Yes, I think music is definitely more than just a form of entertainment (for me anyway). I think it changes your mood instantly, it makes you see the world and the people in it differently, it can make you happy, miserable, heartbroken, excited… Even as I write this blog post, I’m listening to music.
I’m the sort of person that listens to music ALL THE TIME. I listen to it walking to the tram stop, on the tram, walking to school, during electives, sometimes during classes (that don’t involve loads of talking), during recess, during lunch, on the tram home, walking home, while reading, while using the computer, while doing chores around the house, sometimes even while I’m in bed trying to sleep. I remember when my Ipod (I think it was my phone at the time) was confiscated one night and I can’t even describe the dread it brought to think about having to endure the day without listening to music. What was I supposed to do on the tram? I guess I could read, but what about walking home? I spent the entire night thinking of different ways to get it back, borrowing my sister’s phone, borrowing my mum’s phone, even finding the confiscated phone and bringing it anyway. (I ended up surviving the day with a good book)
The trail that my group went on really proved that music is much more than just entertainment. We had a lesson on music therapy, where we all had to name the instruments that we played and then pick and instrument that had no connection whatsoever with the instrument that we played, so that there was even playing ground for everyone. I play the piano, flute, and I dabble a little in guitar, so I couldn’t take anything like the piano, for instance, the xylophone was a definite no. There were no woodwind instruments, so playing the flute didn’t really limit me, and I don’t think the guitars ended up getting brought out. I got the bells the first time round, when we were asked to play to the emotion ‘happy’. It sounded like complete and utter chaos, until someone decided to actually start up a rhythm, and we all just sort of fell into place.
I don’t think we were really getting ‘happy’ across, seeing as I ended up just being annoyed (and the constant feeling of the bells hitting my knee got REALLY irritating ((and it hurt)), but it definitely shows that music can make a real difference to the way you’re feeling, and that people acknowledge this and know that this is what music can do.
Musicians do try to get across feelings and emotions, and I believe that it really works. Obviously music is more than just a form of entertainment, when we’re feeling sad, happy, any emotion really, we use our creative sides to put together a piece of music. When you think about the amount of effort, the amount of thought and hard work that’s gone into thinking up the lyrics, the bass line, the overlaying instruments, even the dedication that’s gone into finding someone to produce the song, the album, the album cover, it just gives music another infinite amount of feeling from the singers, composers, musicians and producers that gives you another infinite amount of feeling while listening to the song.