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0 / 30 Fotos
Early years
- Essentially our musical tastes are planted. Just like how we aren’t born able to speak a language, we aren’t born with the ability to appreciate certain kinds of music.
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1 / 30 Fotos
Specific synapses strengthened
- With language, we are born with the ability to learn any language, but as we learn one some synapses are activated and others aren’t.
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2 / 30 Fotos
We learn certain sounds
- The ones that aren’t proxy don’t get stronger. We develop an ability to understand certain sounds. Music works similarly.
© Shutterstock
3 / 30 Fotos
Enculturation
- With music, this is known as a process called enculturation. In the first six months or so, babies can follow the syntax of any musical style.
© Shutterstock
4 / 30 Fotos
The musical sponge
- Complex rhythmic music from Turkey, major scales in European music, and drumming patterns from Africa are planted like seeds in the young mind.
© Shutterstock
5 / 30 Fotos
Babies know when something changes
- If a piece of music is played for a baby multiple times and then the music is changed slightly, the baby will notice.
© Shutterstock
6 / 30 Fotos
What we hear growing up
- This means that the wider cultural musical context is another influential factor. What we hear growing up is what we learn to love.
© Shutterstock
7 / 30 Fotos
The structure of the music industry
- As we know, the music that we’re exposed to is controlled. It's done so by record labels, radio stations, and even streaming sites.
© Shutterstock
8 / 30 Fotos
Front-running big label musicians produce familiar music
- How does this work? Well, to begin with, record labels like Sony, Universal Music, and EMI front musicians they think will succeed in selling records.
© Shutterstock
9 / 30 Fotos
Big industry influence
- After this, it becomes vital for the label to get this person’s music out there. The more people hear it, the more likely people are to enjoy it and buy tickets to the show or buy the album.
© Shutterstock
10 / 30 Fotos
Availability
- These labels partly own all the streaming sites, have a huge influence on what we hear on the radio, and also largely shape what goes where on the shelves at record stores.
© Shutterstock
11 / 30 Fotos
Big label influence
- In a nutshell, big labels along with their subsidiaries (management companies, booking agents, PR companies, etc.) and their influence on distribution channels (radio, ownership of streaming platforms, music video channels, etc.) control what we hear and therefore what we have a taste for.
© Shutterstock
12 / 30 Fotos
The familiar
- We like what we know, what we’re exposed to. Just like we enjoy a movie that has a structure that we’re used to. Perhaps the movie has a conflict and resolution.
© Shutterstock
13 / 30 Fotos
Familiarity
- The music that these labels put their chips on is also based on music that they know to be familiar with regards to structure and melody. It works as a feedback loop. For example, they might sign an artist that they know to be able to produce songs that are generally under four minutes long and have a chorus within the first minute.
© Shutterstock
14 / 30 Fotos
The feedback loop
- It’s like a feedback loop. They play music to us that they think we will like and we generally do and develop a taste for it. In recent years with how we steam music, however, we have had much more power to explore.
© Shutterstock
15 / 30 Fotos
Unsigned artists are invisible
- Keep in mind though, you are essentially invisible as an independent artist if you don’t have decent backing to get on playlists. So the forces that be still very much exist.
© Shutterstock
16 / 30 Fotos
Identity
- The next part of why we enjoy the music we do has to do with identity. This isn’t just how often certain music around us is played, but also means that how we associate certain music with ourselves regarding our cultural surroundings is important.
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17 / 30 Fotos
Group identity
- In practice, this might mean that a young person might force themselves to wear all black clothes and pale makeup and give more time to trying to appreciate heavy rock music because their friends do.
© Shutterstock
18 / 30 Fotos
Hip-hop and rap music
- Rap music, for example, is the music of the oppressed identity. It began as a form of musical expression for young African-Americans artists.
© Shutterstock
19 / 30 Fotos
Irish trad music
- Other kinds of music and our taste for it can exude our national identities. For example, in listening to a lot of trad music in Ireland, you essentially communicate that you are a proud Irish person or identify with Irishness.
© Shutterstock
20 / 30 Fotos
Motivations
- Some people’s tastes in different forms of music will expand as the result of an externally-motivated venture to 'collect' these kinds of experiences. For example, someone might want the bragging rights of having seen a certain musician at a certain time and in doing so expose themselves to more music.
