In academic literature it's called "The Mozart Effect": first popularised by Dr. Alfred A. Tomatis in his 1991 book Pourquoi Mozart?, the Mozart effect is the study of how classical music stimulates ...
Katia Eliad, a Paris-based artist, was stuck in a rut. She felt blocked in her creativity, out of touch with herself and for some inexplicable reason unable to use green or blue in her abstract ...
You may have heard the claim that listening to classical music makes you smarter. But is this just a myth, or does classical music really have an effect on the brain? Music, as they say, nourishes the ...
Don Campbell, the author who convinced millions around the world that listening to the music of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart makes you smarter, died Saturday at 65 in Colorado, his publicist told the ...
The phrase "Mozart Effect" conjures an image of a pregnant woman who, sporting headphones over her belly, is convinced that playing classical music to her unborn child will improve the tyke's ...
The previously unknown composition was discovered in the collections of Leipzig Municipal Libraries in Germany. Sebastian Willnow / Picture Alliance via Getty Images A 12-minute piece of music ...
He had started playing the piano around the age of three, watching his older sister’s piano lessons, and was taught by his father in both composition and academic subjects. After spending his early ...
Can listening to Mozart make your child smarter? There are plenty of recordings on the market which claim precisely that. But is there any scientific evidence to support these claims? And what is the ...
“Music is a language that knows no boundaries and has the ability to unite people from all walks of life” (Tomatis). The Tomatis Method is a specialised neurosensory programme that helps people ...
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