Emotion, Engagement and Meaning in Strong Experiences of Music Performance

Journal

Psychology of Music

Year

2012

Issue

5

First Page

157

Last Page

161

Abstract

This paper explores the emotions connected with music performance. Performing music provides the potential to attain wellbeing via the hedonic and eudaimonic routes, appealing to pleasure, engagement and meaning (Seligman, 2002). To date, most research exploring emotions amongst performers has focused on these components separately, exploring positive or negative affect, flow, or the development of performer identity. In the current study, 35 university students (mean age 20.6 years) gave free reports of their strongest, most intense experiences of performing music. Accounts were content analyzed using the Strong Experiences of Music Descriptive System (Gabrielsson & Lindström Wik, 2003), and also analyzed for the components of wellbeing using an idiographic approach. Four basic types of response were characterized, emphasizing: (1) negative and positive emotions and personal engagement; (2) negative and positive emotions, engagement and meaning; (3) positive emotion and meaning; or (4) positive emotions, engagement, and meaning. The emphasis on the eudaimonic route to wellbeing (through engagement and meaning) shows that young musicians do have valuable and rewarding experiences with the potential to sustain long-term motivation to engage with practical music-making. The value of the positive psychology framework is also demonstrated by its applicability to descriptions of strong experiences of performing music. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved)

Music and Health Institute Terms

Emotional Functioning; Engagement Level; Mental Health; Music Performance; Recreative Music Methods; Wellness and Well-Being

Indexed Terms

emotional pleasure; musical engagement; musical experiences; music performance; well being; Arts; Emotions; Music Perception; Pleasure

Study Type

Editorial, Opinions, Position Papers

Disciplines

Psychiatry and Psychology

Document Type

Article

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