© Shutterstock
21 / 30 Fotos
Motivations
- Our taste for music can also be affected by our general life experiences, too. Perhaps traumatic events draw us to a need for escapism through music, for instance.
© Shutterstock
22 / 30 Fotos
We tailor what we listen to based on our needs
- For example, we may have learned to listen to music that goes on for longer (psychedelic rock rather than pop perhaps) so that we didn’t have to listen to arguments in our homes growing up.
© Shutterstock
23 / 30 Fotos
Belonging
- Another reason could be that someone may not have felt included before until they went to clubs and danced with kind strangers who accepted them for who they were and they, therefore, made a tremendous effort to understand and learn to like techno and house anthems of the clubs. That's just one example, of course.
© Shutterstock
24 / 30 Fotos
This is me
- In a sense, the reason that music is so universal is that the music we like can reflect some or almost all parts of us: our experiences, our tendencies to feel melancholic, or our rage. It’s a flag that says “this is who I am.”
© Shutterstock
25 / 30 Fotos
Many factors at play
- Because of this, we can say that our taste in music is therefore not the result of a single phenomenon like how our brain develops during childhood. It’s a mixture of this and our experiences, our nature, our identity, and much more.
© Shutterstock
26 / 30 Fotos
There's no formula
- There will never be any exact formula because the weight of how these factors affect our taste in music differs from person to person and also with a person's life.
© Shutterstock
27 / 30 Fotos
How we're listening to music changes
- With this all being said, it should still be noted that the way we experience music is changing. We used to listen to music only live 100 years ago, now it's mostly on headphones.
© Shutterstock
28 / 30 Fotos
What we will listen to in future depends on the mode of delivery
- This will change the type of music we like because some kinds of music work better when listened to this way. For example, hip hop with its kick drum-heavy bass frequencies works well on headphones. Sources: (NBC News) (Diggit Magazine)
© Shutterstock
29 / 30 Fotos
© Shutterstock
0 / 30 Fotos
Early years
- Essentially our musical tastes are planted. Just like how we aren’t born able to speak a language, we aren’t born with the ability to appreciate certain kinds of music.
© Shutterstock
1 / 30 Fotos
Specific synapses strengthened
- With language, we are born with the ability to learn any language, but as we learn one some synapses are activated and others aren’t.
© Shutterstock
2 / 30 Fotos
We learn certain sounds
- The ones that aren’t proxy don’t get stronger. We develop an ability to understand certain sounds. Music works similarly.
© Shutterstock
3 / 30 Fotos
Enculturation
- With music, this is known as a process called enculturation. In the first six months or so, babies can follow the syntax of any musical style.
© Shutterstock
4 / 30 Fotos
The musical sponge
- Complex rhythmic music from Turkey, major scales in European music, and drumming patterns from Africa are planted like seeds in the young mind.
© Shutterstock
5 / 30 Fotos
Babies know when something changes
- If a piece of music is played for a baby multiple times and then the music is changed slightly, the baby will notice.
© Shutterstock
6 / 30 Fotos
What we hear growing up
- This means that the wider cultural musical context is another influential factor. What we hear growing up is what we learn to love.
© Shutterstock
7 / 30 Fotos
The structure of the music industry
- As we know, the music that we’re exposed to is controlled. It's done so by record labels, radio stations, and even streaming sites.
© Shutterstock
8 / 30 Fotos
Front-running big label musicians produce familiar music
- How does this work? Well, to begin with, record labels like Sony, Universal Music, and EMI front musicians they think will succeed in selling records.
© Shutterstock
9 / 30 Fotos
Big industry influence
- After this, it becomes vital for the label to get this person’s music out there. The more people hear it, the more likely people are to enjoy it and buy tickets to the show or buy the album.
© Shutterstock
10 / 30 Fotos
Availability
- These labels partly own all the streaming sites, have a huge influence on what we hear on the radio, and also largely shape what goes where on the shelves at record stores.
© Shutterstock
11 / 30 Fotos
Big label influence
- In a nutshell, big labels along with their subsidiaries (management companies, booking agents, PR companies, etc.) and their influence on distribution channels (radio, ownership of streaming platforms, music video channels, etc.) control what we hear and therefore what we have a taste for.
© Shutterstock
12 / 30 Fotos
The familiar
- We like what we know, what we’re exposed to. Just like we enjoy a movie that has a structure that we’re used to. Perhaps the movie has a conflict and resolution.
