{"id":434,"date":"2009-09-22T22:36:59","date_gmt":"2009-09-23T03:36:59","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/healingmusicenterprises.com\/blog\/?p=434"},"modified":"2014-11-17T20:50:23","modified_gmt":"2014-11-18T01:50:23","slug":"understanding-the-brain-and-the-music-cortex","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/healingmusicenterprises.com\/blog\/2009\/09\/understanding-the-brain-and-the-music-cortex\/","title":{"rendered":"Understanding the Brain and the Music Cortex"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>The brain is still the most important unexplored frontier.\u00a0 It&#8217;s a work in progress, however.\u00a0 Once we really understand how the brain processes music, music will be the most prescribed medicine!<\/p>\n<p>Tuesday, September 22, 2009<\/p>\n<div><a name=\"2127709922549249051\"><\/a><\/div>\n<h3><a href=\"http:\/\/the-brain-and-music.blogspot.com\/2009\/09\/do-you-know-about-music-cortex.html\">Do you know about &#8220;The Music Cortex&#8221;<\/a><\/h3>\n<div><span style=\"color: #330033; font-size: 130%;\">Music and the brain! What could be more fascinating? The more we know about how music affects the brain, the more we can incorporate music into our wellness and healing practices. The following article is a fascinating; a first-person account of music and the brain. Enjoy!<\/span><\/div>\n<div><span style=\"color: #ff0000; font-size: 130%;\">\u00a0<\/span><\/div>\n<div><span style=\"color: #ff0000; font-size: 130%;\">The Music Cortex<\/span><\/div>\n<p>Mr. Apron and I sat down at the kitchen table last night to enjoy our dinner of Exploding Pizza, the kind of crust that comes in a tube, and when you peel back the paper it kind of pops, and therefore contains a warning to point it away from your face. We call that Exploding Pizza. On the table was a brochure for Piffaro, a musical ensemble which performs renaissance and baroque music using period instruments, such as recorders, harps, shawms, and, my personal favorite, sackbuts. As I glanced at the various performance descriptions for 17th century Spanish music, I spied a familiar name in the November performance \u2013 the husband of a woman led my Early Music Ensemble in college. He came in a few times to support those of us brave enough to take on the shawms and dulcians, which are sort of proto-oboes and proto-bassoons, respectively. We obviously had to go.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cI love taking you to these performances, buddy,\u201d said Mr. Apron as he made a mental note to take me to these performances, \u201cbut I hate that it always makes you so sad.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>My brain surgery left my body in less than optimal condition immediately after the surgery. While I\u2019ve pretty much healed up in as much as spontaneous recovery and physical\/occupation\/speech therapy can do, there are subtle, sub-clinical deficits I still retain. When in the medical model, one refers to body function, whether it\u2019s strength, range of motion, or activities you can do, in varying degrees of impairment, such as mildly, moderately, or severely impaired. In my case, I probably fit the description of WFL, three marvelous letters which stand for Within Functional Limits. This says, essentially, \u201cThis person or his body part is suited for all normal functions.\u201d Not quite as gratifying as WNL, Within Normal Limits, WFL simply allows the medical professional to give a cursory assessment and determine that nothing significant is standing in the way of ADLs, (Activities of Daily Living): those happy life skills like dressing oneself; loading the dishwasher; using a spork; and running for\/signaling at the SEPTA bus leaving the curb.<\/p>\n<p>I am WFL. My body parts all work WFL. My once-paralyzed left arm, hand, and all five fingers are WFL. I can buckle my seat belt, cut up food with a knife, fasten a necklace, and open a door. My lips\/mouth\/tongue are WFL. I can chew food, move it around my mouth, form it into a swallow-able glob, and swallow it. I can find pesky pieces of lunch hidden in my cheeks, and I can use a napkin to locate detritus on my lower lip. I am WFL.<\/p>\n<p>If you probe deeper, maybe compare pre- and post-surgery, you\u2019ll see deficits. Maybe not in everyday function, but in measurable impairments. I have very little feeling in my lower lip, chin, and lower cheek on the left half of my face. My left fingertips perceive touch and temperature ever so slightly differently than those on my right hand. What this means for daily life is that sometimes I do miss a piece of food on my face, or drool if I\u2019m sleeping on my left side (which I wouldn\u2019t feel). My left hand might not be up to carrying a dresser long distances. All these differences would not matter for regular old ADLs, but they do matter for a musician.<\/p>\n<p>Immediately after my surgery, my father, a psychiatrist who should have a good handle on brain function, approached my neurosurgeon with some concern regarding my \u201cmusical\u201d ability. Now, in this century we\u2019ve moved away from phrenology and believing concretely that lumps on the head\/brain correspond to characteristics, strengths, and abilities, but there is emerging research into localization of some functions in the brain, made possible with fMRI, imaging which lights up in brighter colors which portions of the brain are active during certain tasks. I read an article once where the brain surgeons had to do surgery on a professional violinist while she was awake to make sure they had localized and avoided disturbing the \u201cmusic center\u201d while they operated. They stimulated portions of her brain and then asked her to play the violin to map out her brain during surgery. So my father, with his concerns about my \u201cmusic center\u201d was not completely out in left field. In fact, there\u2019s a study at Harvard University which has discovered that certain parts of the auditory cortex are sensitive to aspects of music.