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  1. Aug 13, 2023 · A recent podcast episode shed light on the use of music in psychedelic clinical trials for therapy. According to the referenced study, psychedelics can enhance the enjoyment of music and even eliminate negative associations that arise when initially listening to a song.

  2. Sep 6, 2023 · Could psychedelic music be the key to transforming the mind? Zoe Cormier explores the science of and power of psychedelic music and how it helped her heal.

  3. Apr 23, 2024 · We explore five easy masterpieces of the post-psychedelic/neo-psychedelia genre, including classics from The Brian Jonestown Massacre and Primal Scream.

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    • Welcome Influences: Intensification
    • Welcome Influences of The Music: Guidance
    • Welcome Influence of The Music: Calming
    • Welcome Influences of The Music: Openness to Music-Evoked Experience
    • Unwelcome Influences of The Music: Intensification
    • Unwelcome Influences of The Music: Resistance to Music-Evoked Experience
    • Unwelcome Influences of The Music: Misguidance
    • Appreciated Music Styles and Playlist Features: Music Styles
    • Appreciated Music Styles and Playlist Features: Playlist Design
    • Unappreciated Music Styles and Playlist Features: Music Styles

    The most prominent cluster in the group welcome influences, including 17 out of 19 patients (89% of total), refers to themes that describe an intensification of the subjective experience by the music. Within this cluster, themes that describe an “intensification of emotion” were identified in 15 out of 17 (82% of cluster), including descriptions of...

    The second most prominent cluster of welcome influences includes themes that depict the music as a source of “guidance.” This cluster was mentioned by 15 out of 19 patients (79% of total). Within this cluster, statements that the music provided a “sense of being on a journey” were identified in 11 out of 15 (73% of cluster). This included descripti...

    Ten out of 19 patients (53% of total) described calming effects of the music. From this cluster, nine out ten(90% of cluster) described “general calming” effects, whereas five out of ten patients (50% of cluster) described the music as providing “mental calming” effects, including sensations of peacefulness and of the music calming and “slowing the...

    Seven out of 19 patients (37% of total) made statements about their own attitude of openness towards the influences of the music and in addition, about the effects of music on their attitude of openness. From this cluster, six out of seven (86% of cluster) referred to the “importance” and the “purpose” of being open to “challenging experience” evok...

    The most prominent cluster, including five out of ten patients (50% of cluster), described music to “intensify” emotions they did not want to feel, such as increased “fearfulness,” “sadness,” or “fear.” In addition, five out of ten (50% of cluster) made statements about the music creating a sense of “discomfort,” including “unpleasant” or “uncomfor...

    Nine out of 19 patients (47% of total) described feelings of “resistance to the music-evoked experience.” This includes statements of “not liking” or “not wanting” the subjective effects of the music. This cluster of unwelcomed influences contrasts the cluster of themes describing an openness to music-evoked experience, as a welcomed influence (see...

    Six out of 19 (32% of total) made statements about the music providing a sense of “misguidance”; this cluster primarily includes descriptions of the music being a “mismatch” or being incongruent with the unfolding subjective experience. This cluster, named “dissonance,” was present in four out of six (67% of cluster) and forms a contrast with the w...

    All 19 patients referred to some music styles within the music playlist that they especially appreciated (Fig. 2). Most frequent were positive statements about “ethnic music,” present in eight out of 19 patients (42% of cluster), such as Indian, “Spanish,” or “African” music styles (e.g. Jon Hassel, Ry Cooder, and Ronu majumdar). Positive statement...

    Seventeen out of 19 patients (89% of total) made statements reflecting appreciation for the design of the playlist (Fig. 2). Most prominent were positive descriptions of the “music selection,” described by 12 out of 17 patients (71% of cluster), including descriptions of the music “working well” or being “well-selected.” Secondly, nine out of 17 pa...

    Eleven out of 19 patients (58% of total) referred to musical styles that were not appreciated. These responses reflected different degrees of the individual’s disliking of the music and were highly diverse, making no theme present in more than 30% of this cluster (Fig. 2). Some examples of themes in this cluster refer to “music with lyrics,” “vocal...

    • Mendel Kaelen, Bruna Giribaldi, Jordan Raine, Lisa Evans, Christopher Timmerman, Natalie Rodriguez, ...
    • 2018
  5. Mar 30, 2020 · Music was widely considered integral for meaningful emotional and imagery experiences and self-exploration during psychedelic therapy. Music transformed through its elicitation of anthropomorphic, transportive, synesthetic, and material sensations.

    • Clare O'Callaghan, Daniel J Hubik, Justin Dwyer, Martin Williams, Margaret Ross
    • 2020
  6. This ketamine-assisted therapy curation is categorized into five lists: ambient, minimalism, electronic (techno), classical and psychedelia. The majority of the selections here, those from the first four lists, include tracks without lyrics. The psychedelia list comprises music written for, about or during psychedelic experiences.

  7. Feb 8, 2018 · A new paper from our Beckley/Imperial study, on psilocybin therapy for treatment-resistant depression, reveals the ways in which subjective response to music is intensified under psychedelics, and demonstrates the influence of this synergistic effect on the therapeutic experience and clinical outcome.

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