Monday, March 2, 2015

The joy of music


Last night we attended fundraising event at Augustana Campus, the University of Alberta, and
Ava Numminen
the keynote speaker, a music professor, referred to a study done on adult non-singers by Ava Numminen and her colleagues at the University of Helsinki.
   Among other things, here are a few things Numminen and her colleagues learned from their research of theology students.
   Non-singers are not necessarily born non-singers, they stopped singing because of some kind of negative experience in their past, often in their childhood.
   The negative experiences had emotional and belief system consequences for these non-singers.
   The research leans toward debunking the stereotypical premise that one can either sing or one cannot sing—implicit is the premise that most people can sing.
   The research successfully demonstrated that non-singers, given an encouraging environment, and music teachers who inspired them could sing, and even improve their singing.
   Once the non-singers discovered that they could sing, they were willing to sing more, as well as sing in public—e.g. in choirs, and soloists, and liturgical church music.
   The act of singing helps singers to discover the joy of music.
   I find it a sad cultural trend in our society that fewer people sing as often as previous generations did. Other research has discovered that music enhances our health physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually.
   Read the article by Ava Numminen and her colleagues here

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