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Liam-de-M--rov--e

  • Aug 1, 2017
  • Joined Jan 21, 2014
  • Firstly, this is actually an answer to a previous post "Where does music end?" as well as a counter question to that post.

    So, What Is Music... Exactly?

    There have been many definitions and even more articles on this phenomenon called Music that it would be unwise of me to attempt yet another definition, so, what I'm offering instead is the brainchild of David M. Greenberg, Ph.D. a music psychologist at the University of Cambridge and City University of New York, and a visiting researcher at the Autism Research Centre. His research examines musical behavior at the intersection of personality, social, and cognitive science.
    Viz https://www.psychologytoday.com/experts/david-m-greenberg-phd
    https://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/the-power-music/201608/what-is-music-exactly
    https://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/the-power-music/201704/the-world-s-first-music-therapist

    Here are some extracts you may find useful from the title: What Is Music... Exactly?:

    "Start with a simple vibration.

    Music is essential to many of our lives. We listen to it when waking up, while in transit, at work, and with our friends. For many, music is like a constant companion. It can bring us joy and motivate us, accompany us through difficult times, and alleviate our worries.

    Music is much more than mere entertainment. It has been a feature of every known human society—anthropologists and sociologists have yet to find a single culture throughout the course of human history that has not had music. In fact, many evolutionary psychologists today make the argument that music predated language. Primitive tribes and religious practices have used music to reach enlightened states for thousands of years, and Pythagoras used music to heal different psychological and physical ailments. Currently, cutting-edge scientific research has shown the effect that music has on the brain, the individual, and society.

    Not only does music reach us on intellectual, social, and emotional levels, but many describe it as spiritual or mystical. The use of melodic, harmonic, and rhythmic devices in music can induce a psychological state in both the musicians and the listener that is beyond words to describe. Music can bring us back to ourselves, be our mirror, and show us a side of us we may have long forgotten or never knew existed.

    Even though we are constantly exposed music in our daily lives, we rarely stop to actually think about what it is. After all, what exactly is music?

    Fundamentally, music is a combination of sounds, and sound is vibration. One of the most succinct definitions of music comes from the Italian composer Ferruccio Busoni, who said that, “Music is sonorous air.” It's extraordinary to think that a simple vibration unseen by the human eye can facilitate a deeply rich emotional experience, alter perception and consciousness, and induce ecstatic states of being. What is the process by which these sonic vibratory frequencies are heard by the listener, creating a profound psychological experience for them? How does something as fleeting as "sonorous air" have such a healing and therapeutic effect on people? And how does it facilitate personal growth?

    In this series, titled "The Power of Music," we will explore these questions in detail by reporting on the latest cutting edge research on music, interviewing musicians, scientists, therapists, and spiritual leaders about their work with music, and digging up ancient texts and musical practices. We will bring in ideas and experiences from a wide spectrum of perspectives to see if there is some underlying thread that can be found. The intention is not to take away from the mystery of music, but rather to increase our understanding and appreciation of it so that we can use and experience it to the fullest. A greater understanding of the powers of music can inform how it can be used for the benefit of individuals, societies, and those in need.

    And also from the title: The World’s First Music Therapist - An account from over two thousand years ago

    As a musician and someone who studies the psychology of music, a topic of great interest to me is the historical origins of music therapy. When was music first used as a method of healing, and who was the first to do it? As it turns out, the origins of music therapy trace back much further than is commonly thought.

    Music therapy as it is recognized today, is still a relatively young field when compared to other disciplines. In fact, the American Music Therapy Association (the largest music therapy organization in the world) cites the earliest reference of music therapy to a 1789 article in Columbian Magazine titled “Musically Physically Considered” (http://www.musictherapy.org/about/history/). It took over a hundred years after that for the first educational and training program and national association in music therapy to be established in the 1940’s and 50’s.

    However, music has actually been used as a therapy for thousands of years. I had initially thought that the earliest account of music therapy was from the Greek philosopher and mathematician Pythagoras (c. 570 – c. 495 BC), who would prescribe different musical scales and modes to cure different physical and psychological ailments. But there’s an even earlier account and it came from a source that I did not initially anticipate.

    One morning this past December I received a call from my friend and teacher Yitzhak Buxbaum. Yitzhak is a 73-year-old Jewish author and maggid (spiritual teacher) who has written 11 books including Jewish Spiritual Practices (https://www.amazon.com/Jewish-Spiritual-Practices-Yitzhak-Buxbaum/dp/156...).

    Unknowing that the day on which he called was actually my birthday, Yitzhak said, “I have a great gift for you”. He told me to look up I Samuel Chapter 16 in Prophets. He said, “This will give you the answer you are looking for”. Since I had never read the book of Prophets before, I rushed to the nearest book store and bought my first complete Jewish bible. I quickly scurried through the pages to find the verses Yitzhak told me to look up.

    The verses told the story of King Saul who had become tormented by a feeling of melancholy. Saul’s servants suggested that they find a musician who could play for him to soothe his psyche. One of the servants suggested a young man named David who he heard was a skilled musician. Saul was in agreement and so the servants went to find the young David and brought him to King Saul. It then says the following: “And it happened that whenever the spirit of melancholy from God was upon Saul, David would take the lyre (harp) and play it. Saul would then feel relieved and the spirit of melancholy would depart from him” (I Samuel, 16:23).

