Musicophilia: Tales of Music and the Brain, Revised and Expanded Edition @ richardeward.com |
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Musicophilia: Tales of Music and the Brain, Revised and Expanded Edition
by Oliver Sacks
from Vintage
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List Price: $14.95
Price: $10.17
You save: $4.78 (31%)
Media: Paperback
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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Customer Reviews:
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Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 / 5.0 
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A deeply intelligent, loving book. 
Dr. Sacks has written a book that is astounding in its depth and love for humanity, his patients, the mysteries of life and music the great connector of us all. Music, how we each perceive it and it effects us. The stories in this book amaze and awaken us to the marvels of the brain, our wiring, science and possibility.
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Tales and more tales of music and the brain 
I should have read the title of the book more carefully, since this book is exactly what it claims to be: a compilation of tales (on average more than 10 per chapter), most of the times lacking the neuroscientific explanations that I was looking for. I will summarize one anecdote to exemplify what I mean: "Florence Foster Jenkins, a corolatura that attracted a sell-out audience to Carnegie Hall (...) would sing notes that were excruciatingly wrong, flat, even screechy (...) without realizing that she... more info
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Musicophilia: Reviewed 
This book further detailed the fascination with music's neurological connection. Why do some people have a natural talent and others don't? Absolute pitch, musical savants, 'seeing' music, memory training, and gained/lost musical abilities from accidents/health issues/etc are a few of the many topics Sacks addresses. The majority of the book are case reviews from the author's various patients & studies. There are definitely some cases that feel repetitive (Okay great...another story about another guy... more info
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Man, the musical animal 
Sacks does it again, merging clinical precision with insight and real affection for his patients. This time, he explores the biological foundations of music as a human experience. It turns out that music runs deep in the human brain and mind, as it does in possibly no other species. In his medical practice, Sacks has seen how music can heal, as in some Parkison's and psychiatric patients, or even harm, in rare cases where its rhythms can trigger seizures. It can reach in to patients blocked from normal... more info
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