Change Your Brain Every Day - How Music Playlists Can Enhance Your Emotions & Memory

Episode Date: December 5, 2018

In this episode, Dr. Daniel Amen is joined by Barry Goldstein, the composer of the new audio program, Feel Better Fast and Make It Last. Daniel and Barry discuss the amazingly practical uses that musi...cal playlists have for self-targeting emotional responses and improving the amount of detail in long-term memory. They also give tips for creating your own playlists so you can trigger your own feelings of well-being anytime, anywhere.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome to the Brain Warriors Way podcast. I'm Dr. Daniel Amen. And I'm Tana Amen. Here we teach you how to win the fight for your brain to defeat anxiety, depression, memory loss, ADHD, and addictions. The Brain Warriors Way podcast is brought to you by Amen Clinics, where we've transformed lives for three decades using brain spec imaging to better target treatment and natural ways to heal the brain. For more information, visit amenclinics.com.
Starting point is 00:00:34 The Brain Warriors Way podcast is also brought to you by BrainMD, where we produce the highest quality nutraceutical products to support the health of your brain and body. For more information, visit brainmdhealth.com. Welcome to the Brain Warriors Way podcast. Welcome back. I'm here with Barry Goldstein, the creator of our new album, Feel Better Fast and Make It Last, based on the principles of my new book with the same title. Barry has also created The Brain Warrior's Way and our album Music for Bright Minds, which 35 weeks on Billboard's New Age chart.
Starting point is 00:01:18 So we're thrilled with that. So in the book, I talk about how people can purposefully change their state from sad to happy or from spaced out to focused or from anxious to relaxed just by the music they choose. And so what we want our listeners to do is create their own playlist that will help change their state. Now, we want them to use our music, right? But for me, I was just sharing with you my playlist, and I'm a huge Beach Boy fan. I love the Beach Boys, too. And so Good Vibrations, I think, is one of the most creative pieces of music. We could have a whole podcast on that. Ever may.
Starting point is 00:02:09 And I also love I Can Only Imagine by Mercy Me or Smooth Santana. In fact, I was talking about Tana earlier. And she's more rock and roll girl. I'm more classical music person and so we're fussing on our wedding song but we compromised and so it starts off with this beautiful song it's also on my playlist by celine dion and andre bocelli the prayer that's so we start in this, you know, it's not a waltz, but this very sweet dance to that music. And then it transitioned into Santana's smooth. It's really cool how that goes. So whenever I hear it, my brain connects the music to something that is meaningful, that is joyful.
Starting point is 00:03:08 I also love the meaning of the Eagles song, Get Over It. Because so many people blame other people for the problems in their life. And the music's awesome, but the meaning works for me as well as Eric Clapton's Change the World, because that's what you and I are trying to do. Judy Collins' Amazing Grace, Neil Diamond's America. This will show you how really old I am. What a Wonderful World by Louis Armstrong. It's a great song.
Starting point is 00:03:36 And of course, for me, it's finally had a brain from the Wizard of Oz. But talk to us about how certain pieces of music that people choose can actually change their day. And I like what you said is you can develop your own program. That's right. Yeah. And you know, in my book, I talk about creating playlists, not just a full playlist of 10 songs that you like, but targeting certain emotions, like a playlist for gratitude. You know, mine would have Sly and the Family Stone, Thank You for Letting Me Be Myself, or Dido, Thank You, an instrumental song on it. It doesn't have to be one genre, you know, but it's all geared to a specific emotion that you are targeting for it. So yours is never going to be the same as mine. And what we're learning more about preferred music and creating playlists like that, it's becoming lifelines in conditions like Alzheimer's. You know, and I lecture in colleges as well.
Starting point is 00:04:42 And I said, you know, I want you all to pick your song right now, your happy song, one song that changes your state. And when they all do, I said, I want you to remember this song because in 60 years from now, when you're 80 years old, this song might be a lifeline to you. And I explained to them that that is what's going on in homes now where Alzheimer's patients, they're asking their relatives what songs did he like to listen to when he was younger. And they're creating these playlists that are taking people out of those states where they're literally non-responsive into being active again. So they might have asked him, well, what were you wearing for Christmas 15 years ago? He would never remember. But when they play these songs that he loved, and now he says, wow, I remember this song. It reminds me of what I was wearing 20 years ago for Christmas.
Starting point is 00:05:38 So it creates new pathways that open up and allow us to access the memories where we might not have been able to do that through traditional methods. And there's a great video, if you have a chance to watch it online, it's if you type in Henry and Alzheimer's, they show this. Henry and Alzheimer's? Henry and Alzheimer's. Just type it in.
Starting point is 00:05:58 They show a man literally down like this and they ask him to his relatives what songs he listened to. And they create these playlists for him where he's awakening. And Oliver Sacks, a neuroscientist, was involved in that project. It's just amazing. I lecture to doctors and I said, if I would have showed you this video and asked you beforehand what do you think got him from this state to the other state? Would you have answered me music?
Starting point is 00:06:27 And none of them would say yes to that. No one would have guessed that music could have taken someone out of that state. So music is powerful. And preferred music. Your music. Preferred music. Your music that you love. So not a playlist I necessarily designed for them, except our music and many
Starting point is 00:06:47 people love it. Um, but something that is meaningful to you. Stay with us. We're going to wrap this up when we come back. Use the code podcast 10 to get a 10% discount on a full evaluation at amenclinics.com or on our supplements at brainmdhealth.com. Thank you for listening to the Brain Warriors Way podcast. Go to iTunes and leave a review and you'll automatically be entered into a drawing
Starting point is 00:07:23 to get a free signed copy of the Brain Warriors Way and the Brain Warriors Way cookbook we give away every month.

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