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Music As Therapy

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    Photo from https://adahome.care/music-therapy-in-alzheimer-and-dementia/   I personally find music very healing. It can calm my soul, encourage tears when I need to release emotions instead of bottling them in, get my adrenaline pumping for work outs, and empower me. Why does music do all this for us? To begin with, I'll explain how we process music. When we put on a favorite song, the music sounds move through our ears as vibrations. The inner ear translates these vibrations into electrical signals which are transported by neurons to the cerebral cortex in the brain. Dedicated regions of the brain detect elements of the signals like the tone, pitch, and rhythm. The brain then puts all this together to sense the musical experiences.   Photo from https://www.avnet.com/wps/portal/us/resources/article/how-the-deaf-experience-music-then-and-now/ Now, how does music reduce stress? Stress releases specific hormones and chemicals that activate your brain for “fight or fligh

Continued Explorations - A Trip to Brazil

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  SAMBA  Photo from: https://www.journeylatinamerica.co.uk/destinations/brazil/holidays/rio-carnival-holiday/ Today we are traveling to Brazil! Samba is South American music played with mainly percussion instruments. Its origins are linked to African drumming music. Africans were enslaved and transported to Brazil to work in mines and on sugar plantations. The word Samba comes from the African Bantu word "Semba" meaning navel bump. It is also noted that “Kusamba” means to pray or invoke favor of the gods through rhythm, song and dance. It’s interesting that many songs originated from religious practices all over the world. Samba became popular in the 1920s. It, along with the Samba dance, was prohibited because it was perceived as obscene and considered a thing done by criminals and poor people. Samba can be traced back to the favelas, which is a slum or shantytown located within or on the outskirts of the country's large cities. Samba includes layering syncopat

Music and the Fictive Dream – A Song’s Journey from Song Sheet, to Broadway and on to Movie Stardom!

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For this assignment I will be discussing Mamma Mia ; the song, the musical and the movie. When I began looking into this topic, I wondered what came first? Come to find out, it was the song, so I will begin with that. The song Mamma Mia was written and released in 1975 by the group ABBA; specifically by Benny Andersson, Björn Ulvaeus and Stig Anderson, with the lead vocals shared by Agnetha Fältskog and Anni-Frid Lyngstad. The song is about the end of a relationship and being faced with the difficulty of having to let the person they can’t resist go. The phrase Mamma Mia is Italian for “ my mother ” and is mainly used as an interjection to express emotions. A few instruments used in the song surprised me! The catchy instrument heard in the beginning of the song is a marimba.  Photo retrieved from http://majesticpercussion.com/us/products/mallet-instruments/marimbas/ They also used an oboe. Momma Mia is played in the key of D Major at 136 beats per minute. You can detect s