This is read by an automated voice. Please report any issues or inconsistencies here. Music changes how we feel. Not just emotionally, but biologically. You don’t have to be at a concert to notice it.
Music is part of our lives. From our earliest childhood, we are fed lullabies and nursery rhymes. As we grow up, it's the tunes listened to by our parents or played on the radio that build our ...
A growing body of studies show that music lessons in the early years boost the brain beyond childhood, National Geographic reported. Music training benefits us in the long run, as we age, in the form ...
Live musical performances speak to the soul, stimulating the brain in ways more powerful than listening to a recorded tune does, new research finds. "Our study showed that pleasant and unpleasant ...
Can music affect the brain? That was the question asked at Bravo! Vail Music Festival’s Inside the Music event on July 9, part of the festival’s education and enrichment series. “I’ve had the great ...
A new study showed that regularly listening to music, whether its' from Sir Mix A Lot (pictured here) or someone else, is associated with lower likelihoods of cognitive decline and dementia. (Photo by ...
When I was a kid, I spent hours writing. My sister and I shared a small walk-in closet, and while she used her half for organizing her up-to-the-minute fashions on rolling clothes racks and stacked ...
Music can be a powerful tool to help process complex emotions. But music therapy — using music in a clinical setting to help with mental and physical health issues — goes far beyond just listening to ...