The article below is a good  start, but only that. And it is anything  but 
comprehensive.
Why do babies find various classical compositions pleasant ?  Why do  they 
find
minimalist (non)music boring? And dissonant 'music' unpleasant?
 
Why do some people have really ecumenical musical  tastes while  others
are Johnny one-notes, with ears that can only accept one kind of  music?
 
Part of things is also social identification. Less true today than in the  
past
it still is the case (more-or-less) that if you like Classical there is a  
better chance
you will be comfortable among educated elites, while people who have 
no such taste will find it less likely to mingle with elites. What do you  
want
out of life, to influence others, especially opinion leaders,  or are  you 
satisfied
being a hoi polloi and a follower? Conversely, if you want to be a man  of
the people, to resonate as a populist, its a good idea to stock up 
on Country Music. And so forth.
 
Anyway, worth reading even if some music is really good and other  music
is absolute garbage.
 
My humble and completely objective opinion,
Ludwig von Billy
 
 
 
------------------------------------------------------------
 
the guardian
BrainFlappingDeanBurnet
 
Rubbish music: why we judge others for their  musical tastes
 
It's common to judge someone based on the music they like, despite  musical 
preference being largely subjective. But why do musical tastes differ  so, 
and why do we feel the need to criticise those with tastes that don't match  
our own?

 
 
Posted by  
_Tauriq Moosa_ (http://www.theguardian.com/profile/tauriq-moosa)  
Friday 24 January 2014 
 
 
 
While working in music retail, I hitched my sanity to a sense of smug  
superiority. This was not deliberate, so much as natural, to combat – what I  
declared to be – idiocy and ignorance, from the faceless mass of wallets and  
fingers and mouths yearning for the new Katy Perry. They knew nothing of Syd 
 Barrett’s obscure albums; probably couldn’t even pronounce Tchaikovsky; 
and  couldn’t tell the difference between Katie Melua and Norah Jones (I no 
longer  can). We were proud of knowledge, touching invisible monocles and 
pursing our  lips around non-existent pipes when some poor heathen thought Pink 
Floyd was a  single artist rather than a band.  
This might strike many as  horrible and juvenile behaviour, yet it exists 
even for those never paid to  inform customers of albums’ arrival or stock 
availability. Musical taste is  still used by many as a _judgement  of an 
entire person_ 
(http://homepage.psy.utexas.edu/HomePage/Faculty/Gosling/reprints/PsychSci06Messageinaballad.pdf)
 . Adoring the latest Justin Bieber or 
Nickelback is,  probably, more likely to invite insults than any other 
response. 
_Entire_ 
(http://www.grantland.com/story/_/id/7846322/taking-concert-doubleheader-creed-nickelback-world-most-hated-bands)
   _articles_ 
(http://www.montrealgazette.com/entertainment/Nickelback+world+most+hated+band/2757349/story.
html)   have been written on the semi-universal hate these Canadians 
receive (despite  their continuing enormous success). It’s partially just 
another 
case of _hating  popular things_ 
(http://www.theguardian.com/science/brain-flapping/2013/dec/24/criticising-popular-things-why-is-it-so-popular)
 , I 
suppose. 
Our musical tastes are, many think, like most aspects of ourselves: a  
combination of our social environments and our “nature”. This means we don’t  
exactly choose to like Nickelback or Pink Floyd. 
But researchers at the University of Melbourne have uncovered incredible  
results: how much pleasure we take in music is proportional to how much  
dissonance we hear. And dissonance isn’t entirely dependent on physical  
properties we’re born with. 
As _Neil  McLachlan, et al wrote_ 
(http://psycnet.apa.org/index.cfm?fa=buy.optionToBuy&uid=2013-00031-001) : 
“Dissonance [a sense of a lack of harmony] 
was  strongly correlated with pitch-matching error for chords, which in 
turn was  reduced by chord familiarity and greater music training.” This meant 
that the  more a listener knew of what goes into a _chord_ 
(http://www.elpin.com/tutorials/musicalchord.php)  (which is three  or more 
notes played at 
the same time), the more pleasure she got out of the  music comprised of 
those chords. We can therefore learn to appreciate  and love all sorts of 
music. 
Lindsay Abrams, at The  Atlantic _explains  the study further_ 
(http://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2013/02/study-hearing-music-as-beautiful-is-a-
learned-trait/273185/) : 
Trained musicians, perhaps predictably, were more sensitive to dissonance  
than lay listeners. But they also found that when listeners hadn't 
previously  encountered a certain chord, they found it nearly impossible to 
hear the  
individual notes that comprised it. Where this ability was lacking, the 
chords  sounded dissonant, and thus, unpleasant.
The important part of this interesting study however comes from the 
dramatic  claims of the lead author. If true, the research “overturns centuries 
of  
theories that physical properties of the ear determine what we find  
appealing.” 
So, does this give us more or less licence to judge others for their 
musical  taste? If music taste is purely like being left-handed or eye-colour, 
then  shaming others for their taste is as juvenile as my pointless retail  
snobbishness. However, this and further research indicate that taste isn’t the  
same as being left-handed. Essentially, we can learn to like better music. 
Anyone who becomes more skilled and knowledgeable about a particular  
enterprise will obviously appreciate it more, since she now knows what goes 
into  
making it – whether its music, painting or lab experiments. 
But if we simply have not been educated to know more, are we still at fault 
 and deserving of judgement for preferring Canadian warblers to psychedelic 
 Brits? It still seems we’re not. 
First, shaming people for their artistic taste is a bizarre activity, as 
most  forms of shaming are. So what if someone likes Nickelback? No one is  
harmed; indeed more pleasure is gained since he can enjoy his band without 
fear  of being judged by nasty “friends”. 
Second, not all of us have the opportunity to learn about what goes into  
making music –let alone music deemed great by retail assistants at arbitrary  
music stores. Thus, even if we were all capable of learning to love the  
weird rhythms of Tool or Dream Theater, that’s not the same as having the  
opportunity or time or energy to do so. 
I’ve tried teaching numerous people what to listen for, as a musician 
(well,  drummer), for these complicated artists. While my friends could 
appreciate the  songs because I explained it to them, step by step, these 
people are 
under no  obligation to learn by themselves if they do not wish to.  
The main thing should be whether the performer or artist is bringing 
pleasure  to someone’s life. If that pleasure is not harming anyone, it is 
bigoted 
and  arrogant to mock that individual for enjoying it. We’re not the 
deciders of what  is “real” or “proper” music, art, film, and so on. Shaming 
should cease so we  can all listen and enjoy whatever we like – while 
recognising we are all capable  of enjoying more and enjoying things in new 
ways. We 
just don’t have  to.

-- 
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Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
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Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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