Music and mind Harnessing the arts for health and wellness

Book - 2024

"World-renowned soprano and arts/health advocate Renee Fleming curates a collection of essays from leading scientists, creative arts therapists, educators, healthcare providers and artists about the powerful impacts of music and the arts on health and the human experience A compelling and growing body of research has shown music and arts therapies to be effective tools for addressing a widening array of conditions, from providing pain relief, to enhancing speech recovery after stroke or traumatic brain injury through singing, to improving mobility of individuals with Parkinson's disease using rhythm. In Music and Mind Renee Fleming draws upon her own experience as an advocate to showcase the breadth of this booming field, inviting... leading experts to share their discoveries. In addition to describing therapeutic benefits, the book explores evolution, brain function, childhood development, and technology as applied to arts and health. Much of this area of study is relatively new, made possible by recent advances in brain imaging, and supported by the National Institutes of Health, major hospitals, and universities. This work is sparking an explosion of public interest in the arts and health sector. Fleming has presented on this material in over fifty cities across North America, Europe, and Asia, collaborating with leading researchers, policy-makers, and practitioners. With essays from known musicians, writers, and artists, as well as leading neuroscientists, Music and Mind is a groundbreaking book and the perfect introduction and overview of this exciting new field"--

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615.85154/Music
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2nd Floor New Shelf 615.85154/Music (NEW SHELF) Due Nov 26, 2024
Subjects
Genres
Informational works
Published
New York : Viking [2024]
Language
English
Other Authors
Renée Fleming (editor)
Physical Description
xxxiii, 558 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9780593653197
  • Foreword
  • Overture: Music and Mind
  • How and Why
  • Experts Explain the Basic Science Connecting Arts and Health, Including Origins in Evolution
  • Musicality, Evolution, and Animal Responses to Music
  • What Does It Mean to Be Musical?
  • The Parting Glass
  • Sound Connects Us
  • How Music Shows Us What It Means to Be Human
  • The Medical Muse
  • Health Professionals and Artists Share Impacts of the Arts in Hospitals and Clinical Settings
  • Sounding Joy
  • Can Singing Touch the Heart?
  • Rabbit Hole
  • Music for Chronic Pain Management
  • Music Across the Continuum of Care: A Hospital Setting
  • "I Sing the Body Electric": Music Psychotherapy in Medicine
  • Health in the Spotlight
  • Artists and Leading Presenters Discuss Key Health and Community Initiatives
  • How to Fall in Love with Opera
  • Our Symphony Orchestra: The People's Band and a Symbol of Civilization
  • Arts for Non-Arts Outcomes
  • Musical Connections: What Can Music Do?
  • Sing, Dance, and Play!
  • Dance and Parkinson's: Finding Humanity Through a Musical Road Map
  • Creative Learning
  • Educators and Researchers Illuminate the Effects of Arts Engagement on the Developing Brain
  • Humans Are Musical Creatures: The Case for Music Education
  • State of the Art: National Statistics on Music in America's Schools
  • Rhythm & Rhyme: Supporting Young Children and Families with Musical Play
  • Healing Arts
  • Play On Philly
  • Belonging Through Music: Investing in Our Children's Future
  • Music As Therapy
  • Experiences and Applications
  • Music and Mysticism
  • Healing Note by Note
  • The Potential of Group Singing to Promote Health and Well-Being
  • Sing Your Way Home: How Music Therapy Taught Me to Trust the Journey
  • … & the Field: Re-membering the Hinterlands in Music & Health
  • Music and Memory: Exploring the Power of Music to Reach Those with Dementia and Other Neurologic Conditions
  • My Voice, My Song: Music as a Form of Self-Espression in Cancer Treatment
  • Achieving Body, Mind, and Soul Harmony with Multiple Sclerosis
  • Science: A Deeper Dive
  • Researchers Reveal Their Methodology and Compelling Results
  • Arts-Based Therapies in Integrative Health
  • Music, Memory, Aging, and Science
  • Art Therapy, Psychology, and Neuroscience: A Timely Convergence
  • Coda and Crescendo: How Neuroscience Created Neurologic Music Therapy to Help Heal the Injured Brain
  • Musical Enjoyment and the Reward Circuits of the Brain
  • The Benefits of Musical Engagement Across the Life Span: Education, Health, and Well-Being
  • The Road Ahead
  • Integrated Approaches to Arts, Technology, Community, and Health for the Future
  • Nature, Culture, and Healing
  • Composing the Future of Health
  • Porous Density
  • Blueprint for Cultivating; the Field of Neuroarts
  • Acknowledgments
  • About the Contributors
  • Note on Notes
  • Credits
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

