Music therapy for your mood and mind

Music therapy for your mood and mind

The right song can calm, inspire or energize you. Learn how to use music to influence your mind and boost your mood.
Updated:
2009-09-18 12:14
Published:
2008-06-20 00:00
By 
Heather Camlot

How music can affect your mood

Music is a powerful phenomenon that transcends language, culture, gender and age. It can slip into your mind and alter your mood -- for better or for worse -- with its harmony, rhythm, lyrics, melody, timbre and pitch. Together, these musical elements create an intense and profound emotional reaction.

"Music is auditory, emotional and motoric," writes renowned New York neurologist Dr. Oliver Sacks in his book Musicophilia (Knopf, 2007). "We keep time to it, involuntarily, even if we are not consciously attending to it and our faces and postures mirror the ‘narrative' of the melody and the thoughts and feelings it provokes."

Michelle Lawrence, a music therapist with the Victoria Conservatory of Music (VCM) in British Columbia agrees. "Music affects us whether we know it or not. It is around us all the time. You have commercials, television, and music is specifically placed to create emotion, to make you feel something, to make you purchase something."

How music affects and afflicts your mood
Studies have shown that different types of music can have different effects on mood. Grunge rock, for instance, can increase hostility, tension and sadness. Country music can lead to depression. Classical has the power to uplift.Musical group REM's song Shiny Happy People can energize with its quick tempo, lively beat and bright tonal colours; Mozart's Eine Kleine Nachtmusik can relax with its slow tempo, smooth flowing rhythms and even pulse. While music's tempo can directly affect your mood, music affects everyone in different ways.

Get personal with music
"I firmly believe that personal preference has to play a role in it," says Dr. Johanne Brodeur, the head of music therapy at the VCM. "I'm not saying if you play hard rock music it's going to put you to sleep, but it doesn't have to be Bach or Handel. Just something you enjoy listening to that will be soothing to you."

Music has many goals, Brodeur points out, from promoting relaxation and strengthening self-esteem to managing anxiety and expanding your ability to express yourself. "The goals are endless. You just have to decide what's right for you."

Make music work for you
"We can use music to help a lot with our mood in a more powerful way than what people may be doing," says Lawrence. If you're feeling upset, for example, she suggests matching a piece of music to your mood, but then slowly adding in some happier songs.

You can also use music as a nighttime ritual to help you relax, or create a playlist that keeps you motivated during a long run. Of the latter, Dr. Costas Karageorghis, a sport psychologist at Brunel University in London and head of the Music in Sport Research Group, has found that some of the benefits of running with music include its positive effects on mood, its ability to make you feel more alert and its ability to distract from your task and thereby reduce your rate of perceived exertion, or how hard you feel you've worked.

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Music therapy for your mood and mind

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  • CARRIE wrote:

    Jun 23, 2008

    2009-09-22 10:48 AM

    RELAX LISTENING TO PINK FLOYD'S DARK SIDE OF THE MOON.
  • g wrote:

    Jul 03, 2008

    2009-09-22 10:49 AM

    lyrical content aside, listening to bands such as Canada's own Cannibal Corpse can replace caffeine.
  • Susan wrote:

    Jul 03, 2008

    2009-09-22 10:49 AM

    motivational CDs - morning especially "The Very Best of Sheryl Crow", get in the mood for a chore you really don't want to do (eg housework) "The Baddest of George Thorogood"
  • Allison wrote:

    Nov 24, 2008

    2009-09-22 10:49 AM

    When I'm about to go on a road trip or am on a way to a party I listen to IRON MAIDEN!
  • Trevor Jamal Hassad wrote:

    Nov 23, 2008

    2009-09-22 10:50 AM

    For the ultimate pick-me-up music, check out the latest DONNA SUMMER CD called 'CRAYONS'. I guarantee you WILL BE ON YOUR FEET in less than 30 seconds!
  • Jen wrote:

    Jun 09, 2008

    2009-11-18 2:59 PM

    My favourite songs to: Relax to: Stadium Arcadium by The Red Hot Chili Peppers. The Frog Prince by Keane. Ave Maria by Jewel -- particularly during the holiday season Energize you: Where the streets have no name by U2. Pump It by Black Eyes Peas. Pretty much any salsa music. Is It Any Wonder by Keane. To inspire you: Canon by Pachelbel. Kashmir by Led Zeppelin. Running to Stand Still by U2. J:)
  • Omaii Fae Tien wrote:

    Jul 05, 2008

    2009-11-18 2:59 PM

    One of my favourite sings, Gackt, Has a variety of songs. They all rang in different ways in that if I want a pick-me-up song full of energy I turn to his song "Vanilla", if I need a calming one i turn on his 'Mars' version of "Miz'erable" and if I am feeling down adn want similiar music i turn on his "Mirror" He has a wonderful voice and knows exactly how the instruments should meld together for the perfect moods. however my favourite for energy songs are almost all of the songs sang by Miyavi, a talented vocalist.
  • Suzanne Martin wrote:

    Oct 14, 2008

    2009-11-18 3:02 PM

    James Brown! Couldn't figure out why until I read somewhere that analysis of brains listening to JB showed more parts 'lit up'. It is thought that our brain relates to his active physical performances when his music is playing. It engages the parts of the brain involved in physical movement also.
  • Lucas wrote:

    Nov 24, 2008

    2009-11-18 3:02 PM

    Very nice article! I completely agree with it. I like to listen to Utada Hikaru, she's a Japanese pop artist, though i hesitate to call her that. Its like she has a genre all her own. Her voice is amazing and if you read the translations to some of her songs they're just amazing! Even if you don't understand what she's singing you can still understand what the song is about. Every song she's released has a differnet emotion to it. Its just amazing how talented and wonderful she is!
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