Music - Hagan PDF
Music - Hagan PDF
Music - Hagan PDF
Abigail Hagan
Although music has been used as a therapeutic and medicinal healing agent throughout
history, music therapy has only become a credentialed profession in the 18th century.
Research shows that music can promote physical rehabilitation, manage stress, improve
communication, enhance memory, alleviate pain, and help to express feelings. Many
people are not informed about what music therapy is and do not understand that it is
research based and has measurable results. My essay describes different examples of
how music therapy has been used in different situations with actual results that prove the
legitimacy of music being used as a healing tool.
As a student who is interested in a music therapy major, two of the questions most commonly
asked of me are “What is music therapy?” or “What does music therapy do?” Since music
therapy is a growing profession, it is not widely known or understood. Many people are
skeptical of the legitimacy of music as a healing tool, and therefore cast aside music therapy as a
hoax or as a placebo healing method. In the article “Science in our World: Certainty &
Controversy,” Christopher D. Busch uses scientific research to show the powerful effect that
music can have on the body that helps to back up the validity of music therapy.1 After reading
this article, researching this topic, and seeing scientific results I firmly agree that Music therapy
is an effective method of treatment.
In his article, Christopher D. Busch uses descriptions and results of scientific studies from his
research to prove the legitimacy of music therapy.2 Psychologist Charles Emery tested the effects
of music on physical activity. In his study he had half of the subjects exercise with music and
half without. All subjects were then tested for mental activity. On average, participants who
listened to music scored twice as high as those who did not listen to music.3 Psychologist
Frances Rausher’s research showed that playing and writing music increases brain function and
can increase IQ. Children who had music lessons scored 2 to 3 points higher than children who
did not.4
The article says that listening to music that makes you feel happy or relaxed can have some of
the same effects as restful sleep. This, they say, reduces stress, which is one of the biggest health
hazards. In the article Busch writes,
1 Christopher D Busch, “Music Therapy,” Science in Our World: Certainty and Controversy
(2010): accessed October 13, 2014,
http://www.personal.psu.edu/afr3/blogs/SIOW/2010/09/music‐therapy.html
2 Busch, “Music Therapy,”n.p.
3 Charles F. Emery et al., “Issues in Cardiovascular Nursing: Short‐term effects of exercise
and music on cognitive performance among participants in a cardiac rehabilitation
program,” Heart and Lungs (2003): 368‐372.
4 Busch, “Music Therapy,”n.p.
“Nobel Prize winning scientist Bary Marshall once told me that when doctors don't know whats
wrong with you they call it "stress". There may not be very concrete evidence yet, but I think we
all understand how music can make us feel better, even if it is only a qualitative observation.” 5
In an article titled Music Therapy from Grove Music Online I learned a lot about what music
therapy is and how it works. The American Music Therapy Association (AMTA) states that,
“Music Therapy is an established healthcare profession that uses music to address physical,
emotional, cognitive, and social needs of individuals of all ages. Music therapy improves the
quality of life for persons who are well and meets the needs of children and adults with
disabilities or illness. Music therapy interventions can be designed to: promote wellness,
manage stress, alleviate pain, express feelings, enhance memory, improve communication, and
promote physical rehabilitation.”6
Music therapists work closely with psychologists, psychiatrists, and physicians. Examples of
places where music therapists work are in mental health areas, developmentally disabled, general
hospitals, rehabilitation programs, geriatric settings, hospices, clinics for people with visual and
auditory disabilities, and schools. 7
I personally believe that music therapy is effective based on the research I’ve done and also from
personal experience. My friend’s younger brother is autistic, and goes to music therapy sessions
to help him relate to others, and to learn how to express emotion. I know that listening to
different songs causes different emotions in a person involuntarily, so why not use the effect in
medicinal practice to help others.
Music as an auditory art apparently reflects a basic human need for pattern, form, and
organization. Music can provide an aesthetic way to control and enhance the auditory
environment. Human responses to music include the physiological, affective, cognitive, and
associative. There are few individuals for whom music of some type does not have an
attraction.8
I know from personal experience that a single song has the power to change a person’s mood.
Different chords release different endorphins in your body. A minor chord usually has a sound
that the human mind relates to as sad or dark whereas a major chord sounds happy and light.
Some songs are so moving to an individual that they cause a person to cry for reasons they
cannot explain. This phenomenon illustrates the strong psychological affect that music can have
on a person. I can understand how music can be used as a therapy to release emotion or used as
a way to learn how to relate to others through emotional music. Music can also be scientifically
used to access different parts of the brain that aren’t normally used.
5 Busch, “Music Therapy,”n.p.
6 George L. Duerksen. "Music therapy." Grove Music Online. Oxford Music Online. Oxford
9 Moisse et al.,“Gabby Giffords: Finding Words through Song,” abc News (2011): n.p.,
Works Cited
Christopher D Busch, “Music Therapy,” Science in Our World: Certainty and Controversy
(2010): accessed October 13, 2014,
http://www.personal.psu.edu/afr3/blogs/SIOW/2010/09/music-therapy.html
Darko Breitenfeld, International Review of Music Aesthetics and Sociology, Vol. 1, No.2 (Dec.,
1970), pp. 212-213
George L. Duerksen. "Music therapy." Grove Music Online. Oxford Music Online. Oxford
University Press, accessed October 14, 2014,
http://www.oxfordmusiconline.com/subscriber/article/grove/music/A2257019.
Charles F. Emery et al., “Issues in Cardiovascular Nursing: Short-term effects of exercise and
music on cognitive performance among participants in a cardiac rehabilitation program,”
Heart and Lungs (2003): 368-372
Moisse et al.,“Gabby Giffords: Finding Words through Song,” abc News (2011): n.p., accessed
October 13, 2014, http://abcnews.go.com/Health/w_MindBodyNews/gabby-giffords
finding-voice-music-therapy/story?id=14903987
12 Darko Breitenfeld, International Review of Music Aesthetics and Sociology, Vol. 1, No.2