    Here before my very eyes, was one of the first accounts of music therapy. David was able to cure King Saul’s depression through music. About a week later I saw Yitzhak in-person—he waved at me with a smirk and paper in his hand. The paper was a passage from a book by the highly regarded scholar Robert Alter called The David Story: A translation with commentary of 1 and 2 Samuel. In the commentary, Alter writes in reference to the servants suggestion of a musician to King Saul: “what they have in mind is a kind of music therapist”.

    Thus, before David became a great warrior and King, he was first a music therapist. But, there remain many questions: How did King Saul’s servants know to suggest a musician? Who taught David how to play music? And what kind of music did David actually play to heal Saul?

    In reference to the last question, though the harp/lyre can be played upbeat and rhythmically, we might assume that the music David played was soft and gentle, which is suitable for the harp/lyre. Indeed, when the scene is depicted visually in several movies—including “King David” (1985) starring Richard Gere—David is depicted playing a song that matches King Saul’s mood: slow in tempo with a feeling of longing, sadness and emotional depth.

    There is even scientific evidence from the past several years to show how sad music can be consoling and soothing. My team published a study in 2015 (http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0131151) showing how preferences for music with emotional depth and sadness is linked to empathy levels—Dr. Jonna Vuoskoski at Oxford has found similar results. And Dr. David Huron at Ohio State University provides a compelling neurobiological hypothesis on why sad music is soothing. He suggests that for some, when listening to sad music, the hormone prolactin is secreted. Prolactin produces feelings of tranquility and calmness, and emits a consoling and soothing effect. It is released in ‘psychic’ tears of both happiness and sadness, it is released during nursing, after sexual intercourse, and when we feel empathy for someone who is sad. Huron says that the acoustic features of sad music “emulate” the features of sad speech, and that these musical cues may evoke feelings of tenderness or sadness which sends a signal for prolactin to be released.

    The healing powers of music are vast, and we see evidence dating back thousands of years of how music has been used therapeutically. Indeed, there are accounts of music therapy in Judaism and other traditions including Sufism and Hinduism that may even predate King David (for example, the account of the 7-year-old Serach Bat Asher who took Jacob out of a 22-year depression by playing a melody repeatedly while he was praying). Regardless of whether you (the reader) believes or not if the events in religious texts are historically accurate, there is little to argue that at the time in which they were written, music was thought of as a therapeutic modality. In the thousands of years since then, music has co-evolved with the human brain, and people have been intuitively using music as a self-therapy and therapy for others. Thus, our brains are hardwired to experience music as a therapeutic agent, and it should be the mission of today’s musicians, music therapists and psychologists to continue to master the use of this healing modality, that began thousands of years ago."

    Here is an interesting book extract:

    What Is Music?
    William Arms Fisher
    The Musical Quarterly
    Vol. 15, No. 3 (Jul., 1929), pp. 360-370
    https://www.jstor.org/stable/738326?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents

    For those who are interested in some of the Definitions of the word Music, here are some references:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Definition_of_music
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music
    https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music

    Thank you for reading!
    • Hello HeinG,

      I would definitely agree that a very good quality solid Sitka Spruce top is preferable above exotic tone woods that can easily bind/limit you to fewer modes of expression in your playing in your case, seeing this would be your 2nd acoustic guitar.

      Personally I deem the Cort acoustic ranges to be "very good value", but you can do a lot better.

      I've kept all the acoustic guitars I ever bought, so there is a wide range to choose from, depending on my mood. Different body styles and different woods, from more affordable to more expensive, like, Gibson and Martin.

      One guitar that really spoke to me from under the R10k range was the Takamine GD93CE, from their G-series range: Good, solid Sitka Spruce top over Indian Rosewood with a wedge inlay of figured Maple. Definitely an articulate stage performer with an above average built in pre-amp and pickup set.

      Best of luck and always try out as many acoustics as appeal to you before you lay down the dough. ?

      Here is the URL you can visit before finding a dealer: http://www.takamine.com/G90
      • Hi Chilli,

        If you haven't bought your guitar yet, I suggest strongly to go for this one:

        http://www.gumtree.co.za/a-musical-instruments/emmarentia/epiphone-les-paul-custom/1001240728940910028767209

        I own one of these and they are definitely on par with a Gibson LP when it comes to the overall build quality, the hardware and specifically the great set of high class pickups. No costs were spared in building this guitar.

        ?

        • If you are willing to look at solidstate amps, the ZT range might just be up your street. Our famous Keira Witherkay is on her second (I think, upgrade) ZT and she does Jazz, Blues, Acoustic and just about everything on this tiny Lunchbox with a 12" and 200-300 screamers to its throat... Easy to lug anywhere; you can find one in Jozie at a reasonable price. I'd talk to her if it was me buying. I include their web URL for your convenience: http://www.ztamplifiers.com/products/

          I use Fender Tweed cables 18.6' (5.5m) - very reliable, strong and possibly thicker/diameter quality than most at the price.
          Also Planet Waves, Shielded End with gold plating are great. Both makes don't kill the pocket and are guarranteed to give you long life, which is what you want.

          Korg tuners are chromatic and allows higher and lower pitching than say, Seiko.

          Hope this is of some interest to you.

          Long May You Run!

          Liam Lionheart.
          • Nice, very nice! Do you still perform around Cape Town area, Peter?
            Liam
            • Play the base. Play the mandolin. Play the ukelele. Play the Baritone guitar. The more you play, the more you grow, you can't go wrong, in fact if you were strumming acoustic, you'll come out doing acoustic riffs! If you were playing lead, you'll come out fingerpicking acoustic. Just do it! :'(