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New study aims to create the perfect playlist for people on LSD

sigmond

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Mar 21, 2015
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BY Alexandra Blair - Dancing Astronaut

It's long been suggested that psychedelic drug use could be adapted for therapeutic uses, and a slew of recent studies have attempted to prove just how it can work. In a recent interview with Motherboard, Mendel Kaelen, a PhD student in neuroscience at Imperial College, discussed the implications music can have on that experience and just how much deliberation goes into selecting the right soundtrack to facilitate psychological breakthroughs.Kaelen’s playlist was designed as a way to observe how the brain responds to different music while under the influence of psychedelics, specifically LSD. A group of songs are focus grouped and pared down to those that suit specific parts of the psychological journey of the hallucinogenic drug.

“For all these different phases within the playlist, different needs are there to be met that the music can help with,” said Kaelen. The narrative of the list needs to reflect the changing experiences of the drugs physiological effect in the body from onset, through the peak, and then the comedown.
For the initial phase of the trail, when subjects tend to be nervous, Kaelen selected music that would calm and reassure. In what Kaelen calls “a pendulum effect,” the music undulates between varying emotional intensities during the peak of the experience.

Kaelen describes a huge part of the challenge as finding music that is affecting but not too familiar. Familiar tracks, of course, trigger pre-existing connections to moods and experience that affect the outcome of the experiment. Though the playlist is still under wraps as part of an ongoing study, Kaelen’s choices include ambient and neo-classical pieces by Brian Eno, Greg Haines, and Ólafur Arnalds.

http://www.dancingastronaut.com/2016/05/new-study-aims-create-perfect-playlist-people-lsd/
 
I think a very comprehensive 50 year study was already performed by the Grateful Dead.
 
^ lol

It must depend on the person.

I like to start with Bob Marley to get in a good mood.
(Hard to have a bad trip after feeling such joy!)

Then Jimi Hendrix for blast off. Takes me far....

Something lighter but still passionate and funky while peaking, like African music such as Ali Farka Toure.

Something trippy but beautiful and delicate is essential too, like Hamza El Din because, hey, Nubian music ....

I always love LOVE classical Indian music while tripping, like Ustad Ali Akbar Khan.

Then, near the end, I usually get in the mood for Mozart, or sometimes Beethoven.

I usually like to relax at that point by listening to jazz like Miles Davis.


At the very end, I listen to recorded poetry, or not.
 
How ridiculously naive to try to 'program' a soundtrack for tripping. The psychedelic experience will always vary from trip to trip and individual to individual. That is part of the mystical magic of seeking the +4. (ref Dr. Alexander Shulgin's scale explained in both PIKAL and TIKAL, see www.Erowid.com )
To attempt a 'one size fits all' is the epitome of egotism on this person's part. Must be the reborn Timothy Leary back to screw things up for another generation.
 
Ooo slimvictor, that's what up. If I can really get into it high Indian music is just tits. I'm partial to Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan myself but I'm definitely gonna check out the Ali Khan you suggested.
 
How could they know one goddamn thing about what makes a perfect playlist. Its not like music and tripping are personal or anything. To think, someone is funding this nonsense.
 
Ooo slimvictor, that's what up. If I can really get into it high Indian music is just tits. I'm partial to Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan myself but I'm definitely gonna check out the Ali Khan you suggested.

Alright! I will check out Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan too.
 
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