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Whenever a person engages with music—when a piano student
practices a scale, a jazz saxophonist riffs on a melody, a teenager
sobs to a sad song, or a wedding guest gets down on the dance
floor—countless neurons are firing. Playing an instrument
requires all of the resources of the nervous system, including
cognitive, sensory, and motor functions. Composition and
improvisation are remarkable demonstrations of the brain’s
capacity for creativity. Something as seemingly simple as listening
to a tune involves mental faculties most of us don’t even realize
we have. Larry S. Sherman, a neuroscientist and lifelong musician,
and Dennis Plies, a professional musician and teacher, collaborate
to show how our brains and music work in harmony. They consider
music in all the ways we encounter it—teaching, learning,
practicing, listening, composing, improvising, and performing—in
terms of neuroscience as well as music pedagogy, showing how the
brain functions and even changes in the process. Every Brain Needs
Music draws on leading behavioral, cellular, and molecular
neuroscience research as well as surveys of more than a hundred
musical people. It provides new perspectives on learning to play,
teaching, how to practice and perform, the ways we react to music,
and why the brain benefits from musical experiences. Written for
both musical and nonmusical people, including newcomers to brain
science, this book is a lively and easy-to-read exploration of the
neuroscience of music and its significance in our lives.
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