<\/p>\n<p>In the hospital I could do very little. I couldn\u2019t sit up for any length of time without getting very dizzy and causing my already massive headache to throb even more. Finally, towards the end of the week I spent as an inpatient, I felt well enough to sit up. I tried to spend most of my days sitting up to prove to the nursing staff how much my constitution was improving so they\u2019d let me go home.<\/p>\n<p>My mother plays harp professionally. She plays a lot of weddings and church-related events such as midnight masses and Christmas concerts. She has also played for Mothers Day teas at yacht clubs, a Memorial Day event at a cemetery, and concerts for children. In addition to her concert-sized harp, she has a more portable version, which she brought with her to the hospital, to cheer me up, keep us all busy, and entertain the ward with strains of \u201cIf I only had a brain\u201d. In an effort to appease my father\u2019s worries, and for want of something to do that didn\u2019t involve vision (I had double vision immediately after surgery which conveniently went away as soon as I made an appointment with an ophthalmologist 8 weeks later), I asked for the harp. Balancing it on the edge of the bed, cradling the harp between my knees, I propped myself up. My useless left arm lay at my side, but I was able to pluck out \u201cTwinkle Twinkle Little Star\u201d with my right.<\/p>\n<p>Behold! They had spared my \u201cmusic center\u201d! Not only had the post-operative angiogram shown no residual AVM; they had successfully left intact my musical abilities. Or so it seemed. At least my father was relieved.<\/p>\n<p>Unfortunately, I did not have so much success with my other instruments. When I had regained a little function in my left hand (I became strong enough to lift a spice bottle), I tried the clarinet and the bassoon. My embouchure, the shape of the mouth and lips when playing a wind instrument, was weakened not only by months of disuse, but also was significantly affected by my new deficits. I couldn\u2019t keep a seal on the mouthpiece of my clarinet, and spittle flew out of the left side of my mouth. Bassoon was no better. Even as the months wore on, and my strength improved measurably in therapy, I had no more success. Every time I would pick up my bassoon, I would collapse in tears, wailing as I sat in the living room, apologizing repeatedly to the beautiful (some might argue) instrument. My left hand, as \u201cfunctional\u201d as it was for the physiatrist, was still too weak to even hold the heft of the 7 pound instrument, let alone support the instrument with my palm and move all five fingers in rapid precise movements. Websites will tell you that bassoonists don\u2019t actually have to feel the weight of their instruments because they\u2019re supported by seat straps. While it\u2019s true they\u2019re not lifting 7 pounds constantly, they do have to hold up the top-heavy instrument as it leans ever so slightly to the left.<\/p>\n<p>I can do all of the range of movement exercises with my facial muscles, and my left hand strength is now pretty good for a non-dominant hand, but it is nowhere near agile enough to play a musical instrument. The rapid movements, the precision, the muscle memory needed for arpeggios, for reaching all of the 17 keys on a bassoon, for sealing the holes of the instrument\u2026I just don\u2019t have those abilities.<\/p>\n<p>When we go to a concert, be it classical music, early music, Indonesian music, or any other genre or instrument I have played, I get sad. I think of how I used to play, used to be in ensembles and have concerts, and go out for Dairy Queen afterwards. I have been in marching bands of 100 pimply teenagers, chamber orchestras made up of physicians, school bands, wind ensembles, early music ensembles, quartets, and summer orchestras large enough to have 8 bassoonists and 40 flautists. With varying degrees of proficiency, I have played piano, recorder, harp, bassoon, clarinet, bari sax, dulcian, krumhorn, viola da gamba, cello, and gamelan (Indonesian percussion) instruments.<\/p>\n<p>I wish I could pick an instrument back up. It\u2019s been so long now that I\u2019d have an uphill battle to relearn the instrument as well as reteach my hands how to play. I avoid even trying. I keep my bassoon locked up in the basement, where I don\u2019t have to think about it. When I pluck out notes on a piano to help Mr. Apron learn his music for plays, I keep my left hand in my lap, ashamed to try to use it. It would be so hard now that I don\u2019t even try. That if I did, it would be so difficult I would get frustrated and give up. The sadness also stems from the fact that, if you hadn\u2019t gathered from my list of instruments and ensembles, music was a pretty big part of my life until my surgery. It\u2019s also a pretty significant part of my family\u2019s life.