Introduction to Relaxing Music
The ultimate fear of fear may not be in your medicine cabinet, but on Spotify. An eight-minute song called "Weightless" by the British band Marconi Union is celebrated as a musical equivalent of a chill pill. This song was actually designed to pick up listeners and science says that it works.
How "Weightless" Works
In a study by Mindlab International, participants who were commissioned to solve complex puzzles while wearing biometric sensors recorded an astonishing decline in fear of 65%. The song was composed in collaboration with sound therapists with the primary purpose of triggering the stress response of the body. The trippy melody begins with 60 strokes per minute, the average resting frequency, and gradually slows down to 50, which synchronizes the rhythm of your body like a lullaby for your nervous system.
The Science Behind Relaxing Music
This subtle delay promotes a process known as entrainment, where the heart rate and breathing of the listener naturally meet the pace of music, a physiological change that supports relaxation. The melody has no sharp or abrupt transitions in rhythm, sound, or volume, avoiding fluctuations that maintain a constant auditory landscape that promotes calmness and reduces mental stimulation.
Benefits of Relaxing Music
No wonder that the melody has become a figurehead for musical stress relief. In contrast to gym bangers or heartbreak ballads, this song is easy for your eardrum. The "Weightless" madness is followed by growing research, which shows that music can do everything from sharpening focus to softening pain – if you hit the right grades.
Music for Focus
For those who want to climb into the zone rather than out of their heads, research shows that music can help. Classical music is a clever bet for study music, with tracks having a slow to moderate pace, moderately predictable pitch, and rhythmic structure, as well as lower levels of chaotic noise and dissonance.
Music for Pain Relief
Music can also help to avert the volume for physical pain. In a recently conducted study, participants reported a lower level of pain when they listened to melodies to their own natural rhythm. Soothing or relaxing music works best as a pain reliever, and the pace can be the secret sauce. Consider it a doctor’s prescription: press play and relax.
