Rahmaniacs,

Listening to Couple's Retreat sends me on one of the most richest emotional and 
intellectual experiences I can remember having from just one soundtrack.  There 
are so many emotions in this soundtrack, but all pure and sincere, all within 
the brilliance of a mind boggling musical score.  I'd like to share with you an 
article written by one of our own...an Indian musician from Chennai!  Reading 
this article about the relationship between music, thought, communication, and 
emotions affirmed my rich analytical and emotional journey when listening to an 
album like Couple's Retreat, which is one of the most beautifully colorful and 
intelligent albums I have ever heard from anyone, anywhere.  My favorite quote 
from this article is the concluding statement, "Music prepares the soul for 
something higher....."

http://www.hinduonnet.com/folio/fo0012/00120420.htm

The power of music 
Bombay Jayashri Ramnath 

The writer is a Carnatic musician based in Chennai.

Music has the power to cause emotions to well up within us. These feelings are 
gripping - often irresistible - and seem to emerge from nowhere. These feelings 
colour our moods, affect our perceptions and generate a behavioural pattern. 
The indisputable fact about music is its power to evoke emotions. Is there 
anyone, for whom, music is completely emotional - neutral? Music has the 
ability to inevitably tap the still, mysterious deep well of our emotions.

However, music can produce various emotional responses in different individuals 
and even different responses in the same person at different times. Music may 
produce expressions of various emotions - peaceful, relaxing, exciting, 
festive, boring, unsettling, unstimulating, invigorating ... and so on.

Music is an extremely versatile medium of communication. It is capable of 
exploring all the features that are used in verbal communication. Moreover, it 
does so in an explicit and structured way, which makes it an interesting and 
useful window into human communication, in general.

The repetition of a line as in a lullaby, the regular beating of a drum - they 
produce a feeling of physical ease and lull the child to sleep. The rhythmic 
sound of the train, of waves breaking on the shore, the song of a cricket at 
night - why, even the electric fan is able to produce a soothing physical 
quiet. But good music does not stop there. It touches our emotions. True music 
really far deeper and touches our very soul and leaves its imprint on us. It 
may not be possible to explain or describe this reaction in ordinary language. 
It can only be felt. It is one of those mystic experiences, which baffle 
analytical explanation.

Music is known to endow the listener with aesthetic or intellectual pleasure. 
It can be simple, complex, subtle, overt - and these features may reside in one 
of the different aspects of the music e.g. rhythm, melody. Some of the 
greatness of music however, lies in its holistic nature that all the elements 
form a unique wholeness which may not be understood by studying the parts 
separately. However complex, music is readily appreciated by the mind without 
the need for formal knowledge.

The lay listener may not be able to hear which instruments are playing, or 
which pitches are used. Yet, he or she may have no problem appreciating the 
music as a whole. An experienced listener, on the other hand, may be able to 
transcribe every note, but might still be at a loss to understand why the music 
is so pleasing to listen to even for the time!

As a performer, I believe that music can recreate emotions and get the 
listeners involved with my emotions. Any particular music has an inherent 
emotion. And, there is the emotion that one feels while rendering. Besides, the 
listener is in an emotional state while listening to that music - which is also 
important because it could be possible that this will now be linked to the 
emotional state of the listener. So he or she can use the song to recreate this 
emotion. Very often we hear people say "This is my song" and feel that special 
emotion again.

Rhythm and melody are two facets of music that lend themselves to enjoyment in 
their individual capacities. The experience of beat and rhythm has a simple 
relation with joy, well-being and even excitement. Babies spontaneously start 
to rock and move when they hear music with a pronounced beat in a medium or 
fast tempo. By changing rhythm, we can change the aesthetic appeal of a piece 
of music. Even a change of tempo can cause variations in the aesthetic appeal.

Similarly, melody, which is the soul of music, can create different types of 
feelings in listeners. Some melodies bring soulfulness, some sadness, some 
bring jubilance or tranquility.

Music is created from the heart and moulded by emotion. As musicians, we are 
inherently creative - so people say - and we have the ability to derive intense 
pleasure from a particular piece of music, which we listen to or produce. Here, 
I am referring to an aesthetic experience, which everybody must have felt. 
Tears of joy, a tug at the heart, goose pimples... True art always comes as an 
irresistible inner urge. We hear a song of Thyagaraja and are enthralled just 
as we gaze at a majestic temple or an ancient sculpture with wonder. All such 
works of art are the result of an inner urge. That is why it is something 
inherently beautiful.

... And there can be no enjoyment more impersonal and sublimating than what it 
offers. It prepares the very soul for something higher.



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