs (Bill Thompson's BBC blog - essential reading!) |
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ElwoodHerring
Forum Senior Member Joined: November 12 2005 Location: United Kingdom Status: Offline Points: 232 |
Posted: July 12 2006 at 11:59 |
Now there's a man who's got his priorities right. I envy you. I don't have any kids, and probably never will have now. But I do have my music, and for that I'm grateful. I just hope that some of my work will live on after me. |
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[IMG]http://www.herring.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk/DRMkillb.JPG">
Right the Copyright Wrongs (Bill Thompson's BBC blog - essential reading!) |
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Zadok
Forum Groupie Joined: July 04 2006 Location: United Kingdom Status: Offline Points: 80 |
Posted: July 12 2006 at 12:03 |
Most definately. Listening to prog and power metal helped me through a very depressed period a while back.
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cuncuna
Forum Senior Member Joined: March 29 2005 Location: Chile Status: Offline Points: 4318 |
Posted: July 12 2006 at 13:03 |
Music helped me at developing my imagination. Because of my mother, I was exposed to a large and diverse amount of music very early. From Folcklore to Jazz Rock. Everything I heard on that period (and since) was so mysterious and suggestive. As a no English speaker, I'm tempted to use the word "Soundscape" to describe what I use to imagine while I was listening to all those forms of music. On the otehr hand, Reggaeton transforms people into toxic post-apocaliptic prostitutes from hell or from another planet, all covered in transpiration, golden chains and horrible clothing. ¿How's that for a change?.
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¡Beware of the Bee!
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Ricochet
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: February 27 2005 Location: Nauru Status: Offline Points: 46301 |
Posted: July 12 2006 at 13:06 |
Music's my life. Having both classical music and this wonderful prog rock as passion is a bliss. Nothing wrong about my life then.
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DeepPhreeze
Forum Senior Member Joined: April 02 2006 Status: Offline Points: 261 |
Posted: July 12 2006 at 13:12 |
Music is my other drug of choice. Without it I would never call myself into question. There's something very spiritual about handing your thoughts over to the music and letting it guide you through thought processes you normally wouldn't explore.
Music definitely can be life-altering. |
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