Description

Book Synopsis
The first British book on neurology in music was published over 30 years ago. Edited by Drs Macdonald Critchley and R A Henson, it was entitled Music and the Brain (published by Wm Heinemann Medical Books), but all of its contributors are now either retired or deceased. Since then, there has been an increasing amount of research, and the present volume includes the most significant of these advances.The book begins with the evolutionary basis of meaning in music and continues with the historical perspectives, after which the human nervous system is compared to a clavichord, highlighting the use of metaphor in the history of modern neurology. It discusses the neurologist in the concert hall as well as the musician at the bedside by showing how neurology enriches musical perception, the main theme being the cerebral localisation of music production and perception. The book also emphasises the value of teaching singing to treat speech disorders and the importance of nerve compression in musicians, the final chapter being on recent techniques of imaging the musical brain.

Table of Contents
Evolutionary Basis of Meaning in Music (I Cross); Historical Perspectives (J K Johnson); The Creative Brain (S Blunt); Musical Reading and Writing (J Brust); Music as a Calibrator of Time: Auditory Processing (S Jones); Crossed Wires: Synaesthetic Responses to Music (I Moseley); Musicogenic Epilepsy (J Murray); Music and Migraine (K Podell); Maurice Ravel and the Music of the Brain (O Selnes); From Sensibility to Madness in Late 19th Century Leide Romanticism (M Hennerici & H Bazner); Musical Palinacusis as a Symptom of the Migraine Aura (K Podell); and other papers.

Neurology Of Music

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    A Hardback by F Clifford Rose

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      Publisher: Imperial College Press
      Publication Date: 02/08/2010
      ISBN13: 9781848162686, 978-1848162686
      ISBN10: 1848162685

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      The first British book on neurology in music was published over 30 years ago. Edited by Drs Macdonald Critchley and R A Henson, it was entitled Music and the Brain (published by Wm Heinemann Medical Books), but all of its contributors are now either retired or deceased. Since then, there has been an increasing amount of research, and the present volume includes the most significant of these advances.The book begins with the evolutionary basis of meaning in music and continues with the historical perspectives, after which the human nervous system is compared to a clavichord, highlighting the use of metaphor in the history of modern neurology. It discusses the neurologist in the concert hall as well as the musician at the bedside by showing how neurology enriches musical perception, the main theme being the cerebral localisation of music production and perception. The book also emphasises the value of teaching singing to treat speech disorders and the importance of nerve compression in musicians, the final chapter being on recent techniques of imaging the musical brain.

      Table of Contents
      Evolutionary Basis of Meaning in Music (I Cross); Historical Perspectives (J K Johnson); The Creative Brain (S Blunt); Musical Reading and Writing (J Brust); Music as a Calibrator of Time: Auditory Processing (S Jones); Crossed Wires: Synaesthetic Responses to Music (I Moseley); Musicogenic Epilepsy (J Murray); Music and Migraine (K Podell); Maurice Ravel and the Music of the Brain (O Selnes); From Sensibility to Madness in Late 19th Century Leide Romanticism (M Hennerici & H Bazner); Musical Palinacusis as a Symptom of the Migraine Aura (K Podell); and other papers.

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