Summary:
The therapeutic benefits of music are well known, but the
theory that music might be harmful to our health, unless it is so obviously
loud it injures our eardrums, comes as a surprise. In this volume, historian of medicine James
Kennaway traces the idea of pathological music from antiquity to the
present. The book’s introduction
considers whether music really can create illness, whether it be of a physiological
or a psychological nature. We learn, for
example, of arrhythmias and seizure disorders that are set off by music, not to
mention the so-called Stendhal Syndrome, a psychosomatic reaction to great works
of art.
The second chapter describes how, during the 18th
century, disease was thought to result from excessive stimulation of the nerves,
and how that created a theoretical framework for the “medical dangers of music”
(p. 23) as being rooted in the nervous system. The example of the glass
harmonica is given. This musical instrument, invented by Benjamin Franklin, had
its status elevated when Mozart composed two pieces for it. However, its success became its undoing, as
it was feared the tones would “make women faint, send a dog into convulsions,
[and] make a sleeping girl wake screaming through a chord of the diminished
seventh” (p. 45). Special gloves were devised so that a performer might, by
avoiding direct contact with the apparatus, spare his nerves.
In the following chapter, Kennaway explores how Wagner
dominated 19th-century discourse on pathological music in that his
work’s eroticism and novel harmonies were thought to produce neurasthenia (a
popular catch-all term for an array of anxiety disorders). Listeners were
brought to an unhealthy state of ecstasy, and singers, being driven to the
abyss, went insane. Women who had recklessly allowed themselves to become “Wagnerized”
were punished with a “lack [of] children, or, in the most bearable cases, men”
(p. 74).
Moving into the 20th century, the author describes
how ideas about pathological music acquired a political connotation. In Germany, the perceived threat of avant-garde
Jewish composers (eg. Schoenberg) to public health culminated in the so-called
Degenerate Music exhibition of 1938. And in
the United States, African American-influenced jazz was credited with the
power to “change human physiology, damaging the medulla in the brain” (p. 121).
Finally, the book concludes in the present day with
music for brainwashing (e.g. a consideration of whether subliminal messages
hidden in rock songs could lead to suicide), and the use of painfully loud or
abrasive music as sonic weapons in warfare, or for torture. The author’s verdict is that the notion of
music as bad for your health, though emerging in new forms, is more topical than ever.
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