Saturday, October 27, 2012

Music and memory

Music and memory: that’s a powerful combination. It’s also a powerful choice. Music can help us remember, and it can help us choose and understand what we remember.

It is also a way to reach across the loss of memory. I’ve a friend whose mother could not speak toward the end of her life, but she could sing, and loved to sing with her family as she’s always done her whole life long. Another friend’s grandmother was lost in her mind to Alzheimer's and did not know her granddaughter at all -- until her granddaughter began to sing to her, a song they’d both loved when she was small. Then, for the space of the song, recognition and love returned past the gates of lost memory.

Singing to a child -- to an adult, too -- calms when nothing else will, establishes that connection of voice and melody which, while it may use words, important words, connects beyond their meaning. Further along this line of music and memory, how many times have you had a fragment of a tune or a verse of song bring back to you in vivid detail a place, a time, a person you’d not thought of in many a long day?

Music can help us remember, and it can help us understand and connect with what we remember. How has this happened for you?

To go along with these ideas

Pádraigín Ní Uallacháin: Songs of the Scribe

Kathy Mattea: Calling Me Home

Cathie Ryan: teaching tradition

-->If you'd like to support my creative work at Music Road,
here is a way to do that, through PayPal. Note that you do not have to have a PayPal account to do this.Thank you.

Labels: , , , ,

Bookmark and Share
posted by Kerry Dexter at

1 Comments:

Anonymous Alexandra said...

Such an interesting post, communication through music! Towards the end of her life, my mom would sing all the songs she learned when as a girl, many were songs I had never heard.

9:13 AM  

Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]

<< Home