Unpacking musical beauty: Sound, emotion, and impact differences across expertise and personality
Yuko Arthurs, Eve Merlini, Diana Omigie, Andrea Schiavio, Andrea Schiavio, Andrea Schiavio, Andrea Schiavio

TL;DR
This study explores how people experience musical beauty, finding that it involves sound, emotion, and personal impact, and varies with personality and musical training.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into the multifaceted nature of musical beauty and its emotional impact, influenced by individual differences.
Findings
Beautiful music is associated with mellow timbre, pleasing melodies, and emotional resonance.
Amateur musicians and open individuals report a wider range of musical features contributing to beauty.
Musical beauty significantly influences musical activities and emotional support for listeners.
Abstract
Beauty is an aesthetic quality that many composers and performers strive to attain and that most listeners value highly in music. Yet, what listeners hear and feel when they find music beautiful, the impact this experience has on them, and wherein lie any potential individual differences remain unclear. To address these gaps, an online questionnaire was administered to 81 adults. They described their experience of listening to three self-selected “beautiful pieces of music” alongside three pieces they listened to a lot but did not consider beautiful; focusing on each piece’s sonic features, emotions induced, and any impact engaging with the pieces had had on them. Respondents’ personality traits and level of musical training were also collected to explore if these contributed significantly to variability in the data. Thematic analysis of text responses showed that participants consider…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNeuroscience and Music Perception · Diverse Music Education Insights · Creativity in Education and Neuroscience