© Shutterstock
13 / 30 Fotos
Familiarity
- The music that these labels put their chips on is also based on music that they know to be familiar with regards to structure and melody. It works as a feedback loop. For example, they might sign an artist that they know to be able to produce songs that are generally under four minutes long and have a chorus within the first minute.
© Shutterstock
14 / 30 Fotos
The feedback loop
- It’s like a feedback loop. They play music to us that they think we will like and we generally do and develop a taste for it. In recent years with how we steam music, however, we have had much more power to explore.
© Shutterstock
15 / 30 Fotos
Unsigned artists are invisible
- Keep in mind though, you are essentially invisible as an independent artist if you don’t have decent backing to get on playlists. So the forces that be still very much exist.
© Shutterstock
16 / 30 Fotos
Identity
- The next part of why we enjoy the music we do has to do with identity. This isn’t just how often certain music around us is played, but also means that how we associate certain music with ourselves regarding our cultural surroundings is important.
© Shutterstock
17 / 30 Fotos
Group identity
- In practice, this might mean that a young person might force themselves to wear all black clothes and pale makeup and give more time to trying to appreciate heavy rock music because their friends do.
© Shutterstock
18 / 30 Fotos
Hip-hop and rap music
- Rap music, for example, is the music of the oppressed identity. It began as a form of musical expression for young African-Americans artists.
© Shutterstock
19 / 30 Fotos
Irish trad music
- Other kinds of music and our taste for it can exude our national identities. For example, in listening to a lot of trad music in Ireland, you essentially communicate that you are a proud Irish person or identify with Irishness.
© Shutterstock
20 / 30 Fotos
Motivations
- Some people’s tastes in different forms of music will expand as the result of an externally-motivated venture to 'collect' these kinds of experiences. For example, someone might want the bragging rights of having seen a certain musician at a certain time and in doing so expose themselves to more music.
© Shutterstock
21 / 30 Fotos
Motivations
- Our taste for music can also be affected by our general life experiences, too. Perhaps traumatic events draw us to a need for escapism through music, for instance.
© Shutterstock
22 / 30 Fotos
We tailor what we listen to based on our needs
- For example, we may have learned to listen to music that goes on for longer (psychedelic rock rather than pop perhaps) so that we didn’t have to listen to arguments in our homes growing up.
© Shutterstock
23 / 30 Fotos
Belonging
- Another reason could be that someone may not have felt included before until they went to clubs and danced with kind strangers who accepted them for who they were and they, therefore, made a tremendous effort to understand and learn to like techno and house anthems of the clubs. That's just one example, of course.
© Shutterstock
24 / 30 Fotos
This is me
- In a sense, the reason that music is so universal is that the music we like can reflect some or almost all parts of us: our experiences, our tendencies to feel melancholic, or our rage. It’s a flag that says “this is who I am.”
© Shutterstock
25 / 30 Fotos
Many factors at play
- Because of this, we can say that our taste in music is therefore not the result of a single phenomenon like how our brain develops during childhood. It’s a mixture of this and our experiences, our nature, our identity, and much more.
© Shutterstock
26 / 30 Fotos
There's no formula
- There will never be any exact formula because the weight of how these factors affect our taste in music differs from person to person and also with a person's life.
© Shutterstock
27 / 30 Fotos
How we're listening to music changes
- With this all being said, it should still be noted that the way we experience music is changing. We used to listen to music only live 100 years ago, now it's mostly on headphones.
© Shutterstock
28 / 30 Fotos
What we will listen to in future depends on the mode of delivery
- This will change the type of music we like because some kinds of music work better when listened to this way. For example, hip hop with its kick drum-heavy bass frequencies works well on headphones. Sources: (NBC News) (Diggit Magazine)
© Shutterstock
29 / 30 Fotos
Where does our taste in music come from?
Where does that guilty pleasure originate from?
© Shutterstock
We all have our music tastes. The more obscure favorites usually develop at a younger age—we hit up local gigs, listen to funky tunes that our friends recommend, and delve back in time to listen to the greats that came before. Indeed, music has an incredible influence on our lives. It can make us feel ecstatic or bring us to tears.
But is there any science behind why we’re attracted to certain kinds of music? Click on to find out.
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