|
~ ~ |
Here to take note
By
Blair Tindall The
latter -- about his treatment of long-comatose patients brought back to
consciousness -- inspired both Harold Pinter's play "A Kind of Alaska"
and the 1990 film "Awakenings," starring Robin Williams and Robert De
Niro. At
first only grateful to be alive, the subject feels a growing obsession
with classical piano music, an art that had never interested him.
Learning to play well in midlife, he chooses not to question his
surprise gift with medical examination. Others
experience an "amusia" so severe that even nursery tunes sound
cacophonous to them. A symptom common to nearly everyone involves
jingles, songs and tunes you just can't get out of your head. In
parts, music haunts performers whose gifts have disappeared. But music
also performs miracles of communication for autistic children, stroke
victims, Alzheimer's patients and others. Today,
he said, that spirit lives on in him: He plays his father's grand piano
regularly. On
weekends, there was singing in religious services -- and these people
who'd been frozen for many years seemed liberated by the music and
could move, sing and even dance. I
couldn't explain it at the time but began understanding the intimate
connection between the auditory cortex and motor systems. As
humans, we always respond to a musical beat. At a Grateful Dead concert
-- although it's not entirely my sort of thing -- I simply couldn't
stop myself from moving with the music. I met
a blind musician in London who had severe autism with rocking but could
repeat pieces after a single hearing. It's
fascinating to note that one-third of savants -- subjects with very low
IQ with extraordinary skill in calculations, visual art or music -- are
born sight-impaired. About
half have absolute pitch -- the ability to identify notes plucked from
the air. That's quite amazing, as it's found in only one in 10,000 of
the normal population. Do you
have absolute pitch? Would you want it? I keep my father's 1894
Bechstein piano tuned one-third tone flat, to preserve the original
strings -- that could drive someone with absolute pitch absolutely mad.
The
ability may be less rare than you think; some believe it gets "pruned
out" over time. There's research being done with TMS -- Transcranial
Magnetic Stimulation -- exploring whether savant talents and absolute
pitch might have been suppressed in many of our brains. Now
I'm working at Columbia University near a department that's using it to
treat depression and other conditions; it shows promise and much less
danger than before. Recently,
I submitted myself to TMS in the laboratory of Allan Snyder, an
Australian neuroscientist, hoping to release my own savant abilities of
one sort or another, including absolute pitch. I
stopped after 10 minutes when my head and face started to ache, and I
feared for my old brain. There was no improvement, I'm afraid. You
tell me of Broadway musicians who read and play simultaneously, and I
am intrigued by that as well, as I keep a notebook on the piano and jot
down notes with my right hand while improvising harmonies autonomously
with the left. One
time I did, though. I was working on a ward with very autistic and
disturbed youngsters who could make no contact except nonverbally, with
music. I was so impressed by the result that I took my own piano, an
old secondhand Kimball, and gave it to the ward. Unfortunately,
few physicians who treat patients with musical problems and phenomena
keep a piano or music in the office. It's
often intrusive, annoying, frustrating and sometimes tormenting -- but
still can have potentially positive aspects. The
distinguished composer Tobias Picker, who has Tourette's, says he
harnesses that energy for his composing, and his body often stops
ticcing even while studying a musical score. I make
analogies between tics and hallucinations -- on the whole when they
first occur, musical hallucinations are not fun. They're
frightening, intrusive and bewildering, but a lot of people come to
terms with them, and some even mildly enjoy them -- I can think of an
account of one elderly poet with many poems stimulated by visual
hallucinations. After
a few minutes, the tonality returned, but the same amusia occurred on
another day, evidently part of a migraine. Later, when recovering from
an injury in the hospital, I continually played a tape of the
Mendelssohn Violin Concerto. I was
awoken one morning by it, thinking nurses had switched on the tape --
but my musical memory is not good enough to evoke a whole orchestra,
and upon surfacing, I found the tape wasn't on at all. The
most common musical hallucinations occur in the borderlines of sleep;
one is in a quasi-hallucinogenic state anyhow. Clearly, unconscious
memory is much wider than what hits people with musical hallucinations. I'm
frightened of the engrossing ability of music, to the extent people can
walk in front of cars while listening. I also dislike forced music,
which in New York means you can't go into any cafe or gym or mall
without Muzak-like sound imposed on you, and it is often very loud. This
dissociates music from context as a communal act -- it's no longer in
church or a concert hall or singing with others. Music,
voice and auditory stimuli are functionally more closely linked to
memory and emotion than visual phenomena, therefore they hold an
ability to transport one into realms of emotion and memory. Maybe
that music doesn't represent objects and scenes, but states of mind are
difficult to objectify. I recently heard an amazing production of
Bach's St. Matthew Passion at the Brooklyn Academy. Many
people were moved to tears and ecstasy, and I've never experienced it
so intensely. ~ ~ ~ Related
Talent Development Resources pages:Neuroscience articles ADD / ADHD : articles sites books Learning differences : ADD, dyslexia etc... Learning differences 2 : quotes articles sites Mental
health.. Mental health & fitness posts/articles Books : mental health ~ ~ ~ |
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]()
~ ~
|