Originally posted by doversoul
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I worked for many years as a music-and-records librarian in various London public libraries and occasionally I'd run into someone who wanted to "try something new", meaning (usually) something classical. I found then that it was hard enough to know what to recommend to them, let alone to talk them about the experience of hearing it when they brought the records back.
The only story I can offer which throws any light at all on how one particular non-classical-music person saw the genre is this: a borrower asked for a good piece of music to listen to as an introduction. "I want to to try some classical," he said. And then, after a bit of thought added, "Maybe something like the theme tune to MASH on the telly - that's classical, isn't it".
So what is it about that particular piece which made it "classical" for him? The orchestration? No hard-hitting beat? I've simply no idea, but I've wondered about it a lot ever since.
An afterthought: haven't there been experiments in playing different types of music to animals to judge the effects? Hens lay more eggs to Mozart and cows give less milk to the Rolling Stones? That sort of thing? Hardly the same as human responses of course, but has anything similar ever been tried with volunteer (human) guinea pigs? Albinoni = lower blood pressure, maybe?
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