<\/p>\n<p>My mother, as I mentioned, is a harpist. She is also a pianist. My brother dabbled in drums for a while before returning to piano, his first instrument. Last time I checked, he had completed his college majors in physics and music, ripping through sonatas and pop songs at the speed of lightning. My sister, too, started with piano, and branched off into brass, picking up the trumpet, mainly, but also trying out the euphonium. She also plays the shofar annually at my parents\u2019 synagogue\u2019s High Holy Days celebration, blasting the announcement of the holiday from the ram\u2019s horn for all to hear. My father, though never quite reaching proficiency on the piano, stuck with woodwind instruments. He started with clarinet, as did I, and then moved to bassoon, as did I. I followed his path, waiting for my hands to grow even a smidge more so I could play the bassoon like my father. My first ensemble was a duet with my father. He had put down his clarinet since probably junior high, but dug it out of my grandmother\u2019s closet to play when I started playing in 5th grade. And when I picked up the bassoon, he dusted his off from where it had lain, dormant under the piano, since I was born.<\/p>\n<p>Though the years I\u2019ve had many \u201cclarinet buddies,\u201d playing duets with me, or starting impromptu ensembles. We helped each other improve, and I may have actually done more practicing when playing with a friend. As I moved into high school, I found clarinet buddies in marching band or other low woodwind players in orchestra to be my bassoon buddies (I was always the lone bassoonist). In college, I never quite found any bassoon or clarinet buddies. I couldn\u2019t figure out how to socialize during the breaks at orchestra rehearsal. I was just a shy freshman, the 3rd bassoonist in a section meant for 2. It didn\u2019t seem like much of a loss when I quit orchestra, and, subsequently, bassoon lessons. I hadn\u2019t been motivated to improve in a long time. Away at college, I missed the camaraderie of having music buddies. I didn\u2019t have the motivation to play, or any of the benefits that had always come with music for me.<\/p>\n<p>As Mr. Apron and discussed music last night, I started tearing up. I guess he thought I was again regretting that I have put down my instruments and am afraid to try again. It was all this talk about clarinet buddies. I was realizing that neither Hannah, nor Nadia, nor Jamie, nor Alison, nor Sandy were my first clarinet buddy. My father, who himself had put down his instruments when I was born, was my first clarinet buddy. Though we had built a pink dollhouse together for my 3rd birthday, and gone skiing together when I was 6, the most consistent and longest lasting activity we have shared is music. Music did not care if there was 24\u201d of powder on the ski slope. Music did not care if we had wrist-guards while rollerblading. Music did not leave sawdust in our eyes or require Mickey Mouse ear protectors. Music is something my father supported me in for many years. I understand his fear of my losing my music because of my surgery. He hadn\u2019t realized then that my deficits would not be in the region of the brain that is sensitive to rhythm, melody and harmony, but in my fingers and my discouragement.<\/p>\n<p>We will go to that early music concert in November, and I know I\u2019ll get sad. I\u2019ll also enjoy seeing and hearing the beautiful instruments that I used to hold and play. I\u2019m not sure where I\u2019ll go with music, or if I\u2019ll even persist with an instrument long enough to find out if it\u2019s even possible to play again. I\u2019m still fortunate to have grown up playing and listening to the tunes of my family, in the house where we referred to the living room as \u201cthe music room.\u201d The music room was where I danced at age 4 to my mother\u2019s harp practicing, where I set up a crude drum set for my brother made out of oatmeal drums and pie tins, and where my father and I played many hours of duets together.<\/p>\n<p>More than physical impairments, and all the excuses I let my body and brain make for my failure to try again, is motivation. Maybe again I\u2019ll find motivation in one of these concerts \u2013 an open call for a mediocre bassoonist, an invitation to come try out the bass recorder, a song I can\u2019t let go of \u2013 or in another source. Maybe Mr. Apron will find a duet for banjo and something-I-used-to-play. Maybe I\u2019ll meet someone who inspires me and wants to have jam sessions.<\/p>\n<p>Or maybe we\u2019ll have to grow me another clarinet buddy.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>The brain is still the most important unexplored frontier.\u00a0 It&#8217;s a work in progress, however.\u00a0 Once we really understand how the brain processes music, music will be the most prescribed medicine! Tuesday, September 22, 2009 Do you know about &#8220;The Music Cortex&#8221; Music and the brain! What could be more fascinating? The more we know [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":[],"categories":[423,9],"tags":[221,424],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v19.10 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/wordpress\/plugins\/seo\/ -->\n<title>Understanding the Brain and the Music Cortex - Healing Music Enterprises Blog<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"http:\/\/healingmusicenterprises.com\/blog\/2009\/09\/understanding-the-brain-and-the-music-cortex\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Understanding the Brain and the Music Cortex - Healing Music Enterprises Blog\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"The brain is still the most important unexplored frontier.\u00a0 It&#8217;s a work in progress, however.\u00a0 Once we really understand how the brain processes music, music will be the most prescribed medicine! 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