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The 5 Main Ways Music Can Impact Your Life

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Music affects all people differently.

One thing that is consistent is that no matter who you are or where you are from – music changes lives and can improve your day to day living.

There’s nothing better than pairing one of your favorite activities, for example driving or jogging, with an awesome tune. Music is transformative in many ways, but it is especially impactful on both our physical and emotional wellbeing.

So what are the most common ways music can impact people’s lives?

That’s exactly what we’ll explain below. Some may surprise you while others won’t. Either way, we’re certain when you’re done reading, you’ll be ready to throw on one of your favorite jams.

1. Therapeutic – Music is a Way To Relax

Music affects the body both mentally and physically, and it can create relaxing state of being. This can come in the form of slowing down blood pressure or slowing down a heart rate.

Additionally, different styles of songs can reduce the production of stress inducing hormones. Whether you’re passively listening or actively using music during prayer or meditation, music’s ability to help someone relax is undeniable.

2. Emotive – Improves Expression and Communication

By listening or creating music, people can express emotions and feelings beyond words. Researchers claim that listening to music may be able to change how the brain functions to the same extent as medication.

Music is an outlet for defining our existence in our reality. And this is a universal truth that spans time and culture. Because of this, music serves as a primary mode for human expression and allows people to communicate feelings or experiences better.

3. Physical Enhancement – Improves Performance Activity

Going for a run or embarking on your daily workout routine is practically impossible without your music. And there’s a good reason for that. Music can improve performance in multiple ways.

Music is a good type of distraction that keeps the mind occupied, with reported physical improvement of 15% during a workout. Music also helps ‘put you in the zone,’ contribute to helping you keep pace and time your workouts, and make you want to exercise in the first place.

4. Intelligence Boosting – Increases Memory

There has been decades and decades of research that has gone into understanding how music can improve one’s intelligence and brain. Whether you’re listening to music or playing an instrument, there are many brain benefits in music.

Some research suggests that playing an instrument regularly alters the shape and power of the brain. There are even indications that music helps enhance memory, meaning learning music online via a site like allstringed.com has many added benefits.

5. Fosters Self-Perception – Gives Perspective

Music is an opportunity for storytelling. Whether it’s through the lyrics or the rhythm and harmony created by notes and sounds, music is the composer’s way to tell their story, and the audience’s job is to listen.

And it’s because of this reciprocal relationship humans can connect with both their heart and mind to the experience. Whether it’s Lizzo’s “Truth Hurts” or Frank Sinatra’s “My Way” or Debussy’s “Clair De Lune” music’s ability to impact a person’s self-perception is undeniable.

Final Thoughts

Was there anything that surprised you from our list? With so many different benefits and ways music can affect your life, don’t you think we could all do with a bit more tunes and a lot less television?

It’s undeniable that music can elevate people in many ways that will benefit them throughout their entire lives. All we have to do is create and listen.

 

Believed to be the only surviving footage of The Beatles Abbey Road TV special from BBC 2 in 1969

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The special is notable for the first airing of the “Day in the Life” music video and also contained other things such as a animation sequence of Maxwell’s Silver Hammer.

1-minute tip for artists: Your Merch

👕 by Kelsi Mayne, by the way? Why, because not only do I love her music, I love a great pun, and that’s a great enough reason to re-think your merch for sale.

Radiohead Are Putting Classic Live Shows on YouTube During the Pandemic

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Just watch. First up, Punchestown Racecourse, County Kildare, Ireland.

.. and here’s Live In Berlin, where the crowd goes, how do you say, bezerk?

Johnny Marr Teaches “The Headmaster Ritual” by The Smiths

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Johnny Marr gives a unique access to his home studio where he performs and then teaches how to play “The Headmaster Ritual” by The Smiths.

1-minute tip for artists: Do a takeover.

The social media takeover is another cool way for artists to get heard and seen – you get to posting your own content on a whole different stream, reaching new people, and they get to do the same.

1-minute tip for artists: Trending topics.

Find those trneidn topics on social media to connect a post with, but stay away from anything negative, or one that’s an absolute storm of controversy.

Canadian Folk Outlier NOBLE SON Offers “Sad Dumb Lovesick Young Kid” Ahead of New Album, Life Isn’t Fun

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When it comes to describing the indie-folk undertaking that is Canadian artist Noble Son — aka Adam Kirschner, singer/songwriter, actor, and VFV (very familiar voice) — his new single “Sad Dumb Lovesick Young Kid,” and album Life Isn’t Fun, here’s what others have to say:

“There is a dichotomy buried deep in the musical well that is Noble Son: the brutal heartbreak of reality and the bounding absurdity of life itself,” says BeatRoute. “His romanticism is all wrong according to feel-good rules — where love fails, politics prevail, that sort of thing — but maybe that’s why his music makes us hurt so good.

“It’s impossible to speak of his work without also exclaiming about the other component of Noble Son: an uncanny Jim Carrey-esque persona. All the roiling energy in that creative well of the artist also expresses itself through comically brilliant physicality.”

“When we think of folk music at a glance, visions of somber men and women standing emotionally with their guitars often comes to mind,” Citrus Magazine concurs. “Noble Son is quite the opposite.

“Kirschner confronts and criticizes his genre for being too serious, which is pretty obvious for anyone who’s seen him live. Perhaps life is a bit more of a playground than we give it credit, and it’s time for the sad boy musician trope to be a thing of the past. Through storytelling, Kirschner reminds us that we are allowed to have fun, even in times of uncertainty and political unrest.”

Between long, isolating winters during his Northern Canadian upbringing, and inspiration mined from themes of anxiety, self pity, obsessive joy, and rage, Kirschner’s uniquely eruptive songwriting and displays of sonic inventiveness walk the line between subtly endearing and unbridled animalism.

Recorded at Afterlife Studios in Vancouver, BC — and his most ambitious work to date — Life Isn’t Fun features contributions from Erik Nielsen (We Are The City, Deep Dark Woods), Andrew Rasmussen (Hey, Ocean!, Hannah Georgas), Alex Dobson (Old Man Canyon, David Beckingham) and more.

Adam Kirschner is an internationally recognized voice actor, having backed cartoons and commercials for brands such as Porsche, Disney, Bud Light, My Little Pony, the Vancouver Canucks, and more. He’s also an accomplished television and film actor, and has been seen on shows such as CW’s iZombie and the upcoming Hulu original series, Woke.

His most previous video for “Love Love Love” — also featured on Life Isn’t Fun — was shot by Director of Photography Cole Graham (Drake, Solange) and directed by Kasey Lum (Lights, Felix Cartel).

Life Isn’t Fun is available May 15, 2020.

“Sad Dumb Lovesick Young Kid” is available now.

1-minute tip for artists: Throwback Thursdays

Who would have guessed that it all started from a basketball show blog in the mid-2000s? This is your opportunity to share photos, videos, or talk about happy moments in your life, past songs, past memories, anything nostalgic for your audience.

Indigo Love of Reading Foundation Commits $1,000,000 in Funding for Books and Educational Resources to Support Canadian Families in High-Needs Communities During the COVID-19 Pandemic

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