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How Sound Affects You

ask.audio conscious music production consciousness cymatics dr hans jenny dr. tomatis frequency frequency sweep hertz how sound affects us meditation mindbody awareness music therapy resonant frequencies sound healing sound therapy vibration Apr 22, 2023

Vibration and Frequency 

Everything around us is vibrating. It's easy to forget that any objects we perceive as solid or not 'alive' are actually vibrating. It may be at a very slow pace, beyond our sense of movement but the atoms and molecules that make up rocks, trees and man-made goods are ALL moving energy. Nothing is at rest. 

 Low to High Frequency Sweep

 

Everything has a frequency. We attract and repel people with our energy or individual frequency. We can think of our individual frequency as a tone or a harmony of tones unique to us. Inside our bodies...our organs, our bones and cells vibrate at their natural frequencies. Frequencies are measured in Hertz, just like we see in our equalizer controls whether they are hardware or software based. The longer and more spread out the wave, the lower the sound. The closer together the waves are, the higher the sound. Dr. Peter Guy Manners completed extensive clinical research with the help of medical doctors and clinical researchers in 1940 to pinpoint the natural resonant frequencies or 'biosignatures' of our healthy tissue and organ systems. Since then, tools and instruments have been developed to help feed the body these frequencies to balance the body

Dr. Tomatis Listening and Evaluation Device pictured above http://www.tomatis.com.au/professionaltraining.php

 

Dr. Tomatis a French physician and auditory neurophysiologist believed our ears drive and affect our entire nervous system. Depending what we are listening to; music or otherwise, will dictate our energy level and sense of well-being.  He experimented with different music including; high frequencies, and/or low frequencies to see how they affect the brain and the patient overall.  By studying Benedictine monks in France, he observed how important the monk’s chanting was to their overall health and well-being. When the daily chanting ritual was taken away from them for a short time, most fell ill before the singing was reintroduced to their full recovery. Don Campbell, in his book ‘The Mozart Effect,’ studied how listening to Mozart boosted the brain capacity, focus and spatial reasoning of the listener while they were studying or answer questions.  More and more evidence and study is coming out all the time about the power of sound and music for our over all well-being. 

The study of the visible representations of vibrational sound is called Cymatics.   This research was pioneered by Dr. Hans Jenny who played tones at different frequencies through a vibrating plate filled with sand.   As he swept through tones and frequencies, you could see the sound arrange itself into distinct geometrical patterns, or mandalas, showing the unique visual imprint of each tone.  Every sound we hear has an imprint.  

Dr. Hans Jenny Experiments with Cymatics

 

Noise Kills and Music Heals

With this in mind there are certain sounds, when heard and visualized, that can harm and also heal.  Distorted, irregular cymatic patterns of loud noise and harmful electro-magnetic energies can disrupt the healthy vibrational patterns of our bodies causing dis-ease.     The patterns of these harmful sounds even look jagged and irregular while soothing, pure sound have beautiful geometric shapes, like snowflakes

 

Unique Snowflakes under Microscope

 

Hearing is the first sense to develop in the womb.  The vagus nerve connects our ear to every organ and muscle system in our body.  Many believe what we hear is processed and carried throughout our body affecting it in a positive or negative manner, even causing change at the cellular level.  This is why music and sound with the right intention can also heal us.  Sound also permeates us quickly because 70% of our bodies are made of water.  

I had the pleasure of attending a workshop with Dr. Mitchell Gaynor, a well-known oncologist who works with his cancer patients combining traditional chemotherapy with chanting, singing, guided meditation, tibetan bowl and crystal bowl therapy.  He has had great success with sound healing techniques and has seen people release a great amount of psychological and physiological blockages, facilitating their healing process and recovery.  Music has the power to relieve anxiety and stress while releasing endorphins and boosting our immune systems.  No drugs required!

 

Tibetan Bowl pictured above

 

Conscious Music Production

What can we do as music producers and artists to infuse more positive intention into our music?

I only intend to make suggests and pose this question to you as an open ended project, just like our art which shifts and changes with time.  I am also not suggesting that everyone make ‘new age’ or meditation music to access this space.  Just keeping in mind how sound and music affects people will guide your music production choices in whatever genre you specialize.  So much of this process already happens naturally.

 One way you can do this is by dropping into your own sacred space through meditation and/or singing.  Many widely influential artists, like Philip Glass, meditate before embarking on a day of composition.  Sitting in silence and practicing clearing the mind can lead to increased focus in the production process.  Clearing and opening the mind will allow for new ideas to emerge effortlessly without the clutter in the way.  Include humming or chanting a simple ‘om’ or ‘ah’ while doing this to help stay present.  Your own singing vibration can help your body practice ‘dropping in’ to your own resonant frequencies.  Create with a sense of balance.

In upcoming articles, I will be discussing the power of brainwave entrainment using binaural beats and how to produce them.  Also, I will be exploring instruments and sounds used in sound therapy and meditation that can also be applied to other types of music.  This is a field of study that is merging more and more with the music world at large.

When you start to think about writing and producing music with all these things in mind, it can shift your perception of your own process and what you intend to convey, no matter what kind of music you produce.  It will certainly reach the people who are resonating in the same frequency spectrum as you! 

 

Written by Lynda Arnold 

Originally Published on Ask.Audio









 

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