Art and science, both reliant on creativity, are powerful lenses through which to comprehend the world. This anthology, edited by renowned singer Fleming, celebrates the convergence of those two domains. The eclectic ensemble of contributors includes scientists (Francis Collins), therapists, musicians (Yo-Yo Ma), physicians, writers (Richard Powers, Ann Patchett), and researchers. Music affects the human brain in wide-ranging ways and can enhance well-being too. But exactly why are people so robustly attracted to music and react so dramatically to rhythm? Various chapters focus on neuroscience, music therapy (for chronic pain, stress, or dementia), group singing, child development, dance for patients with Parkinson's disease, music in schools, and mysticism. Current research on how music promotes health is featured. The book attains a high note with its incorporation of emotionally moving memoir. Music can energize, inspire, and calm us, yet healing us might turn out to be its greatest gift. Whether readers' tastes trend toward beautifully organized sound, comforting random background noise, or even ear-wrecking hard rock, chances are this vibrant tome will resonate.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Singer Fleming (The Inner Singer) gathers essays that probe the "powerful health benefits of music and the arts" in this stimulating anthology. Among the multidisciplinary slate of contributors featured are singer-songwriter Ben Folds, who explains in "Our Symphony Orchestra" that live music spurs communal connection, vividly describing how he performed at a concert in the weeks following 9/11 in which the audience's "grief silently reverberated around the room"; Christopher Bailey, the arts and health lead of the World Health Organization, who became blind in midlife and details in "Sounding Joy" how sight loss spurs the production of "new neural pathways to the auditory center use sound to create an aural landscape"; and Michael H. Thaut, a professor of music at the Institute of Medical Sciences' Rehabilitation Science Institute, who outlines in "Coda and Crescendo" how music therapy can retrain "cognitive, motor, and speech and language functions via shared brain systems, altered connectivity, and enhanced plasticity." Taken together, the essays reflect a "human-centric" model of care that smoothly integrates traditional scientific research and intuitive notions of integrative health. The result is an expansive and thought-provoking look at the dynamic intersection between art and science. (Apr.)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

A collection of essays about the health benefits of music and the arts. Editor Fleming, an acclaimed soprano and arts/health advocate, introduces readers to current research and practices related to the healing power of the arts. Among the contributors are scientists from leading research facilities, practitioners, educators, and musicians and writers, including Richard Powers, Ann Patchett, Rosanne Cash, Zakir Hussain, and Yo-Yo Ma, who share their personal experiences. Many readers are aware of the power of music to reduce stress. However, there is an interesting misconception that classical music is superior to other genres when it comes to relaxation. While calm music is "often associated with relaxation, a wide variety of music styles and ways of engaging with music can promote stress relief," writes Joke Bradt, a board-certified music therapist. While studies show that introducing music to children at an early age improves cognitive and brain development, as well as language skills, some school districts are still apprehensive about implementing music programs. Indre Viskontas, director of the Creative Brain Lab at the University of San Francisco, clearly demonstrates why they shouldn't be hesitant: "Instead of taking time and resources away from the core curriculum, music programs in schools motivate kids to attend, and drive up graduation rates, GPAs, and good behavior." The contributors also provide concrete evidence to support the ways music therapy and art-based interventions can assist patients with dementia and other debilitating conditions, including Alzheimer's, PTSD, Parkinson's disease, and multiple sclerosis, as well as depression and loneliness. While some of the topics repeat across the essays, they are no less compelling, and most of the pieces complement each other. Francis S. Collins, the former head of the Human Genome Project, provides the foreword. A must-read for anyone who questions the health benefits of music. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.