Muzik mampu Pengaruhi Manusia
Anda perlu
mengetahui tempo muzik yang paling sesuai untuk diri anda.
June 19th, 2014 by Blake Madden
You’re walking along,
enjoying some of your favorite music on a pair of headphones, when all of a
sudden you realize you’re re-enacting Survivor’s “Eye of the Tiger” video, stepping in
time to the music like someone on a mission: Left foot in sync with a bass
drum, right foot with the snare, or vice versa.
Depending on your
disposition, you might feel emboldened or embarrassed. If it’s the latter, take
heart. There may be biological reasons why your steps fit so well with the
song’s tempo. As a human, you may not be able to help yourself.
The Human Frequency
Human beings can
distinguish a range of tempos from around 40 to 300 beats per minute. When the
pulse slows below 40 bpm, we may not be able to identify or recall a
discernible pattern. When it goes faster than 300 bpm, repetitions start to
blur into a continuous tone.
In
between 40 and 300 bpm, there’s a lot of real estate for us to play around in.
The history of popular music, however, suggests that we mostly enjoy a
relatively narrow range of tempos.
In
2011, students at Brazil’s Federal University of Minas Gerais mined tempo data
from the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart, the Billboard 200 album chart, and
the Million Song Dataset for a tempo visualization
project.
They found that from the 1940s until our current decade, the average tempo of
our most popular songs fluctuated no more than 5 bpm, hovering between 117 bpm
to 122 bpm.
Two graduate students
from Rutgers University obtained similar
results
when analyzing popular music tempo data provided by The Echo Nest—the same
“musical intelligence” company that provides the data for the Million Song
Dataset.
“Looks like most
songs linger right around that optimal figure of 119.80 BPM,” Shaun Ellis and
Tom Engelhardt wrote of their collected data. “Also, hits between 1976
and 1984 displayed rather mono-rhythmic qualities, with few year averages
drifting above or below the golden mark.”
Dirk Moelants, a
musicologist and assistant at the department of musicology at The University of
Ghent, argues that a ‘preferred tempo’ around 120 bpm is a part of our biology.
His 2002 paper for the 7th International Conference on Music Perception
and Cognition, titled “Preferred Tempo
Reconsidered”,
challenged psychologist Paul Fraisse’s previous conclusion that preferred tempo
was somewhere in the range of 100 bpm.
The results of
several isolated experiments that asked participants to tap fingers, walk, or
applaud at their own tempo, showed participants moving naturally at a tempo of
around 120 bpm (or a 500ms delay in between pulses).
A 2005 paper by
Hamish G. MacDougall and Steven T. Moorefor the Journal of
Applied Physiology, titled “Marching to the beat of the same drummer:
the spontaneous tempo of human locomotion”, took Moelants’ research a step
further, monitoring a group of human subjects and their motions not just in the
lab, but also in the course of a typical 10-hour day.
Twenty subjects were
given baseball caps with attached activity monitors in order to record the
tempo of their linear head movements during athletic activities such as running
and cycling, and mostly-static activities such as working on a computer or
riding a bus.
“Here we show a
highly tuned resonant frequency of human locomotion at 2 Hz [about 120 bpm]
with no evidence of correlation with gender, age, height, weight, or body mass
index,” MacDougall and Moore wrote. “We speculate that this spontaneous
tempo of locomotion represents some form of central ‘resonant frequency’ of
human movement.”
Tempo and Emotion
Slow music,
generally, makes us feel sad. Fast music tends to make us happier, unless it is
in a minor mode or rhythmically fragmented, in which case it can inspire fear.
These concepts are
generally accepted these days, but until psychologist Kate Hevner Mueller began
conducting experiments in the 1930s, we had no real proof of just how profound
this effect is. Mueller asked her participants to express their emotions
regarding different pieces of music in which only one defining
characteristic—such as pitch, mode, or tempo—had changed. She concluded that
tempo influenced our emotions more than any other characteristic.
Over 60 years later,
Lise Gagnon and Isabelle Peretz of the University of Montreal performed similar
experiments,
isolating and changing individual musical characteristics and reached the same
conclusion: “The results confirm that both mode and tempo determine “happy-sad”
judgments in isolation, with the tempo being more salient, even when tempo
salience was adjusted.”
Emotional response to
changing tempos may explain why we don’t always prefer our “preferred” tempo:
Human emotions range all over the map. If the constant, 120 bpm average of
charting pop hits represents our platonic ideal of natural balance, then tempos
far above or below that range represent the rest of the roller-coaster ride we
call ‘life’.
The angst and
nihilism of The Buzzcocks’ “Boredom” slashes through our ears at around
180 bpm. Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five paint the tension of inner-city
life in “The Message”—one of hip-hop’s
first bonafide hits—at around 100 bpm. Bette Midler regularly inspires
waterworks with her 60 bpm ode to an overshadowed friend, “The Wind Beneath My Wings”. 120bpm is our safe
place, and the further we get from it tempo-wise, the more volatile we become.
What’s Your Tempo?
In the 1970s, Georgi
Lozanov developed the teaching method now known as “Suggestopedia”, claiming it could
help children learn foreign languages three to five times faster than average.
A central conceit of
Suggestopedia is the use of music in the classroom, particularly Baroque music
played at a “largo” tempo of about 60 bpm, which he claimed aided memory
retention. Playing music at or below the tempo of a healthy resting human
heart, so the theory goes, relaxes children, thereby improving their ability to
learn.
Some have debated the
science behind Lozanov’s claims, but UNESCO (The United Nations Educational,
Scientific and Cultural Organization) found no fault in his results. In 1978,
their report on Suggestopedia declared: “There is consensus that Suggestopedia
is a generally superior teaching method for many subjects and for many types of
students, compared with traditional methods.”
For improving
physical performance, Dr. Costas Karageorghis of England’s Brunel University
suggests music with tempos of 120 bpm to 140 bpm during exercise, when our
hearts beat in a similar range.
In the 2006 paper he
co-authored with Peter C. Terry, “Psychophysical
Effects of Music in Sport and Exercise: An Update on Theory, Research and
Application”,
Karageorghis found that 400m runners recorded faster times when their movements
were synchronized with music.
Non-athletes
exercising in sync to music benefit just as much, Karageorghis adds in an
interview
for Welsh sprinter Colin Jackson’s Raise Your Game website:
“[Music] can reduce
our perception of effort by as much as 10%. So, for example, a 66 minute cycle
can feel like a 60 minute cycle with music.” By syncing with music faster than
our preferred tempo, we can basically trick our bodies into working harder for
longer.
Scientists are still
uncertain as to which part or parts of the brain control musical activity—let
alone where our perception of tempo occurs and why our bodies prefer certain
tempos to others.
A romantic yet
unconfirmed notion revolves around our heartbeats: 60 bpm – 80 bpm in
relatively healthy adults, or exactly half of the range of tempos we naturally
exhibit during basic locomotion and exercise. Perhaps we are twice as fast to
act on instinct as we are to act with what is truly in our heart.
At least now we know
exactly what it means to say music has “a good beat to dance to”.
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