Stereogum Home

 

October 1, 2007

Oliver Sacks On Brainworms

Neurologist Oliver Sacks -- you know, the dude who inspired Awakenings –- has a new book music fans might wanna check out (lots of relevant overlaps). Musicophilia: Tales Of Music And The Brain, which looks at the ways music affects the brain, seems crammed with anecdotes and fascinating case studies that'll sorta literally blow the mind. Can't wait to read it. For now, there's an interview with Sacks in this month's WIRED -- part of which is excerpted over at their site. We found the following exchange particularly interesting.

WIRED: When you were growing up, hearing music often required going to see it performed. But iPods make music ubiquitous, like mental air-conditioning. What have we gained or lost by that?

OLIVER SACKS: At first it would seem to be a wonderful gain. Darwin might have had to go to London to see a concert. But I can't help wondering if the incidence of earworms and musical hallucinations is higher now, with background music in every public place. You can't go to a restaurant without music, and they get offended if you ask them to turn it off. They feel it's part of their creativity -- they're doing it for you.

The brain is very sensitive to music; you don't have to attend to it to record it internally and be affected by it. I think we may be exposed to too much loud and repetitive music. One patient of mine has epileptic seizures induced by music and has to wear earplugs in New York City. It's a dangerous place for him.

Also, to bolster the ol' vocab, check out OS discussing brainworms at Amazon. Hey, that’s kinda how we feel about "Young Folks."

Musicophilia: Tales of Music and the Brain is out 10/24 on Knopf. Wonder what he's listening to...

Posted at 3:12 PM in
Tags:




4 Comments

"The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat and Other Clinical Tales" is the best/only collection of neurology anecdotes I've ever read.

Posted by: David at 10/01/07 7:02 PM  | Reply
Score = 0 Vote up Vote down

"this is your brain on music: science of a human obsession" by daniel levitin from mcgill university is a good read if you're into music and neuroscience.

Posted by: jon d at 10/01/07 11:44 PM  | Reply
Score = 0 Vote up Vote down

Well... props to stereogum for trying!

I've had this book on my list for months... glad to see the post, even if no one is really interested in neurology...

Posted by: schlarb at 10/02/07 2:54 AM  | Reply
Score = 0 Vote up Vote down

I'm not very interested in neurology, but I'm currently reading An Anthropologist on Mars and it's very good, very entertaining. I can't wait to read this one.

Posted by: Becky at 10/02/07 12:08 PM  | Reply
Score = 0 Vote up Vote down

Leave a comment


Staff

  • Founder/Editor-In-Chief: Scott Lapatine
  • Executive Editor: Amrit Singh
  • Senior Writer: Brandon Stosuy

Info

Contact

Get Flash to see our mp3 player. Here are our mp3s: Cold Cave - Life Magazine (»)
Pants Yell! - Cold Hands (»)
Bill Quick - Take Me Away (»)
Fool's Gold - Surprise Hotel (Wallpaper's Mariah Mashup) (»)
Air - Sing Sang Sung (Black Moth Super Rainbow Remix) (»)
Avi Buffalo - What's In It For (»)
Vampire Weekend - Horchata (»)
Small Black - Kings Of Animals (»)
Max Tundra - Which Song (Passion Pit Remix) (»)
Cold Cave - Theme From Tomorrowland (»)
Tegan And Sara - Hell (»)
Jeff The Brotherhood - Bone Jam (»)
Mount Eerie - Wind's Dark Poem (»)
Tigercity - Fake Gold (»)
Yeasayer - Ambling Alp (»)
Drink Up Buttercup - Even Think (Andrew W.K. Remix) (»)
Florence And The Machine - You've Got The Love (The xx Remix) (»)
Cold Cave - The Laurels of Erotomania (»)
Jookabox - Phantom Don't Go (»)
Jookabox - You Cried Me (»)

Progress Report logo
Commercial Appeal logo
Premature Evaluation logo
Band to Watch logo
Quit Your Day Job logo
The Outsiders logo
The 'Gum Drop logo